These people moved from their house in good faith and have been left in limbo. |
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It leaves you in limbo, in a dreadful no-man's land that is fraught with danger. |
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That is why, according to traditional theology, unbaptized babies have to languish in limbo for all eternity. |
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I suffered for eight months in limbo whilst awaiting the Crown Prosecution Service decision. |
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So there they stayed, in limbo, until after resolution 1441 when last November they were allowed to return. |
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For two years the album had been stuck in limbo, until someone introduced him into the right circles. |
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But the decision still left them in limbo until a final decision could be made on the park's future. |
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Jim's hand stopped halfway to his mouth, holding the bottle there for a moment in limbo. |
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Here was mummy, the matriarch, whose strength had sustained us for so many years, her own health now in limbo. |
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However, the manager of that different area changed his mind, so I was in limbo. |
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You're not exactly here and you're not quite there, you're somewhere else in limbo. |
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Stuck in limbo for 37 years, the album has finally been unveiled to adoring acolytes, frothing critics and celebrity fans by its creator. |
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The 1950s recordings have been in limbo until recently, boasting neither modern sound nor superlative sentimental value. |
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Temporary visas mean life in limbo, with no prospect of family reunion or settling, and putting down roots. |
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But as matters stand, Scotland are in limbo, consigned to treading a tightrope with players balancing jobs and sport. |
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If a piece is in limbo, the player must get it back on the board before moving any other piece. |
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He never has shown up on the police blotter, nor did he throw temper tantrums during his year in limbo. |
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Now the ownership of the land is in limbo, with no one willing to take responsibility for the tip. |
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Detainees live absent any points of reference, the whole process is very slow, and that detainees have the feeling that they are living in limbo. |
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There are live crabs snapping at children, lobster tanks, and giant glass aquariums with huge fish floating sadly in limbo. |
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Bula Resources shares were subsequently delisted by the Stock Exchange, leaving shareholders in limbo. |
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Germany now faces weeks in limbo as the main parties indulge in horse-trading over all the possible permutations. |
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While he's been granted citizenship, he says hundreds of others are living in limbo. |
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A couple of seasons of too much talk, too many colorless characters, and not enough action have left the show in limbo. |
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Dillon chose to cast himself in the lead, playing a con man in limbo, set adrift when his criminal father figure skips the U.S. to escape the long arm of the law. |
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In short, the Europe of necessary solidarity on energy is still very much in limbo. |
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The Commission cannot be left in limbo as a body charged with a function that the very Parties creating it have prevented it from performing. |
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As well, there are often long delays between hearings which translate into months if not years during which children's lives are in limbo. |
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But in actual fact, the parents can be left in limbo, and their concerns are real. |
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Disabled electricians are stuck in limbo with no meaningful work that they can do and no training to start them on another career path. |
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The controversial defection law was put on ice yesterday pending a Constitutional Court decision, leaving some politicians in limbo and others scrambling for survival. |
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Spin FM, which was due to begin broadcasting last February, remains in limbo, at least until after the Supreme Court hear the appeal towards the end of this year. |
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Keeping him in limbo seems to be the preferred punishment for him in the eyes of the Iranian authorities. |
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The players and the many supporters who turn out each week to get behind their club, deserve much better than being left in limbo for an indefinite period. |
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Would that film, also starring an early 2000s Best Actress Oscar winner, have been in limbo this long? |
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At the time of going to press, Sligo Airport is still sitting in limbo, as it awaits the decision of the Department of Transport's Aviation Authority. |
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Oxfam Ireland, calling for talks on farming subsidies to resume as early as possible, said developing nations will be in limbo until a date for further negotiations is set. |
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He was left in limbo by Scottish Labour's Executive, which refused to endorse his candidacy until Fife police concluded their investigations into the case. |
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It does mean that they view the convention as too important to be left in limbo. |
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So that leaves shareholders in limbo until further details are released. |
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And now the collapse of a proposed move to Blackburn Rovers has left his club career in limbo as he concentrates on the vital role of Australia's over-age captain in Greece. |
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As a result, nominees have been left in limbo, courthouses sit empty, justice is delayed, political rhetoric has escalated and political civility has suffered. |
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The inquiry is in limbo because of the decision of the court today. |
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The recurrence of the ghost, an archetypal figure of incompletion, implies that a self-perpetuating covenant between the living and the dead has been left in limbo. |
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With the development plans in limbo, prices should remain at a premium. |
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It was the summer before her 9th grade year, months that dwelled in limbo between gradually evaporating innocence and a monsoon of unfathomed tears. |
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Allowing it to remain in limbo would be a tremendous stumbling block, not to mention a disgrace. |
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That said, if horizontal relationships across an organization become bogged down in seemingly endless and unproductive meetings, then good ideas can get stuck in limbo. |
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The federal homelessness funding at this point is in limbo. |
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Organizations that address the needs of homeless people are in limbo. |
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I know that the people of Kosovo cannot live in limbo for much longer. |
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For now the Karen are a people in limbo, without home or homeland. |
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Ontario is in limbo following the announcement by the federal government that it will defer collection of program overpayments to farmers in the provinces where CAIS is federally administered. |
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The limited funds mean some activities are in limbo, which, during the Council session, provoked discussions about how activities should be prioritized. |
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While nuclear testing does not appear to be in the plans of anyone at present, a test ban in limbo may be more easily ignored than one that has over 130 adherents. |
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Their lives have been in limbo and they have relived their abusive experiences over and over again in their minds in preparation for their testimony. |
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Should the Council and the European Parliament fail to reach agreement, will a transitional programme be implemented in place of the real programme, or will the organisations and young people concerned be left in limbo? |
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There are so many cases which, at least in Nova Scotia, don't meet the criteria necessary for an emergency hearing, with the result that parents and children are left in limbo for significant periods of time. |
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This is an issue which crops up regularly at IGCs but remains in limbo. |
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In strictly practical terms, the European Parliament will have only limited influence on EU trade policy so long as the constitutional treaty remains in limbo. |
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The theme or main line of the script may suggest an overriding motif: enervating heat, ominous clamminess, dappled sunlight, penetrating northern light, a feeling of being in limbo or underwater. |
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It is becomingly increasingly clear, that the contemporary fascination with outcomes-based education is leaving teachers and learners in limbo, and this exacerbates educational wastage at all levels. |
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They could profit instead from the mob's adventurousness: that sense of being in limbo, neither on sea nor on land, suspended in a state of fantasy. Pink paint and corrosionMost piers still encapsulate 19th-century dreams. |
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Every effort should be made to reach a decision in an efficient manner in order not to keep children in limbo for a long period of time regarding their status and their future. |
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That leaves large parts of the market in limbo, producing enough cash from tenants for owners to stay alive and lenders to forbear but with little prospect of an immediate recovery in values. How long can this last? |
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Even though her life remains in limbo she counts herself as fortunate. |
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In the past year they have been given the runaround and left in limbo. This adds unneeded stress on the staff and leaves less time for them to do the actual work of helping others in the community. |
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A case can remain in limbo for years while the parties fight over a defendant's attempts to discover information about a plaintiff's possible inequitable conduct. |
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Rangers defender Andrews' career is in limbo at the moment as he weighs up whether to have a knee operation or continue to place his trust in faith healers. |
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