Your endorphins don't really kick in until you've been exercising aerobically for 30 minutes. |
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Further restrictions on working time would be a kick in the teeth for many firms, particularly smaller ones. |
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This is nothing more than a kick in the teeth for the local residents who have supported the club for many years. |
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The referee didn't call a goal kick for the Stingrays, but instead called a corner kick in favor of Riverside. |
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This is a kick in the teeth for the people of Salford and an outrageous waste of taxpayers' money. |
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It is a kick in the teeth for the sailors who go on the ships that take our exports overseas. |
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I smiled at him for a second before dropping him with a hard front kick in his stomach. |
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She waited for the buzz of tequila to kick in or the stage to improve but neither happened. |
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But any job creation depends on how the tax cuts are structured and when they kick in during the business cycle. |
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I give it a hefty kick in my utter frustration at not being able to unlock it. |
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It's something we've been aiming at all year and certainly now, the buzz does begin to kick in a bit more. |
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This is a kick in the teeth for the members of the council who worked so hard. |
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Since the new drug benefit doesn't kick in until after the election, the codgers won't realize they've been duped until it's too late. |
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If he is convicted of first-degree murder, that would also kick in whether there are special circumstances. |
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It was at that exact moment that a set of security lamps decided to kick in and bathe me in their glaring beams of light. |
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Perhaps it's healthy to have a kick in the teeth like that every now and then. |
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The European Court of Justice has recently delivered a kick in the teeth to British people who want to work longer hours. |
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The chairman described the council's decision to reject the scheme as a kick in the teeth. |
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We are trying to improve the facilities all the time and make the ground more presentable and this sort of thing is just a kick in the teeth. |
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The assault landing thrusters begin to kick in, a loudly whine of complaint against too rapid a fall under fierce gravity. |
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But Connolly was adjudged to have been offside after Jim Weir had guided Kane's free kick in the striker's direction. |
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To a whizz kid of such towering promise, it was a kick in the belly and a rabbit punch to the back of the head. |
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The softly-spoken Aberdonian looks to the central belt as his ambitions to bring in new business kick in. |
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Then the vocals kick in, stripping the veneer of respectability and reminding anyone who they are listening to. |
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Here in Southern California we're accustomed to summer westerlies and northwesterlies that kick in about noon and may work up to about 20 knots. |
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It would not be the first time that a bootlicker was rewarded with a kick in the teeth. |
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But they give you a kick in the shins and then tell you that they're slapping you on the back. |
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The player's decision is a disaster for his club, a real kick in the teeth for his employers. |
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The visitors were awarded an indirect free kick in the Southend United penalty area on the hour mark. |
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I wished for some kick in the red-chile steak butter I asked for with my bison filet, as a substitute for the advertised port wine sauce. |
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It took a while for the effects to kick in but, when they did, they bit deep. |
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I was innocently walking with my friend, when Stephen ran at me from behind, jumped up, and gave me a tremendous flying kick in the back. |
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It's 25 to 45-year-old blokes and sheilas who kick in and join footy clubs, not children. |
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I'm hoping the combination of sleeping pill and codeine tablets will kick in for her shortly to give her some relief and both of us some rest. |
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During the long, cruel month of February, waiting for my delinquent digestive system to kick in, I had contracted low-grade pneumonia. |
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The impression endures up to the moment that the hyperkinetic breaks kick in and roll forth with gleeful abandon. |
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Dressed in riot gear and bunched together, they are hugging the wall of a mudbrick house ready to kick in the door. |
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The aspirin he had taken had finally started to kick in, and disintegrate his almighty hangover. |
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The final kick in the final second of a heart-stopping afternoon saw Melrose pip Peebles to the post. |
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On those same dark and damp days, the light-sensing headlamps and rain-sensitive wipers kick in without touching the controls. |
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Your balancing reflexes can't kick in unless your leg muscles are strong enough and your joints flexible enough to respond. |
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Just as the trauma of my previous imprisonment receded, the financial reality began to kick in. |
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Both the Soviet Union and the United States were eager to kick in cash and advice. |
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He is soon feeling sick and unhappy as the effects of his high fat diet kick in. |
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By repeating this drill, the swimmer should be encouraged to complete the second kick in order to generate enough power to recover the arms. |
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Terrified and panicking, he tried to kick in a glass door to escape his pursuers and, in doing so, fatally lacerated himself. |
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But we can draw some reassurance from the inevitable homoeostatic mechanisms that will kick in. |
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To hear from the Government that their regiment is about to be scrapped is a kick in the teeth for the brave men and women of our armed services. |
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A kick in the head like this hiring freeze makes you wonder if any of the powersthat-be really care. |
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At the same time, many employers who've had to kick in more money to keep pensions solvent doubled down on efforts to rid themselves of old plans. |
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My stance is slightly more than hipwide and my feet are somewhat splayed to create a better thigh sweep and to kick in my glutes and hamstrings during the downstroke. |
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I expect that the game against the Netherlands will be the kick in the pants that the England squad need. |
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And that appears to have given the candidates a bit of a kick in the pants. |
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The long-deferred, urgent matter of immigration reform got a big kick in the pants yesterday. |
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A pat on the back, though only a few vertebrae removed from a kick in the pants, is miles ahead in results. |
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A good kick in the pants for websites that claim to keep our information secure! |
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Following the floorshow, DJs kick in with music by Nina Simone to Nouvelle Vague and, for the more energetic, Moby to Mylo. |
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Referee Jorge Gonzalez judged it a pack-pass and awarded the Union an indirect free kick in the box. |
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After the prize-giving, the festivities begin again and the dancing goes on well into the next morning until hangovers, prudence and normal life kick in. |
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I intend to make a nuisance of myself, particularly to the Council, for as long as it takes for a change of mind to kick in. |
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It could have chosen to send CN back to the bargaining table instead of sending the workers a kick in the teeth. |
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Also, McConnell's eagerness to rush the announcement out meant that there was still no detail at the end of last week as to when it would actually kick in. |
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When the sun comes out, it will open, allowing users to swim under blue skies, but when the weather turns, the telescopic structure will slide shut and heating will kick in. |
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Around the age of fourteen, when adolescence started to kick in, our boy who was first in the class turned into an unsuspected rebel. |
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This time wasting shall be penalised by a free kick in the centre of the match field for the opponent. |
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Under the new rules, progressive sanctions may kick in earlier in the budgetary surveillance process. |
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Get benefits to a liveable level and increase the maximum allowable earnings before the clawbacks kick in. |
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Another big hydro rate increase is about to kick in and more increases are planned. |
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I call on the Council to adopt this proposal quickly so that the benefits to the EU economy can kick in. |
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Many now kick in at the two-year mark, the point at which new employees often start to feel restless. |
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My arms ached like they'd been repeatedly thumped, and there was an aching in my stomach which suggested they'd given me a hefty kick in the balls. |
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When fathers hold and play with their children, oxytocin and prolactin kick in, priming them for bonding. |
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Whenever the motors kick in, a high-pitched whirring sound emanates from the controller, which is a major distraction. |
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The soldiers dismount and secure the area and with little warning, kick in the door, roust the residents out of the house, and search and ransack the home. |
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If you call them soon enough, surety firms might be able to kick in some money to ease cash shortages as well as to share good ideas and offer lots of expertise. |
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The drums quickly kick in with a fast snare and an even faster kick drum. |
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Leave it to an Aussie to give American journalism a swift kick in its down under. |
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Fiona gave Justin a hard kick in the shin underneath the table. |
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It is a kick in the crotch, a punch to the kidney and a savage body slam. |
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I noticed pronounced brassiness in some of the musical numbers, and the subwoofer lacked oomph in scenes where I thought it should kick in harder. |
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United had bossed the first half, the five-man midfield which Fergie defends so spikily proving its worth as Leeds barely had a kick in the opening 20 minutes. |
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Hargreaves is down injured after taking a hefty kick in the knee. |
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If we all kick in a few bucks we can help them get over the hump. |
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Two of these ditties will put a kick in your step, while the others tend toward teary, beery ballads built on acoustic guitar, pedal steel and mandolin. |
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Michael Farfan smashed home a difficult teed up shot from the resulting indirect free kick in the box, and Conor Casey added a third in the 89th minute. |
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Now for Photorejuvenation to shrink red blood vessels, allowing my body's defences to kick in and take away the destroyed red cells. |
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Another came up and the cry-baby gave him a kick in the stomach. |
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This was a real kick in the balls to us because Afghanistan was going on, September 11 had just happened, and we were away from our families. |
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Now, two communicating annunciator panels alert him when the UPSs kick in and go to battery. |
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For the year-end party, we're asking each employee to kick in twenty dollars. |
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We in the Conservative Party have asked and continue to ask the agriculture minister to ante up and kick in the federal portion of this funding for other ruminant programs, ones already committed to by the western provinces. |
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All they needed was a good kick in the pants. |
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You just don't steal a man's gun and not expect a swift kick in the jewels in return. |
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So when you increase ghrelin levels, you stimulate that growth hormone to kick in, and growth hormone builds you not only up but out as well. |
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The fascia also carries redesigned headlights, stronger front wheel-wells and new taillights to give it a small but nice kick in the looks department. |
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Russia does not have a comprehensive social safety net able to kick in when plant closures suspend the centralized economy's guarantees of work, housing, health care, recreation and a reasonable standard of living. |
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And then that same pathway of rational drug design can kick in. |
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Once a bubble has been recognized, that's the time for mechanisms of caution and prudence to kick in, even in the face of exuberanceespecially in the face of exuberance. |
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The plan, with duties reportedly ready to kick in by July 12, was adopted by EU finance ministers and has prompted complaints by the U. S. biodiesel industry. |
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The negative impacts kick in quickly and are devastating. |
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But she was often snakebit: she lost seven U. S. outdoor championships to Regina Jacobs, who always seemed to have a slightly better kick in the final straightaway. |
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The technological change in the powertrains of road vehicles caused by consumer behaviour and the legal requirements when registering new vehicles is in full swing and is also beginning to kick in on the aftermarket. |
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Those who pretend that human ingeniousness holds a solution ready to kick in when needed, won't be able to lie much longer. |
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That was just thenal kick in the teeth for the Ibrox punters and maybe even for Walter himself. |
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I am sure they know it is not slated to kick in until some time next year. |
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The time had come to give my career a kick in the pants. |
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This results in longer sarcomeres until the neurologic protective mechanisms kick in again to tighten and shorten the muscle fibers. |
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They can make that spending kick in at any time because their projections, according to every credible economic forecaster and every external commentator, is absolutely out of control. |
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They know that if the negotiations fail, further sanctions will kick in, economic stagnation will worsen, and they will reap the benefits of widespread public disenchantment. |
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This band gives many a kick in the anthill and picks up the story again, right where Stonehenge, in its time a national figurehead of the genre, has virtually given it up. |
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The performances have been there but it is just that the results have been like a kick in the cajones. |
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With Alexis Sanchez on fire, the Gunners could pile on the misery today, as long as their travel sickness doesn't kick in again. |
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If there had been no budget last evening, Canadians and Quebecers would not have gone all year without noticing, because the significant effects will not kick in for two, three and four years. |
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Anything else that goes wrong really gives you a kick in the teeth. |
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Wednesday's victory came on a headed corner kick in the 73rd minute by center back Carles Puyol, a man whose ringlet curls belong on a 1970s Farrah Fawcett poster. |
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Penalty deciders will only kick in from the quarter-final stage of the tournament. |
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The only time the team was in danger was on an indirect free kick in the penalty area with three minutes left, but El Salvador failed to capitalize. |
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To take this funding away from us whenwe are already dealing with the school building cuts would be a real kick in the teeth. |
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It is obvious that not only were the propositions rejected, but the governor received a kick in his muscle-bound gluteus maximus. |
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So what happens is when the diesel? the windmill goes kicking out 3 megawatts but the community needs 5 megawatts of power, then, the diesel has to kick in. |
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Tesco also claims Manchester University researchers analysed Beckham's free kicks and came up with a computer generated virtual free kick in order to get the curve right. |
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There are also firm, sharp offerings, like kasseri, kefalograviera and graviera, which are just right for a pecorinolike kick in a savory pie or fried up into tzaganaki. |
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But Ryan Mason's England debut in the 1-1 draw with Italy was a kick in the codpiece for clubs who assemble squads in overseas boutiques instead of local corner shops. |
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That kid needs a kick in the pants to get his homework done today. |
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She had found her niche by being truant from school, giving people a bad time, and basically giving her parents' strict moral values a good, strong kick in the teeth. |
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This kick in the teeth, brutal under any circumstances, is more so, given Matoussem Ramoud's gentle, trusting nature and his infatuation with America. |
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You have to push the switch hard to get the heater to kick in. |
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The beer starts with a lovely juicy mango character on the front of the palate, and then the Habaneros kick in, bringing the heat and searing the taste buds. |
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The Italian scored his fourth goal in as many games with a stunning overhead kick in the 28th minute to open the floodgates for a City goal-fest against Aston Villa. |
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