Does this make you feel like throwing the book at your unsolicited informant, and to lose interest in reading on? |
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There is nothing worse than seeing a child lose interest in the sport because of the antics of a coach. |
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A few big shots went in and he seemed to lose interest and rather than get chinned out cold he just wanted to get himself out of there. |
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Faced with a menu in a restaurant, he would usually order some man-sized dish such as prawns, only to lose interest as soon as it arrived. |
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Meanwhile, younger fans lose interest quickly and often don't develop strong loyalties. |
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If it takes more than eight weeks, you run the risk that members will lose interest and quit before the club becomes formally organized. |
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Your audience will not remember all the numbers and may lose interest in the program. |
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If an appreciation of the value of the human person and of human life is lacking, we will also lose interest in others and in the earth itself. |
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Growers often lose interest in their trees during the long years waiting for the first crop. |
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Some lose interest in doing their job properly or are repeatedly absent from work. |
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A person may appear uninterested and apathetic, and may quickly lose interest in the hobbies they previously enjoyed. |
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When symptoms develop gradually, people may begin to lose interest in their usual pursuits and to withdraw from friends and family members. |
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When I explain the whys and wherefores, they suddenly lose interest, it is not an interesting story any more. |
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If volunteers at those harbour boards don't see some progress over a period of time, they may lose interest. |
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If your price doesn't fit within their price range, they will lose interest even if your products are of better quality. |
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If it does not, they are likely to lose interest and, eventually, whatever abilities they had gained in reading and writing. |
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On the other hand, pupils who already know more than others might lose interest and motivation if information is repeated to excess. |
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Talking about money and family finances in a negative way will probably cause them to lose interest. |
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They lose interest in the dialogue because it leads nowhere. |
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After much self-analysis, I've realized that while I am enthusiastic, energetic, and adventurous, I have the tendency to lose interest on the job after a short time. |
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Unfortunately, after uttering that word, most roll their eyes or curl their upper lip in mild disgust and just plain lose interest in the conversation. |
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Little tykes will soon lose interest, leaving everything safe and sound. |
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When dirk abandons his artistic aspirations to become a bond trader, even Selina seems to lose interest in dirk. |
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When practice sessions become monotonous, players lose interest and focus. |
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In the prodromal phase, people may begin to lose interest in their usual activities and to withdraw from friends and family members. |
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Over the past ten years, we have seen the Polish people lose interest in the political process. |
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Under such circumstances, children and teens may lose interest in participating in sport activities. |
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Sometimes babies lose interest in breastfeeding on their own, when things like walking steal their interest. |
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The person may lose interest in personal hygiene, become easily distracted or repeat the same action over and over again. |
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Communities can lose interest in projects when there are delays or if the results do not lead to immediate action. |
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People with schizophrenia may become less concerned about the way they dress and lose interest in grooming and bathing. |
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Advertising in disclosure documents takes up space and causes consumers to lose interest in the important information. |
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Some believed, rightly, that the people of British North America would lose interest in defence matters unless one or more Canadian regiments were kept active. |
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When a major storm is forecast, residents of coastal cliff tops become concerned about erosion and the safety of their homes, but may quickly lose interest, if the storm passes with little impact. |
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Similarly, it must not lose interest in a country shortly after a conflict has been resolved, as it is exactly at that time that elected governments need most help with the process of governing and providing services. |
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Although such an objective is defendable to respect people's freedom to design and organise their private life, society cannot lose interest in the family. |
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In interviews, I often lose interest early. |
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She always thought he would lose interest in her and wander away. |
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In short, we need to be able to maintain our belief in and enthusiasm for the euro during the warming-up stage as well, although ensuring at the same time that people do not lose interest before the euro actually takes off. |
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We have all wondered about why people lose interest in physical activity. |
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Other times the artists lose interest in the projects. |
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If the low claims ratio persists the insured population could lose interest in the programme over time due to its inferior value and this could open the door to a competitor to service the same market better. |
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This will make producers group together, which will ultimately result in rather standardized produce, which will in turn cause clients to lose interest in these products without taste or originality. |
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Surgery in an opera? How wonderfully decadent! And just as I was beginning to lose interest! |
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The Innu suspect that, after the relocation of the Mushuau Innu and completion of the side agreement on Voisey's Bay, the Government will lose interest in the Innu. |
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But she did not lose interest in business. |
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Although the viewership figures were respectable, its slating in the press led US television networks to lose interest in broadcasting the film. |
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Starving people lose interest in anything but food. |
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