They'll go after him anyway, needless to say, but it stands a good chance of backfiring. |
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Oh, and needless to say, Ronnie Spector is a complete goddess whose voice can make the hairs on the back of one's neck stand on end. |
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So, needless to say, just about everyone was plumb out of breath when they stopped a hundred yards from their target. |
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Well, needless to say, that triggered a pillow fight that lasted for 10 minutes until Nick pulled me down and started kissing me. |
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Such circumstances, needless to say, had a disincentive effect upon agricultural production. |
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The show, needless to say, will offer avid theatregoers a chance to get together and laugh at themselves. |
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Hot tubs unstiffen your muscles and, needless to say, warm your bones comfortably after a battle with the wintry elements. |
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Gary Dale, needless to say, has Frank's unqualified endorsement for the impending electoral tilt. |
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Add to that a covert operation to score some marijuana for his dad's glaucoma, and, well, it's needless to say this day doesn't end well. |
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The computer industry, needless to say, has never worried itself overmuch about that. |
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Anyhow, it has, needless to say, been something of a busy week, mainly spent writing. |
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My films several times were recut after I finished them, and, needless to say, I thought, for the worse. |
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Smooth, sophisticated, and with a slurpability that belies its richness, it is subtly sweet and, needless to say, very, very boozy. |
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Stacy is running for the presidency and needless to say his wife and daughters don't know about his little playmate. |
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I was so angry at her because she went and tattletaled on me, and needless to say she never ratted on herself. |
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It was, needless to say, one of the first albums I ripped, and I listen to bits of it at least once a week. |
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Which, needless to say, could make him a hot prospect for the GOP presidential nomination. |
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I made sizzurp in my mug and needless to say, the post-show trip to the bar was totally redundant and I was nearly nodding off in my seat. |
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So, needless to say, I am intimately familiar with the incident and what took place. |
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But as a result of all this, Steph, who is, needless to say, completely happy and fine, has a date tomorrow. |
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That was not, needless to say, a slogan made-to-order for bumper stickers. |
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It is needless to say that light of fire delights one and all this is due to the basic truth that all beings are of Light. |
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So needless to say this has not only been a way for me to therapize myself by blogging, it's also been a lesson in putting together an on-line work of art! |
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He was said to have been messianic in his zeal to make vaccinations mandatory because of his alleged stockpile of smallpox that, needless to say, never turned up. |
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This, needless to say, has nothing to do with refinding his religious roots. |
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Although, needless to say, I am particularly drawn to the fourth one. |
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And needless to say, they're ideal for the holiday season, festive without feeling overly Christmassy. |
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To find that loose and ludic habit offensive is, needless to say, itself a basic right. |
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Today, the krone still exists, and the Danish economy, needless to say, is doing rather better than those of the euro area. |
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As a British Conservative, needless to say I do not welcome the emphasis on resurrecting the European Constitution. |
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It is needless to say that we are there to give you all the advices you need. |
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The nonprofit was the first interview she went to, and needless to say, she didn't end up going to any others. |
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Airmen, needless to say, showed themselves eager, hurling grenades and firing their weapons at targets on the ground from the earliest days of the war. |
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So now to the big day, needless to say there were hardly any jitterbugs. |
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And needless to say, smoking dope in the past month is not evidence of abuse or dependency. |
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They had accepted all that world of sexual repression, had accepted its rules, the hypocrisy of the myth of female virginity and, needless to say, they had accepted authority. |
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The narrative is driven almost completely by toneless voiceovers, and violence, needless to say, simmers and moans forever beneath the film's surface. |
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We were in a joint family then and needless to say, it was good fun. |
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So needless to say, the celebrations went on long into the night! |
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So needless to say, there were a lot of jokes about spies and so on. |
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In England, needless to say, the mood is one of unbridled optimism. |
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And, needless to say, shortly after he began to believe me, he went away. |
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And needless to say it's the GOP that depends on perpetuation of the fiction. |
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Maybe that is stretching it a bit, but needless to say I was overmatched. |
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The Norwegians, needless to say, were without blemish. |
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And needless to say she flashed her bits to a chorus of howls and wolf whistles. |
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None of these examples, needless to say, shines much light on what would happen if a country with 65 million people and such a huge economy decided to sling its hook. |
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My Group is waiting with bated breath for the document the Commission has promised on a European space satellite in which, needless to say, the input of the European Space Agency is vital. |
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Mr. Speaker, when I heard the news, needless to say, I burst out laughing. |
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Her Britannic Majesty's Foreign and Commonwealth Office, needless to say, grovelled its usual apologies. But cheer up, it's more of a joke than a sanction. |
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And needless to say, they haven't let up on the creepy brutality one iota. |
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In other words, this is a romance not just between a male and a male but between a human being and an animal — a situation that, needless to say, would have no place in the modern, normalizing homophile plot. |
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His Oxford shirts and matching boxers are, needless to say, woven. |
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Most people know about Seattle and its ties to the specialty coffee business so, needless to say, this is a scrutinous town about coffee and its packaging. |
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And needless to say, the Western Australia row will eventually be filled in as well, though not before drinking a schooner of the amber nectar in Perth. |
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And disappearing, needless to say, is a quintessential Austerian act. |
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