Mentees need someone to bounce ideas off of, to talk about life, to shoot the breeze. |
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On both occasions I visited, regulars drifted in and out to shoot the breeze at the counter with the owner. |
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A few ageing regulars shoot the breeze but otherwise it's quiet on a weekday afternoon. |
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At noon, they stopped for half an hour to eat and shoot the breeze, and then went back to work for the best part of the afternoon. |
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Victor Parker is his name, and the two men shoot the breeze like old business associates. |
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Thus every day, on my blog, these strangers show up, just to shoot the breeze, flirt, kvetch, veer off topic and, most of all, pay zero attention to what I have written. |
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After working in the field, we try to shoot the breeze over a bottle of beer. |
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Better to drink a couple glasses of wine, digest, shoot the breeze, loll around, then roll. |
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A bunch of us would get together regularly at the Abbotsford Bar in Edinburgh and just shoot the breeze. |
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Meet fellow club members twice a year to talk shop and shoot the breeze! |
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We'd sit on her front porch and shoot the breeze. |
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It's a chance for like-minded individuals to get together and shoot the breeze, share their experiences, and trade tips on specific topics. |
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He always addresses my needs in either parts or service and he always has time to shoot the breeze. |
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The guy most likely to pop into another coach's office, just to shoot the breeze. |
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And it isn't too far away, so I'll be able to shoot the breeze in the morning. |
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I'd love to tell you all about it next week, but it's someone else's turn to shoot the breeze. |
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Cindy Crawford and Justin Bieber are also along to shoot the breeze. |
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The boys will be performing their new single, Shoot The Breeze, on The Book Show with Mariella Fostrup at the Hay-On-Wye Festival. |
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