Gen put something new on his machine, and maybe his CD burner is working now. |
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I'm against the principle of retreading ground unless you have something new to say. |
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These days artists aspire to come up with an idea for something new to put on an arts grant application. |
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Indeed, beyond the conventional list of individual human rights something new was at issue. |
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The power of attraction will only have a chance to work though, if the other partner is open minded and willing to consider something new. |
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By modern rock standards we were tame, but at the time, it was something new that people had never seen before. |
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I can stare at this masterpiece for hours, seeing something new and awe-inspiring in the picture every day. |
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He provides really on-target tips for refining how teams should approach projects that are aiming for something new, something better. |
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So put your inhibitions behind you and allow yourself to sample a taste of something new! |
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The sharing aspect of it let you find others who had similar tastes and sample their collections, letting you find something new. |
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So many computer magazines are more like bridal zines, to be purchased only when one is in the market for something new. |
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Now, you say that they were not capable of coming up with a new conceptional approach, something new and creative. |
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The British consumer, long familiar with biryanis and bhunas and increasingly sophisticated about spicy flavours, is ready to try something new. |
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But it's pretty much guaranteed that those trendsetters who start the fashion rages already have something new in mind. |
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When you go to bargain bins in record stores, you can get Blondie and The Beatles and you can go back every day and get something new and good. |
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Check out my magnificent archives or take a peek into something new in my blogroll. |
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On the off chance I decide to try something new and purchase a board game, which one should I purchase? |
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This ancient Nabatean city is so rich in history that everyday something new is being discovered. |
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With all of the reality shows that make TV watching a complete bore, I was glad to finally see something new, fresh, absorbing and entertaining. |
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Spectators were totally focused on the ebb and flow, but came away with nothing except the feeling that they'd seen something new and untamable. |
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I'll do the wracking of the brains to think of something new to write each time. |
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If he acquires something new for his home, he always gives away a similar object. |
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At the Musee Cantini you can bet your last sou there'll be something new and exciting to see every time you visit. |
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We also organized a trip to a velodrome in London so that we could try something new. |
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But commercial hunting for bushmeat has become such a problem here that we had to try something new to control it. |
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Wished you had something new and unique to wear that will steal a look from those around, when you go to a party? |
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In my article, I tried to state clearly that I was not calling for a return to a pre-Vatican II style of catechesis, but something new. |
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As the only true centre party in this Parliament, New Zealand First wants to propose something new and different. |
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My other half and I are constantly trying to persuade each other to try something new, but to no avail. |
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When you have a stutter, your own language is hard enough, let alone trying something new. |
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Here's hoping that future organizers of events like this can step out and take a chance on something new and exciting for everyone. |
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But its popularity gradually waned as Discovery failed to catch the interest of local viewers who channel-hop to see something new. |
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You have great potential in your birth chart and the ability to always learn something new. |
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With all the previous week's news digested, the Sundays have to offer something new to entice readers to the read the glossy adverts. |
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Buyers are quite choosy and expect something new all the time, whether it is mobile phone ring tones or data cables for a digital diary. |
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I left halfway through, swearing to myself that I would never ever show up to this class without checking to make sure we're doing something new. |
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New Labour ideologues and their supporters want us to believe that youth crime is something new and particularly menacing. |
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It fashions these elements into a performance that allows something new to appear, the design of which was not necessarily inevitable. |
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But as she stood there fearless and prepared for the worst, she felt something new. |
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I did not know whether it was her abnormal dress, her desire for death, or her oddly inflected voice but this girl was something new. |
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No one knows my body as well as I do, so I had an inkling something new was amiss. |
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Among the unexamined assumptions in his book is that the abuse of children by immature, institutionally protected priests is something new. |
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It satisfies people who watch television in the frustratingly vain hope that they might happen across something new. |
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It is one of rapid change, on the cusp of something new, different, and exciting. |
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Macmillan held his earpiece again as if hearing something new, and then turned to the printer just as it began to print. |
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If inductive inference can teach us something new, in opposition to deductive inference, this is because it is not a tautology. |
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He's always willing to try something new to expand our business and profitability. |
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I'd rather sweat and curse over ten pages of something new than dry and polish one page until it's gleaming and ready to be put away. |
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It's an opportunity for people to give themselves a good spring clean and try something new! |
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Nationalism was something new and exciting and was a gratification to be explored vigorously. |
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Among the hubbub of dance beats and gyrating bodies grew a feeling of discovery, of enthusiasm for something new. |
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I can assure you that next time I will be doing a donkey vote unless I have learned something new between now and then. |
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Well, coming back to the exhibition, each stall has something new to offer from doormats to curtains to decoration items. |
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Each day had something new for the children, exposing them to various knowledge inputs. |
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From Russian borscht to banana samal, he hoped to give the children the opportunity of trying something new and healthy. |
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I read a lot of newspapers on the Web, and this is something new and wonderful. |
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The other thing is people are acting as if corruption in the Olympics is something new. |
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But I was always ready to experience something new, so I agreed to hostess. |
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Never mind that you have learned something new, that you have kicked over the traces of your parents. |
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They were intrigued and learned something new about Mozart and aleatory music. |
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I stared at the picture, something new and foreign squeezing my heart and wringing it dry. |
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Onscreen wizards guide you through the trickier tasks and hint boxes appear each time you try something new. |
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We need creative builders, not mere reformers or rejectionists, in order to build something new. |
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The use of aluminium and steel in car production is thought of as something new. |
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When you buy something new you don't expect to then find what you've bought is second hand. |
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Thirty years ago he fused the sound of punk with dub reggae and early hip-hop acts and created something new. |
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It's a bold, inventive shot at something new that misses the target. |
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And we would imagine how long it took for the scorched earth to transform into a field where something new had grown. |
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We always look at whenever someone's launching something new, particularly when it's in our wheelhouse. |
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If there's something new about today's zombie, it's his relatability. |
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The old pool had outlived its heyday and to fill it in and create something new has to be the best way forward for this important part of Scarborough's seafront. |
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There's a growing upper class which can afford to be decadent, at the same time that the vast underclass would desperately like to possess something new, unscarred. |
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That is, of course, unless one has something new to say about the French emperor. |
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Here's something new to be struggling with apart from shorthand. |
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The movement in Winter in the Blood, the geographical, spiritual movement, is something new in cinema. |
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Have you been promising yourself that you will take up something new to get you out during the summer, but then somehow you always manage to end up in the pub? |
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There are stirrings of something new when they rule in favor of those students who exercise freedoms of expression and assembly for religious purposes. |
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Hundreds of people, young and old, have taken up the opportunity to learn new skills, enjoy a hobby or just try out something new for the fun of it. |
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The gossip magazines and tabloids try their best to get something new. |
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I think I will start looking for something new when I get back from hols. |
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Whereas the radio show, TV show, books and computer game are all recognisably variations on a theme, this is something new and almost entirely unrelated. |
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He is bringing in something new and unexpected and disturbing. |
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They use spindles made of bamboo, which is something new to us. |
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Driving at eighty miles per hour wasn't something new for him. |
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But once EV-68 fizzles out, surely something new will fill its place in the rabid 24-hour all-crisis-all-the-time news cycle. |
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It was a venerable and respected venue with a proud history that Arthur had taken possession of in a bid to bring something new to London's theatreland. |
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A multiplicity of interesting directions beckon, tempting you to take on too much by rushing into something new before finishing the last thing you started. |
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How many of you have scratched your head into baldness trying to come up with something new and interesting to say on the Feast of the Transfiguration? |
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The other stories too reflect the vibrancy and dynamism of the short story as a form that constantly offers something new in craft, technique and theme. |
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I should have stuck with them but no, I just had to try something new! |
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One day, when I was in my teens, I wanted something new to read, so I went into the study and looked around on my parents's bookshelves and found this peculiarly titled book. |
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The Milton Ager and Jack Yellow song signified the end of a dark era in American history...and the start of something new. |
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Next, I decided to try something new and have students block out the shapes that they had drawn with some frisket, which is masking film commonly used by airbrush artists. |
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Though some essays are certainly stronger, or more penetrating than others are, each brings something new to the table, and enhances the dialogue in some way. |
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I was also beginning to wonder if anyone was actually reading my blog, but then my friend Jessica M. Facebooked me and commented that I really needed to post something new. |
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But amid all the supersizing, many of us feel God doing something new, something small and subtle. |
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After the original plan failed miserably, they decided to go back to the drawing board and come up with something new. |
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Philip Johnson, who had first taken his inspiration from Le Corbusier, also began to look beyond modernism for something new. |
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Pliny repeated Aristotle's maxim that Africa was always producing something new. |
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If a crop fails in a monoculture, we rely on agricultural diversity to replant the land with something new. |
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As the auto industry is waining away, the city is looking for something new. |
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Previous antidrug campaigns have obviously failed and it is time to try something new before more lives are lost. |
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We return to more familiar ground with the Dadaists, whose rejection of past art led them to destroy it in the creation of something new. |
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Actual occasions are concrescences, processes by which varied antecedent conditions are worked up into something new. |
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The Lady Alice apple is a welcome addition for consumers who love apples and are looking for something new in the late winter and spring. |
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The humid is readily mobile, and thus women are unconstant and always seeking something new. |
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It seemed like the mall rats of Springfield and Eugene wanted something else, something new. |
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Every year there is something new, something that everybody who is anybody gourmetwise, has to eat and rave about. |
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But this may be like the hydra, where something new can grow in its place. |
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The theatergoing experience gave students permission and motivation to be inquisitive about something new. |
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The issue of the digital divide is not something new, however over the past few months it has become increasingly high-profile. |
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In his school's symbological system, the crow represented change, something new and good. |
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The intimacy and depth of the images in pina are something new. |
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Disappearance of the common house sparrow from the urban areas is not something new. |
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Well, we learned something new about what's going on in wingnut land. |
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The virement of environmental funds to a World Heritage Site road project was something new in this country, and was to be welcomed as a good precedent. |
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He said that what will separate me from there other crooners will be original material in my genre, so I've been writing material to finally put out something new. |
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This approach leads to a nearly constant flood of memos and meetings that sound as if something new is constantly being hawked again and again and again. |
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Srinivasan's belief in astrology and numerology isn't something new. |
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Famous in the film industry for being a perfectionist, this is not the first time mir has taken up the challenge of learning something new for a film role. |
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