It was their job to haul the flour, stoke the fire, clean, cook, and most importantly, knead the dough. |
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These ads are geared to stoke voter emotions and fears to hammer a candidate on a controversial issue. |
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I remember my father going out to stoke the furnaces to make sure they didn't go out. |
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Healy still goes online to read it from time to time, to stoke his ire anew. |
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On a dank autumnal afternoon in Glasgow's west end the light is liquid, a day to draw the blinds and stoke the fire. |
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Here two men are shown recuperating in the stoke hold under the ventilation shaft. |
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We must not, by inattention, stoke the fires of resentment among our own population. |
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In preparation for the smoking ceremony, they stoke a smouldering fire of ti-tree and eucalyptus. |
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New Zealand began accurately, Wales began badly, and never managed to stoke the crowd noise into something tumultuous. |
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I zipped it open, pulled out my pipe, matches and baccy, and commenced to stoke up and enjoy a good British moment. |
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Just to really stoke things up, we arrived at Lyneham to find that we'd been booked an early lunch in the canteen. |
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Many pensioners could even use their pots to invest in buy-to-let properties which could stoke future house price bubbles. |
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It is too early to tell if such aggressive measures will mute the violence or stoke it. |
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The ability of companies to raise prices will stoke earnings, a signal that the economy is on the mend, and stocks could climb higher. |
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When food and fuel subsidies go, people riot and social tensions stoke the flames. |
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Mounds of wood stood ready to stoke smoky campfires being used as Dutch ovens. |
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From Tampa to Denver, there is enough intrigue to stoke the interest of even the most casual football fan. |
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Derby fixtures stoke the emotional fires, polarise the fans and add spice to the bread and butter of league football. |
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I'd be sharing decisions with the other guy, the reptile, the functionary whose usual job was to stoke the boiler and run the air and water intakes. |
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Kelp, bladder wrack, Irish moss and kombu are chock-full of iodine, and they can stoke a sluggish thyroid, speed up metabolism and assist in cellulite reduction. |
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It is difficult to stoke up any fire in your belly in circumstances like that. |
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He also accuses Theresa May of distorting figures to stoke up anti-immigrant feeling. |
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Sikh community leaders helped stoke up the controversy and were mostly to blame. |
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He was an authoritarian, but had a real feel for his players, highly aware of the effect of his words and how to stoke up his men's ambitions. |
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So, Sean Burroughs for Dewon Brazelton doesn't stoke your hot-stove fire? |
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For Live Another Day, did you make a concerted effort to not stoke those fires? |
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After all, it is easy to walk up to this podium and point fingers and stoke divisions. |
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This belief has helped stoke the notion that recovery is on the way by the end of this year. |
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Truckloads of firewood were brought in to stoke the dozens of small fires over which the food was cooked. |
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While EPA reported that its plan was progressing on schedule, this news only served to stoke fresh local hostilities. |
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When poverty is added to ethnic or regional inequalities, the grievances that stoke civil violence are compounded. |
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He just has to stoke her up and we know that that is something Safran and her skipper know how to do. |
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Instead of challenging ignorance, media on occasions stoke the fires of intolerance and racism. |
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Unanswered, its effect is to stoke resentment and encourage conflict. |
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The local Reserve Defence Forces drawn from D-Company of the 10th infantry battalion, got the eagerly awaited parade off to a punctual start on the stoke of 2.30 pm. |
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Meanwhile, guatemalan civic groups worry that the presence of U.S. troops could once again stoke repression at home. |
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So much of the fear the media tries to stoke in me is fear of the oppressed underdog lashing out. |
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But also just as the news media plays to or even inflames such fears to drive ratings, Republicans stoke fear to drive votes. |
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They are also likely to stoke the kind of sectarian mistrust from which ISIS draws its strength. |
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There are people who intentionally stoke the flames of hate against our community. |
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Indeed once the guitars come in and the band stoke up their mighty drone, the effect is that of an amped up Popul Vuh, the German band who soundtracked many Herzog films. |
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I had assumed this to be from the deck above, but on reflection it could easily have been the bulkhead separating the stoke hold from the coal bunkers. |
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You have to stoke the body the same way you would feed a fire. |
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Brand-name acts showed up to stoke their careers. |
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The current work rate and the pressure in the Geneva boiler will have to be increased and, like others, we intend to stoke up the Geneva boiler to get things moving. |
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The oven should be low, for ease of stacking up to 15 trays, but the flames of the fire should be at least 50 cm removed from the lowest tray, hence a 10-20 cm fire pit is required for each stoke hole. |
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Trigger-happy combat is substituted for stealth but there is the glut of PS4 enhancements to further stoke your fire. |
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Rectangular boxes of brick or stone served as furnaces, with an opening at the bottom to stoke the fire and remove ashes. |
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Our caretaker, Maria, would turn up unannounced to hang a bunch of semi-dried tomatoes from the ceiling of our charming little kitchen or show us how to stoke the wood-fired oven attached to the home. |
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They are appreciated as stylish snacks that stoke the desire to take wing, as delicacies that accompany a journey's beginnings, as sweets that encourage all impulses. |
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Suitable for high speed and long stoke operation. |
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Looking at current policy, one can see that the cutbacks that are made in all areas of society do not stoke up demand, but, on the contrary, stifle it still further. |
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If we go on selling this project to the peoples of Europe on a lie, we are more likely than not to stoke up and cause bitter resentments and extreme nationalism. |
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Many on the far right of this Parliament fear an effective European Union because it will diminish their ability to stoke up fear at a national level. |
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But it is vital that in doing so, they do not just stoke up more trouble. |
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To stoke that conversation, organizers will roll out a range of interactive components and unveil content and registration information as it becomes available. |
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It should foster liquidity and stoke demand. |
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While American politicians stoke anti-Chinese hysteria and French ones fuel worries about the disappearance of jobs to eastern Europe, British politicians keep off the subject. |
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This has implied a worsening of relations with the U. S., as the Tehran continues to stoke nationalist feelings to compensate for growingly precarious standards of living and to placate rising popular aspirations. |
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He was accused by the truth and reconciliation commission of conspiring with the apartheid security forces to stoke township violence in the early 1990s, a charge he has always vehemently denied. |
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The move, two weeks after a 23-year-old male aide complained to police that the former deputy prime minister sexually assaulted him, is bound to stoke political tensions in Malaysia. |
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Whether you get wayward on shred hitting massive park jumps, popping off groomed rollers, rewinding off stumps, or charging untracked lines, the Agent adds stoke to all sides of the collective addiction. |
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Stand up to the blowhards and the demagogues who stoke division and hate for their own selfish ends. |
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In a move clearly designed to stoke the fires of Ford Nation and enrage left-leaning councillors, Ford came out swinging at left-leaning special interest groups. |
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