He knew he was ready, knew it was real, knew it was her, and the words came without a stutter or a stammer. |
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She asked several times and I tried to speak but again, it was a struggle and mostly a stutter. |
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Unpleasant like the faint nausea of the initial stutter and sharp turns of a car journey. |
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She strode out of the tent and watched him stoking the fire for a few moments, there was a blustery wind making it stutter and struggle. |
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Computer screens glow, fax machines stutter out reams of paper and the filing cabinets which line every wall bulge with thousands of documents. |
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He looked a lot more rested last night and while he rambled on a bit, he didn't stutter as much as I thought he would. |
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Some left-handed people when pressurised to change over to the right hand also tend to develop a stutter or stammer. |
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He hoped he would be able to coherently say what he was feeling, despite his stutter. |
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This leader, who comes so well-advertised, tends to stutter and to revert to managerial bureaucratese. |
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Although I'm a very powerful man my work chums slag me constantly for my Dublin accent and terrible stutter. |
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David has trouble looking you in the eye, has a stutter and hasn't yet got the hang of speaking on the phone. |
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I expect him to break into a strangled stutter as I wring his neck, to beg for his life. |
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The video image is sharp, though there is an occasional image stutter on hard cuts. |
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He may have spoken with a slight Liverpool accent and a slight stutter and was carrying a cream Reebok bag and a plastic bag. |
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When you have a stutter, your own language is hard enough, let alone trying something new. |
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Left-handed children who are prevented from using their their left hands often develop symptoms such as a stutter. |
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I was invited to read some of it at School Assembly and after that my stutter went. |
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His eyes widened a moment, a flare of sudden overwhelming emotion to which he could only stutter. |
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She made a sound, a stutter, but couldn't form or think of any words to say. |
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To compensate for a lifelong stutter, Walton also overpronounces words, which gives his speech an arrogant twist. |
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Mendelssohn also suffered two physical constraints, a hammerlock stutter and a severe curvature of the spine that gave him a hump. |
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The McGuire programme, which helped him, also enabled Pop Idol Gareth Gates to overcome his stutter and go on to chart success. |
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We feel we will stutter and stumble and earn the deserved scorn of our listeners. |
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The last time I saw Ralph Ineson he made me shuffle around Tesco supermarket pretending to be an old man with a stutter. |
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He was very geeky and as he got older, although the stutter left, he was still a bit of a social outcast. |
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But I shouldn't judge the guy solely on the basis of his stutter and seemingly poor social skills. |
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He spoke loudly, often exploding into laughter at his own cleverness and compelling attention with a strange stutter. |
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I didn't stutter or display more than my normal tendencies to verbal incontinence, so I'm about as happy as I could reasonably be expected to be. |
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Yet the data clearly suggest that the job machine may have developed a long-term stutter for other reasons. |
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Hines had befriended the girl after she joined the Lollypop Children's Theatre in order to overcome a stutter. |
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I stutter apologetically that I suppose she looks more like a kid. |
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Don't beat around the bush and falter, stammer, stutter, and stumble over yourself. |
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All he ever did back then was blink and stutter and furtively unwrap mints that had long since gone warm in his pocket. |
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But I also had an index in the back of my diary that explained that famul meant stutter of stammer. |
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Any challenge or crisis, though, could bring the stutter back, together with paralysing stage-fright. |
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He is afraid he will stutter when he speaks in court or that he will unintentionally offend someone. |
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If this is not the case, the playback will stutter or it will not play at all. |
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I like animals because some people never hear me out when I stutter but my Minka always does. |
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However, if the display is performing any type of frame rate conversion there will be very noticeable stutter introduced in the smooth motion. |
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Aidan squeaked, with an added stutter because he was suddenly nervous. |
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Give me some time to stammer, stutter and stumble my way through this. |
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Particularly annoying among the record's contrivances is its frivolous use of drum machines, which skip and stutter when the songs call for simple beats. |
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A thin man with a wisp of a goatee beard, he struggles with a stutter to explain what happened to him that day. |
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With Ambassador John Negroponte in place, halting dialogues could begin to splutter, and stutter, and stumble. |
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The Bradford star, who has struggled to overcome his own stutter, is about to sit final speech exams which will qualify him to help others who are verbally challenged. |
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In almost every case, it's the smile, or the stutter, that decides it all. |
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He had a stutter and she helped him, and gave him confidence. |
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When I concentrated, I could hear the explosions in the distance, supplemented every once in a while by the stutter of a machinegun or the crack of a rifle. |
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He raps very fast and melodically and percussively, and it helped me get rid of the stutter. |
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The entire sound track of In girum is a second ahead of the picture and there is a kind of stutter between the main titles and the first image. |
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Tories ridiculed stammerer Mr Balls as he mixed his words and began to stutter. |
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The Churchill Centre and Museum says the majority of records show his impediment was a lateral lisp, while Churchill's stutter is a myth. |
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At that time Winston was a stocky boy with red hair who talked with a stutter and a lisp. |
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Given that his active mind and quick wit tend to be obscured by his unpredictable stutter, Hal Hefner is not an obvious candidate for his school debate team. |
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Priestley's illness left him with a permanent stutter and he gave up any thoughts of entering the ministry at that time. |
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Deleuze feels especially intrigued by people's asyntactic stutter, stammer, and wordless cries. |
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Disfluency data of German preschool children who stutter and comparison children. |
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Meanwhile, the archbishop, a man devoted to the poor, a man whose shyness sometimes caused him to stutter, had been indecorously pitched from his balcony. |
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To stutter your whole life is much harder. |
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And his club foot stands in for the author's debilitating stutter. |
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Richter's compulsive eschewal of cliché little concerned with results, which stutter on uncrossed verges of meaning suggests desiccated existentialist anguish: Giacometti without tears. |
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Richter's compulsive eschewal of cliché — little concerned with results, which stutter on uncrossed verges of meaning — suggests desiccated existentialist anguish: Giacometti without tears. |
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Lula's failure to provide them caused markets to stutter again this week. |
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And lo and behold, I didn't stammer or stutter when I sang! |
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Sometimes an f-word or a b-word is used in TV and movies like a stutter. |
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People who stutter are often typecast and fall into certain roles. |
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The basso profondo sobs and shouts, the tenors stutter, shriek and expostulate, the sopranos rush up and down their scales, uttering the very sounds of semi-comic disaster Kerbel's words describe. |
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The song used gimmicks such as a vocal stutter to simulate the speech of a mod on amphetamines, and two key changes. |
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The PWS frequently mindreads other people as judging them because they stutter. |
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False starts become visible records of her hesitancy, like the stutter that precedes enunciations too long or complex to be managed in a single utterance. |
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Scott Yaruss and Robert Quesal, the OASES is designed to examine functional communication difficulties and quality of life for adults who stutter. |
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Notify's VMWI technology detects the stutter dial tone that telephone company voice mail providers use to alert their users that they have new voice mail messages. |
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