Perhaps it would be gratuitously unkind to compare the intellects and depth of the two presidents. |
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Not that he was abusive, unkind or violent, he just expected more of her than she often felt she had to give. |
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I believe that we will be judged on this record and not by unkind and unjustified personal remarks in the press. |
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The weather gods were unkind making the course unpleasant in certain areas. |
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If we are ever together again, we must always remember that there are to be no unkind words, thoughts or gestures. |
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Climatic conditions were unkind on the second evening, but that did not deter a sizeable crowd from braving the elements. |
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Without wishing to be unkind, it was student vegetable gloop with little herby scone things on the top. |
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It is simply unkind to force people in Reg's position to travel overseas to get their last wish. |
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The downturn in the technology sector has been unkind to those with a strong bias towards this area. |
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Their sense of humour is unkind and they tend to enjoy other people's misfortunes. |
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It refers to the unfriendly stare and unkind glances we sometimes get from people around us. |
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In the meantime, they were not unkind to him, and their greatest offense was his captivity. |
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Against any tendency to naturalize evil, Julian sees evil as profoundly unnatural, unkind. |
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They have delicate mouthparts, so it's really unkind to use barbed hooks on the poor things. |
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They tend to give players opportunities and a run in the first team whereas others, and I am not being unkind, would chop and change. |
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My lady, fair and lovely and unkind, your gentle coyness wounds me to the heart. |
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The kindest men do not suffer and the most terrible people do not have unkind physiognomies. |
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There was unkind talk in the press about him dyeing his hair, possibly even wearing a toupee. |
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The eldest son in his family, Mohan had a bad time at school because his speech was the focus of many unkind taunts from his classmates. |
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He and Marx both understood that history was both kind and unkind, that it had its stops, starts, and occasional reverses. |
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Please do not make things worse by doing this, it only harms the individual involved more and unkind words can scar quite deeply. |
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After all, the more unkind the times, the more the survival of the culture itself comes into question. |
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Alfred Kinsey was raised by a prig of a father, unkind to his son, his wife and anyone else who got in the way of his bitter view of the world. |
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Some people are unkind enough to say it is a trade union and does not act in the public interest. |
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This minister and this government have never sought to be unfair or unkind to the teaching profession. |
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Rounding up, Salih stressed that it would be foolish and unkind to turn down laurels bestowed by those who appreciated your work. |
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When someone insults us or does something unkind to us, an internal formation is created in our consciousness. |
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Farmers are always getting the blame for being unkind to the Environment, where in the majority of cases, the farmers are blameless. |
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The indifferent look on my face is only there because people like you are being unkind to me and I can't fight back. |
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The humour was not unkind, but merely a case of an audience laughing along with a Freudian slip. |
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My husband's family has been unkind to me in the past and I want them to know I will not put up with this hurtful behavior anymore. |
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He was unkind to Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, while devoting a whole essay to the adroit but decidedly lesser The Hidden Fortress. |
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Australians are trained to dread invasion and yet cannot stomach being unkind to any stranger. |
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The first time round, in 2011, the critics, while not unkind, were not laudatory. |
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In the event of unkind weather conditions, the show will be moved indoors. |
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Amel kisses his hand and asks his advice on dealing with the unkind remarks. |
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I invited friends to jump on his bed and tried to humiliate him with unkind remarks. |
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Don't make unkind remarks or argue with your ex-partner in front of children. |
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She is brusque and unkind to the point of obnoxiousness for much of the time but also capable of great generosity. |
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I turned to say some very unkind things to friend cat who was now in a frenzy of excitement. |
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So when they tumble off, the fact that we cheer and sneer is awful, hypocritical, and deeply, sometimes savagely unkind. |
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It would be unkind to force you to speak of your torment twice. |
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If you have eczema, you may have had people stare at you or make unkind comments about your appearance. |
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The remarks I made regarding the unemployed in Halifax were insensitive and unkind, and I apologize for them. |
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Mr. Bill Blaikie: Mr. Speaker, I do not want to be unkind but the hon. member should pay closer attention. |
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For the second year in a row the weather man was rather unkind to the Owl's Head Challenge organizers and participants. |
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While not wishing to be unkind to our colleague from Red Deer, I find this somewhat of an exaggeration. |
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In the days of sailing ships the trip to North America took two or three months, longer if the winds were particularly unkind. |
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I do not want to be unkind, unfair or inflict too much damage on the member for Okanagan-Coquihalla. |
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I have watched people in my neighbourhood who I do not think intended any cruelty or intended to be unkind to their animals. |
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If you're harboring the slightest bitterness toward anyone, or any unkind thoughts of any sort whatever, you must get rid of them quickly. |
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I heard members of the Reform, and I hesitate to be too unkind since they were being somewhat gentle, say they would not support the bill. |
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While it may be invidious to single out any particular group, it must be said that 1996 proved particularly unkind to people with disabilities. |
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Heck, you might even be as unkind to note that the work is a tad dated. |
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So long as they pigged it with him and were willing to share his lot he was not unkind to them, unless he happened by some accident to achieve drunkenness. |
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There's Something About Mary was rather unkind to women who tan to crocodile-skinned excess, and featured an electrocution scene involving a yappy dog and a drug overdose. |
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It operates on a shoestring so it may be unkind to point to the very poor production values, but it and others have solved problems more creatively than is the case here. |
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With your unkind and unjust words, you continue to cause harm to LGBT people in your religious communities. |
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Consider those surrounded by vacated cubicles, absorbing the work of those who were let go, anticipating their own unkind fate. |
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Dear Sir, Godfrey Horsecroft has generously permitted me to reply on his behalf to the unkind letter from a Mr Ruttmold which you published last week. |
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Once again we find that nature is unkind to simplistic formulations. |
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She had never been one to argue back or be unkind to anyone. |
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Penalty shoot-outs have been as unkind to the ladies as their male counterparts of late. |
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Lily goes to do the tests and does not even suspect Tisa her unkind opponent, who also wants a place at the Academy. |
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There's an unkind saying that it takes one to know one, and it's almost true. |
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He had a hawky face with a high colour and eyes like slits of blue crystal, set in a web of fine lines. They were hard but not unkind. |
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Rip called him by name, but the cur snarled, snapped his teeth, and passed on. This was an unkind cut indeed. |
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The comments from reviewers.most of whom work on a research subject far removed from the applicant's subject, are totally useless and generally unkind and destructive for no valid reason. |
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His slow-cooked recipe involves a very low oven, lemon juice, a little water and four and a half hours of patient turning while fending off unkind remarks about its unprepossessing appearance. |
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Apart from the Kop making unkind remarks about the size of Steve Bruce's head, which the Hull manager took in good spirit, Liverpool produced almost nothing before the interval. |
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The often-irascible Mr. Young then tries to make unkind remarks about Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the Democratic leader and former speaker, while Ms. Hirono gives him a playful nudge. |
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Commissioner, without seeking to be unkind, is it not fair to say that the Commission's record on cutting red tape has been very high on promise, but very low on delivery? |
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The world is grotesque and unkind in this disturbing drawing. |
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The old lady declares that Lady Byron was by no means of a cold temperament, but that the affectionate impulses of her nature were checked by the unkind treatment she experienced from her husband. |
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There is nothing negative in this: it is not enough to refrain from making unkind comments, we must try to find something pleasant to say in their place. |
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People may say that it is unkind to make a reflection like that. |
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I trust that, further to this report, the Commission will very soon table specific proposals to protect the interests of people to whom fate has been unkind. |
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Even leftist Syriza in Greece has a rightwing nationalist party, the Independent Greeks, in the mix, maximising its opportunities to be unkind to migrants. |
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Advertisers may sniff at low-down gossip, but America's female readers seem happy to take their celebrity news any way they can get it true, false, worshipful or unkind. |
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If fate has been unkind in failing to give you a high education, that need not keep you out of the business or social tournament: you will do the best you can with what learning you have, and brace yourself to acquire more. |
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With Annabel you never got any of the negative fallout you get from people who are striving in an unkind, competitive fashion, the kind who, the minute they feel threatened, go psycho. |
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We had to learn that to refuse such gifts, which represented serious sacrifice, was more unkind than to accept them. |
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Can she excuse my wrongs with Virtue's cloak? Shall I call her good when she proves unkind? |
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Like many of us, philosophers can be small-mindedly unkind to their partners and friends. |
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To his friends, she was an inexplicable choice of wife, and the subject of some rather disparaging and unkind remarks. |
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The Pattles moved in the upper echelons of colonial society, although the resemblance of their name to the common native patronym Patel inspired a certain amount of unkind genealogical snickering. |
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To describe Dodd as a journeyman circuiteer would not be too unkind. |
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They encourage him to really think about his words before he says them, how they may impact on others, to use his social filter to stop words that are mean, unkind, or wrong. |
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