Serving cheap, low-quality food and beverages to ungrateful men and women wearing polyester is an abomination. |
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She read one sentence and could hardly believe that such abomination could possibly exist let alone be described. |
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Today the far right uses the unconscious urges of gender-sex abomination and abjection toward Others. |
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This is the great curse of the 20th Century secular scientists who are an abomination in the eye of The Lord. |
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A good few who declared they would march in protest at the abomination cried off with a variety of weak excuses. |
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When are we going to understand that debt slavery is an abomination, is abhorrent to God? |
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Furthermore, I will never bring myself to describe such an intense and ungodly sight as this abomination of evil. |
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This abomination is an insult to taxpayers' intelligence, and why we have put up with this nonsense is mystifying. |
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Here, in the words of the Scripture, is desolation of abomination, or at any rate its beginnings. |
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Trench, ever quick on the draw, drew a shotgun out of his trench-coat and quickly pointed it at the abomination in their midst. |
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Here, it seemed, was the ultimate source of all miscreation and abomination. |
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Good works in the sense of meritoriousness are naturally an abomination to God. |
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This alleged listicle is such an abomination that we feel to compelled to offer a reasoned critique. |
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Fortunately, it turned out they too spoke the international language of prog rock or whatever musical abomination he was riffing on at the time. |
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From now on, pizza will just be a circular abomination we order out of desperation, when there isn't time to make anything good. |
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And the flames of their life's work would burn in his eyes, his heart, until every last abomination had breathed their last. |
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Or because one horror tops another, and that Tzahal would have in the process climbed one more rung on the ladder of abomination and crime? |
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Merkel gets spooked by the radical – and that's why this referendum idea is an abomination. |
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Have we decided yet on whether zero-hours contracts are an abomination, or a means for small businesses to thrive? |
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The government should be leading this nation instead of being an abomination on some of the issues where it is not doing the job. |
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It is an absolute abomination to this House and everything that is good about this place and good about Canada. |
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Commissioner, we want to work together to prevent this kind of abomination. |
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This is indeed an abomination in economic and human terms, but it is also a real provocation in political terms. |
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And Allah only wishes to remove all abomination from you, ye members of the Family, and to make you pure and spotless. |
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There is a need for really vigorous efforts to combat this abomination, this terrible act, wherever it occurs. |
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Description fails to do justice to the abomination of desolation of that vast battle-field in the rain? |
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All of this would be an abomination to those who preach hate and practise murder if we were to walk away. |
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Guys today treat their bodies as temples and liquor is an abomination. |
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Their sins are unforgivable, and their disregard of the children is an abomination. |
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All of this is an abomination not merely as a matter of principle, but even in purely practical terms. |
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It is a cityscape of abomination, the nightmare of a Classicist. |
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With this tradition I view this bonfire as act of abomination. |
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He rightly recognized that the Berlin Wall was an abomination and a poignant symbol of the chains imprisoning the captive nations of Eastern Europe. |
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For that alone, the makers of this abomination should be horsewhipped. |
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I'm sure a real DJ could whip up a better version of this abomination fairly easily, but I was just farting around in audio software and figured I might as well upload it. |
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He represents it also as a funereal bird, a monster of the night, the very abomination of human kind. |
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Mr President, those countries used to Roman and Napoleonic law have to accept that the state governs their lives, but in Britain any such idea is an abomination. |
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But bearbaiting, then a favourite diversion of high and low, was the abomination which most strongly stirred the wrath of the austere sectaries. |
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That which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God. |
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Everyone who loves India should mourn this abomination called Telangana. |
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The whole land is desolate, ungodliness reigns supreme, your sanctuary is desecrated and the abomination of desolation has even contaminated the holy place. |
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No curse or abomination has ever nor will come from Me for my children, and so without distinguishing between sinners and the just, I make my blessing, my kiss of love and peace descend upon all of them. |
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From all this we should learn that everything which has not been united with our God in Christ is nothing but an abomination which we should shun. |
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If you think airline deregulation was an abomination because service can be wretched and airline bankruptcies are common, you will like Lind's telling. |
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The sense of intimate self-observation can see a progressive improvement in the work related to the abomination which we are truly interested in disintegrating. |
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First, I understand that government members resent a mass mailing being done to inform the public about the abomination that the sponsorship scandal is. |
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It is an abomination and should be summarily condemned. |
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Many fled from the places of abomination to the desert. |
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At that gathering, the Secretary-General condemned violence against women, stating that it is an abomination and an attack on the foundations of our civilization. |
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Without the Dairy Milk shell – and I say this without having tried the new product, obviously – we are left with nothing less than an abomination. |
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We'll carry on until the abomination that is Yarl's Wood is shut down. |
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For the government to take this away is an absolute abomination. |
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That is why this is an abomination. Because it did not go through the proper process, what it did was make a mockery of the budgets of this country. |
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Other Protestant groups took a different attitude, with most Anabaptists, Quakers, Congregationalists and Presbyterian Puritans regarding such festivals as an abomination. |
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At first he plans to kill them for committing an abomination but later realizes he has no right to do so, as the cannibals do not knowingly commit a crime. |
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