But you won't find them in any supermarkets because of their fragility, so you'll have to grow your own. |
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Basically, the Tory MP approached the Liberals because he and his wife, Nina wanted to cross the floor and join the government. |
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Then I'm jealous because, as cringingly adolescent as it feels to say this, I don't know anyone who shares my paradigm. |
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I haven't yet been in my attic, because attics are dark, scary, and often full of bugs and critters. |
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During the show they mentioned frangible bullets as being safe on the range because of their construction. |
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If nothing unlucky happens to you today, cross your fingers and touch wood because it's only six months until the next Friday the 13th. |
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Initial reports suggest that that crash was an accident because of foul weather. |
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I thought at one time that it was because we live in a semi-rural position in the Pennines that you see lots of four-wheel-drive vehicles. |
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The report was critical of police because there was no formal procedure to chase up those who failed to answer to bail. |
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It's best to watch them from the openings rather than swimming in, because you could damage the fragile coral roofs and frighten them off. |
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The frameworks of the looms are made in Mahdia and assembled using only wooden doweling, because metal nails would snag the threads. |
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He became so reckless in his deceptions and crookedness precisely because he believed himself to be untouchable. |
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I'm no longer struck with a feeling that this will only get worse, because frankly it's about as bad as it can be. |
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I remember being terribly cross with him, but he got away with a great deal because of his personal charm. |
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Just because he was spying on Olivia via hidden cameras, it doesn't necessarily mean that he's a creeper. |
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Marine amoebae are not in danger of lysis or crenation because seawater and their cytoplasm are isotonic. |
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Hussey said the residents decided to put up the structure because of the severe crime wave which has plagued the area in the last 18 months. |
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Also, they were common because the Fourth of July was peak beach time for families. |
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The wines are inexpensive, and occupy a small special niche, which has been subject to some derision, in part because of foxiness and sweetness. |
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And hence he would have been unable to appear in any public debate, because he would have been crisscrossing the country. |
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Saxe-Coburg postponed his Wednesday visit to Brussels because of the critical situation after the terrorist acts. |
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Many people cowered from criticising him, not least because of his readiness to confront his critics in the libel courts. |
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The museum was built in 1972, although the chief's home and store remained closed because of their fragility. |
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The original is unisex and in a yellow box because in 1916 most of the fragrances were colognes and everybody wore them. |
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The other players who were not in the initial tour squad because of injury problems are still possibles for the trip to Australia. |
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They were a minority in terms of voting, because if one put that issue to the vote, those who had franchise to vote on it were men. |
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Farmers ask for government help because they cannot harvest their crops after a drought. |
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Most of the others left my life because I was, frankly, too scary and horrid. |
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It is because the dogwood was used for the Cross, it is said, that it has not grown straight, or to a large size ever since. |
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Next time everyone will be against you, because you will have led them to expect that there will be no penalties for crossing you. |
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Every year more people ask for their benefits to be paid direct to a bank by automatic credit transfer, because they find it convenient. |
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This is partly because 80 per cent of assessees have agriculture-based income that is not declared. |
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Phytosaurs are particularly useful for biozonation because these large river and swamp-dwelling animals were frequently fossilized. |
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Actually the real reason there are gaps in the fossil record is because of geological changes over time. |
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He paid for it later when he lost a four-ball because his chip shot was caffeine-compromised. |
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People do not want them referred to as little, touchy-feely persons, because crooks, crims, and offenders is what they are. |
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An American reconnaissance plane veers off course during a flyover and is shot down because its crew sees something they aren't intended to see. |
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The games are hard to counterfeit because players must connect to a server, which can detect and reject software pirates. |
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I have been known to be more of an owl than a fowl because I have late nights and struggle with early mornings. |
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During the day, they dug foxholes, strung wire, and filled sandbags, because site defense is never complete. |
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The tragedy is made all the worse because genocide is both predictable and preventable. |
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You'll know him because of his cruel grin, his foxlike nose, his sparkling eyes and wickedly arched eyebrows, and his unruly shock of gray hair. |
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He said they had turned down the offer because they wanted the council to be in full possession of all the facts surrounding the proposals. |
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The security guards expressed similar fears but were more confident because they are trained to handle such critical situations. |
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The Government has, however, always insisted the two polls were postponed because of concerns over postal ballot fraud allegations. |
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No philosopher would jettison Plato just because it's old fashioned, nor would anyone mock the old fogy Whitman. |
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Even flyovers and ring roads have not helped because of the lack of lane discipline by most vehicles. |
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Well let's go inside, because people say that the sound is worse inside the house, which seems counter-intuitive really. |
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Not because you won't drop weight, but because you'll croak if you eat if after you lose weight. |
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The postal votes cannot be sent out before April 20, because the deadline for applications only lapses at 5pm the previous day. |
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Unofficially, this is because I can't cook, officially, it's because I am making a statement of post-feminist empowerment. |
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I chose the setting of a post-apocalyptic future because it served the story. |
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Second, firm closed-cell foam inside the belt is better than squishy foam because it rebounds better over time. |
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The issue is significant because all the private lines operate as franchises with two-year contracts with the city. |
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That would have been because franking credits would have been consumed as against losses. |
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However, the project folded because the instrument was too expensive for commercialization. |
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Set-aside payments will not help the farmer much because the subsidy is the same as if it had been cropped, but without the actual crop to sell. |
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That is the crux of the problem to me, because frankly, not all films are meant for television. |
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Varying the voltage across the lens, the researchers could change the focal length of the lens, because this alters its refractive index. |
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They will not meekly give up their power simply because of a few million crosses on pieces of paper. |
|
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I was asked to go and cross my name off the list, because Gordon Copeland knew I was here. |
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I think our music crosses over because we're tapping into a romantic yearning that so many people have. |
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Credit card spending can be very expensive if balances remain uncleared or if credit limits are breached because of penalty charges. |
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This was an especially creditable effort because his two previous wins had been over longer distances. |
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One almost gets the impression that we are so credulous of such wild predictions because we secretly want them to come true. |
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Olivia worries that she was too forward with him, and that he is now judging her because of it. |
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He knew that his people wouldn't carry out that wish because it's not customary within general Maori protocol to cremate the dead. |
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They are so named because they originate from the decayed and fossilized remains of plants and animals that lived millions of years ago. |
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They fossilize readily and in recognizable form because the interlocking desmas retain the original form of the sponge. |
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It's not because the local cable plant is fossilized or the company is impoverished. |
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This works in part because the criminals are careful not to foul their own nest. |
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He didn't take the train because there was a derailment and the schedule was fouled up. |
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If the Australians succumbed it was because of the relentless pressure that came from the tall scores the Indian batsmen posted. |
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Harold said he couldn't get down comfortably to play shots because he cricked his neck a few days ago. |
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Now, FBI agents' time is a much scarcer commodity because so many agents focus on counterterrorism. |
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Other street vendors gave up on selling counterfeits because they said they were tired of being questioned by police, and feared getting caught. |
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A switch within the prepositional phrase should be ruled out because English has prepositions and Panjabi postpositions. |
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But we are concerned because there is a strong presidency without countervailing institutions. |
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Ralph asked me to resign my full-time post and be his assistant, because he needed someone. |
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The historical Mexican criollo likewise suffered because of a deep sense of national and continental identity. |
|
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I develop a soft spot for the domestic diva because I believe that she's being made out as a poster child for corporate misbehavior. |
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Rachel could continue to sense his scrutiny, and because of that kept her countenance strictly controlled. |
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Veterans actually look forward to the postseason because the grind of the regular season gives way to a college season, in a sense. |
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Boston won 93 games in '02, but didn't make the postseason mostly because of a faulty bullpen. |
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Flying into Fairbanks in the winter is odd, because the town is covered by a fog bank, sort of like the island in the remake of King Kong. |
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But his appeal has been quashed because he cannot provide proof of postage. |
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I'm heading 5373 miles west to spend Easter in fogbound San Francisco, because I can. |
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There is no question of an early hearing in the county court because no appeal can lie to that court until the review is completed. |
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But there was no possibility of that because racial subjugation was enforced by law. |
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He was getting fractious and crabby while I was getting panicky because I knew there was something else and I couldn't remember what it was. |
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And they often get lost to medical follow-up because they don't need medical follow-up. |
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It is practically impossible to see the Chromophyton fogbow with naked eye because it is so broad and diffuse. |
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A terrified postwoman is refusing to deliver mail to a house in the street because of a frightening cat. |
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But my current retreat is different because it is coupled with the denial of one of my favourite habits. |
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It is because of this that we are able to see the hint of the possibilities of some real solutions. |
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In fact, I won't be seeing it at all, because I have a pot of white emulsion and a wall that needs to be watched as the paint dries. |
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Operators would rather rake the pot than charge per hand, because they can take out more money. |
|
It's also a very good pattern for anyone who has a bit of a pot, because the crossgrain hangs down straight, and totally diminishes a pot. |
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Mother says that just because they smoke pot doesn't mean that they're stoners. |
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I later got threatened with arrest because I didn't repair the fog light that was broken in the collision. |
|
|
Since most people love gooey molten cheese and because dipping and dunking is both convivial and fun, a cheese fondue is ideal. |
|
In North America, it remains to be seen if growers will use less potash or phosphate because of the higher nitrogen prices. |
|
This does not happen, however, because the cell membrane itself is impermeable to ions like sodium and potassium. |
|
This is because the fixed coupon on the bond is paid on the par amount of the bond. |
|
Beside the countermark, this copy is easily distinguished because of the casting marks on the obverse. |
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I will not let this mission go fubar because there are too many chiefs giving orders to my Indians. |
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I really don't want to dwell on it because I don't want to overshadow the courageousness of the way the team played. |
|
I'm very surprised because she clearly ate the entire ravioli dish, foie gras and all. |
|
The deviation resulted because the counterparts held by me did not include Computer's signatures. |
|
And because doctors are at the top of the food chain, the bad behavior of even a few of them can set a corrosive tone for the whole organization. |
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I'm excited too, because it means I get to buy lots of cool stuff that folds out. |
|
Maybe the cold coffee had heightened my senses, or possibly because it was a nice day more people were requesting drinks involving the blender. |
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He could easily have checked his facts, but did not bother to because so far as he was concerned the Holmes stories were potboilers. |
|
They may as well have called it deep six, because the film plummeted into a predictable pastiche of previous potboilers. |
|
Skip these pot-bound plants because the roots will be torn off during transplanting, and could cause a major set-back. |
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I think the mixture of big money and bigotry has to be guarded against and fought because now it has become a sort of Frankenstein's monster. |
|
Lunches tend to be lengthy with several courses served because the noon meal is the main meal of the day. |
|
I possessively kept them out of my little brother's reach who wanted them only because he saw how much I loved them. |
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I want you to talk a lot about this because it's the counterpoint to what lots of others have said. |
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Illegal hare coursing is a threat to populations because farmers cull them rather than have hare coursers on their land. |
|
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The protests are counterproductive, because the right wing loves it when the left gets angry. |
|
Many customers eagerly signed up because their pets had been made frantic with fear by the noise of fireworks. |
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Hunt said he was worried about the development because of the potential fire threat. |
|
Their method is different from this method because they break the Gaussian intensity distribution of illuminating laser on the focal plane. |
|
Yes, I am a drooling, venal dishonest fool who is just lying because she's mean. |
|
Could I possibly come back just for one second because you did surprise me with going round that way? |
|
Even as I was grateful for their courteousness, I was aware that they may have been so nice because I sounded white and well educated. |
|
Fearing counter-revolution, the sans-culottes destroyed prisons because they believed they were secretly sheltering conspirators. |
|
Now, I can relate to this because I went as far as I could possibly go without actually switching from the bank I've been with for 25 years. |
|
Many clients believe it is important to obtain as much credit as possible because these dollars would be available for unexpected events. |
|
Homes on high land with a negligible risk of flooding may be turned down simply because they are in a high-risk postcode. |
|
And I believe in short engagements and short courtships because I just got married in the summer to a wonderful man. |
|
Marcus tells Frank to pack his bags because they are heading to Twin Creeks. |
|
When he goes on a date with Jane Gallagher, Holden becomes extremely agitated, because Stradlater is extremely forwardwith his dates. |
|
But giving the state the power to take your vote away because it thinks you aren't smart enough to execute it gives me the creepy-crawlies. |
|
In most cases, the checks came back because the recipient had moved and failed to provide a forwarding address to the IRS or the Postal Service. |
|
Some great teachers of the past told their students simply to cremate their body and dispose of it, because the body is not important. |
|
If you are in the market for an estate, it's unlikely to be because you are footloose and fancy-free. |
|
And, at one level, it's hard to blame workers because they were disposable fodder for employers for long enough. |
|
And by just taking the pieces I want, I have smaller footprints because I leave behind the features I don't need. |
|
|
He's noticed the very indiscreet game of footsie underneath the table, probably because Stephen just kicked him thinking that was Jules' foot. |
|
It was not widely supported when it began, but because of the way its leaders were treated, it has passed into Irish folklore. |
|
Witches have been coming together as covens for centuries because groups have stronger magick than individuals. |
|
Compiling Domesday Book was a huge endeavour, which entered the folk memory because almost everyone was involved. |
|
This is not because it would be unsafe, but because we have no evidence to suggest whether or not it is safe. |
|
There is a very good case for knocking these flats down because it will cost more to repair them than to start building from scratch. |
|
She is not very happy about it but she can't say too much because she works for the council. |
|
His partner, suffering from post-natal depression, had dropped the baby off with his mother because she could not cope any more. |
|
Adjuvant post-operative radiation therapy was administered because resection margins were positive. |
|
They'd better be quick about it, because a gas plume would cover the area within eight minutes. |
|
He could not do it because no man rightly can forgive the sins he has committed against others. |
|
The National Opposition will be supporting this bill to the select committee, because it covers some important issues. |
|
We do celebrate after matches but we can't get out of the ground because of the crowds, so we have to wait in the dressing rooms for ages. |
|
All I really wanted was a dishwasher, but because the countertops weren't deep enough to install one, one thing led to another. |
|
During the winter months, they may forage for food during the day because of the difficulty in finding an adequate food source. |
|
Right now they aren't firing at me, I guess because of the tree cover, but I can't take that chance on stopping. |
|
Police believe the mistakes were covered up because admitting to the errors would leave them open to further scandal. |
|
Others are entirely unable to function, because of a total lack of coverage. |
|
But dietary advice is often neglected by doctors because so many people do not follow it. |
|
I didn't have a job until I was older because I played in weekend bands and in Stones cover bands. |
|
|
Our first trip to Paris was because a former roommate got a post-doctorate in Paris. |
|
The community is forced to shut down the library, because all the books contain the forbidden letter. |
|
I like to believe that this was because the moral and logical force of my argument meant this was all these lesser minds could fixate on. |
|
Our democratic government becomes a force for good because it reflects those values. |
|
They were an unstoppable juggernaut, a team built specifically for the postseason because the regular season was a foregone conclusion. |
|
I was quite literally forcing the food down because I needed to replenish my body. |
|
We don't want their euro because it's not working in the countries it has been forced upon and it won't work here. |
|
Glass slides and coverslips are not recommended because they do not produce reliable, consistent results. |
|
And it's all because of 10 years of force-feeding the public instead of giving them what they want. |
|
We're just parroting and lampooning pop culture and current events because there's so much stuff that we were force-fed when we grew up. |
|
We didn't come within a country mile, partly because I couldn't play, and partly because this thing's too singular and unique. |
|
The truth is that because of the unbiased media today, these covetous politicians have been exposed. |
|
Islanders do not openly admire the possessions of others because it suggests that one is envious and covetous. |
|
The Irish are surrounded by country music because we practically invented the genre. |
|
Thoughts are important because they delimit the child's capability in a given situation. |
|
I think it's a good thing because if you know you're forewarned, you're forearmed. |
|
The probability of parasitism may vary among hosts because differences in their behaviors assist cowbirds in locating nests. |
|
They cower in fear and are thus powerless, because somebody who feels fear is easily controlled, intimidated and subjugated. |
|
He forecasted an impact on inflation because the prices of petrol and fuels are getting more expensive faster than euro appreciation. |
|
This transition to electronic voting cannot be justified, because any gains in efficiencies are counterbalanced by lost accountability. |
|
|
Patients with melanoma require close follow-up because they are at risk for recurrence and diagnosis of a second primary tumor. |
|
The report is also critical of road safety education because of its lack of prominence, vagueness and poor training for teachers. |
|
Philadelphia, however, remained reluctant to change on the fly because the Flyers are successful forecheckers. |
|
Water buffalo is not as durable as cowhide, but it's cheaper because of its large supply. |
|
Prices have fallen because of the trend towards more modern, post-war designs. |
|
In many cases, we can't even do a thorough inspection of the engine compartment because the cowling only has an oil door. |
|
Not only did he get a bumper pay-rise, but he got a huge cash payout because his co-workers were discriminated against. |
|
These are growing cowpeas, a crop, which they had abandoned before because of lack of an effective market. |
|
We took the decision to shut the showers because public health is always at the forefront of any decision we make. |
|
However, they were only able to do this because they had a great degree of freedom about what was actually paid out in any given year. |
|
I keep relentlessly busy because I suffer from FOMO, or fear of missing out. |
|
And I love foreign policy, because of the adventure and because of the stakes. |
|
They hate foreigners because Americans are foreigners, fugitives from the old order. |
|
This is because many institutions suggest that sterling is set to plunge further on the foreign exchanges. |
|
This is because, as with fuel, more than 70 percent of power production costs are specified in foreign exchange. |
|
Generic placement of fossil spider crabs is often difficult because definitive criteria are rarely available for study. |
|
I'd had enough and leveled off, because the winds were causing us to crab significantly. |
|
The department is not involved directly because it is essentially a foreign-policy issue. |
|
For all things that were created appeared in their Creator's reason because they existed in his foreknowledge. |
|
Bars, forelands, and spits are attractive spots for development because they offer easy access to the beach. |
|
|
My death-ray stare was useless because the theater was dark and I couldn't pinpoint the exact source of the candy fondler. |
|
She believed he had not received sufficient supervision because the foreman had two trainees to look out for. |
|
Even if you were that man himself, you have no reason to be crabbed at because I'm having a bad morning. |
|
Why should the capital lose out because the rest of Britain is so crabbed and provincial in its attitude towards newcomers? |
|
Then I had to deal with a crabby two year old who went berserk because I took his coat off. |
|
There's no bread in it, but the crab cakes stay together because they're cooked on a baking sheet in the oven. |
|
In the last 20 years there's been a sea change in the criminal law because of forensics. |
|
They are sort of foreseers of our future, because they have already experienced what we have yet to face. |
|
Because I'd had a couple of drinks after the show, and also because I was ' cream crackered ', I had a driver. |
|
Many people lose elasticity and flexibility because habitual tension foreshortens the muscles, ligaments and tendons. |
|
They do so because their market is hardly a market at all compared with the forest of For Sale signs which deface Britain. |
|
One of the key players will be the Forestry Commission, not least because a quarter of the national park is forested. |
|
River boat captains learnt not to tie their boats to the crack willow because it was fragile. |
|
The trees along the bank are mainly crack willows, so called because of the brittleness of their twigs. |
|
I say this because I don't know of any other religion that has been able to foretell the future through prophets. |
|
The foretopsail is smallish and easy to work on because we can stand in the working top on the foremast. |
|
My boyfriend told me that the reason he has not proposed yet is because he wants to be set in a stable, forever job. |
|
Many more cave critters die in the game because of the missing guano in the food chain. |
|
We are not prepared to discuss what we are planning to do because forewarned is forearmed. |
|
He accepts his position at the bottom of the food chain, because it gives him a unique opportunity to make the lives of others miserable. |
|
|
At first I thought it was one of those days when they don't feel like trading because there is too much forex to handle. |
|
In consequence, many men died in prison, but because they had not been convicted, their property was not forfeited to the Crown. |
|
Ur ceased to exist in the 4th century BC, probably because the River Euphrates changed course. |
|
The episodes on the second volume worked because they were crammed to the brim with jokes. |
|
And because it is an unsigned copy, they don't even have to forge a signature. |
|
It is because the abundant foodgrains can't be distributed properly that this starvation is happening. |
|
Hidden because she works at home on sewing machines crammed into a corner of her laundry. |
|
Often blood was drawn but without malice, just an accident, like an actor forgetting his lines because he's trying too hard to remember. |
|
And on the other hand I don't want him to call me, because it would be so much easier to forget about him that way. |
|
I got one of these for my grandmother last year, because she is blind and forgetful and had burned the bottom out of two teakettles. |
|
Heart muscle may cramp when it needs more oxygen because of exertion, emotion, or exposure to cold. |
|
She had abandoned him, he thought, because she could not live in a world that would not forgive her for her mistakes. |
|
Chris' earlier email should have made the postbag last week, but didn't because I goofed. |
|
In Hungary, the forint came under severe pressure this year because of the rising state deficit. |
|
I remember not being able to throw any forkballs because my hands were so cold. |
|
That's because while unconscious, he had needed two craniotomies to relieve the pressure. |
|
If you do the math, I think it will fall a little short but that's only because some of the courses were served at the same time. |
|
Once considered cranky, biodynamic methods are gaining respect worldwide, not least because of their excellent results. |
|
She was cranky because it had taken over an hour to get the twins to go to sleep. |
|
I cried with laughter the first time I read this, and I still go there when I feel cranky, because it always makes me giggle. |
|
|
Obviously my attitude hasn't been the best because the musicians keep telling me that I'm cross and cranky and difficult to work with. |
|
It may well be that some taxpayers are being discouraged from filling in forms simply because these forms verge on the incomprehensible. |
|
The science behind that is a little sketchy, but it could be because they contain zinc, a mineral linked to progesterone and male potency. |
|
Laura came home very distressed because she thought her form teacher would tell her off for being late. |
|
Canyon Ranch includes herbs and spices on its own food pyramid because they provide so much flavor to lower-fat meals. |
|
Some tipsters do have good long-term records, largely because they study form every day, but they are few and far between. |
|
I just feel that this is one of those formal occasions that gets big headlines because it's a formal occasion and not because it really matters. |
|
He said that the audits were not documented because no formal complaint was brought against her. |
|
These sketches stick in the mind not just because of their content but because of their formal qualities. |
|
It is a tragedy in this case because the life lost was one with such future potential. |
|
Tipperary crashed out of the Munster championship at the semi-final stage because their attack was weak and they didn't have a settled backline. |
|
We were told afterwards that she crashed in theatre because of the delay previously. |
|
I crashed out on Phil's floor for the night and kept waking up because Phil was snoring and talking in his sleep. |
|
Thomas said they went to the meeting with high expectations because they felt their counter-proposals were reasonable. |
|
That means at some stage I'm going to crash and burn, because I really don't see it as risky. |
|
Many studios only accept scripts written with Final Draft because it formats everything by character, action, dialogue, shot and transition. |
|
In part, I travel because there are always useful local records in libraries and courthouses that can provide some missing clue. |
|
The body doesn't have to play a role in the crashworthiness of the vehicle, because that capability can be built right into the skateboard. |
|
It's hit or miss as to whether you'll get a view of the volcano's sulfuric craters, because of cloud cover, fog, and haze. |
|
And who should know better than he that it is craven to belittle a man's service because it didn't extend over some arbitrary stretch of time? |
|
|
We aren't filling the ground and that's disappointing because we are playing such entertaining football. |
|
Racing had started 40 minutes later because the scheduled ambulance failed to turn up and the Aces then made a flying start. |
|
Young children are prone to picking up germs because they spend time crawling on the ground and don't wash their hands as frequently as adults. |
|
Even the meager construction projects fell through because of the the government foot-dragging and incompetence. |
|
Anyway, if you come crawling to my door, crying to be let in because a comet is headed straight for your town, you can just forget it! |
|
He said the road did not look particularly dangerous but jams were caused when motorist slowed down to a crawl because of the icy conditions. |
|
I only make the kind of work I make because of the discourse of postmodernism and the time that I'm working in. |
|
Formulaic expressions are formulaic, precisely because of their fixed form. |
|
Bovine material, or cow hide, has been banned from crayfishing because it results in a poorer quality of crayfish. |
|
Strict rules governed young women's courtship behavior because of the possibility of pregnancy and the importance of a prudent choice. |
|
The strategy formulation process is important because a better process should produce better strategies. |
|
Nor is it multi-polar, because it does not include any great power that stands on an equal footing with the United States. |
|
He does this out of solemn devotion to the truth, he says, and not because he has been crazily obsessed with her. |
|
It was a hope I was holding onto, because the possibility of success was so attractive. |
|
The post-mortem revealed that death was due to powerful electric shock, not because of burns. |
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Just for the record here, as most news sources operate on a for-profit basis they are biased because of it. |
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He became a little worried because he heard a light creak in the floorboards. |
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It forswears the use of commercial plutonium as a fuel, because of proliferation risks. |
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Of course, the small integrated schools will cream off a lot of the glory because of their name and ethos. |
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I'm over-joyed at this news and not just because the footpaths I like to walk will very shortly re-open. |
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Now admittedly, this is largely because of the fees being creamed off by the investment managers. |
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In theory they can offer cheap loans because they are run by volunteers and there are no shareholders creaming off the profits. |
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His forte lay in articulating authentic emotion, because most of his fictional writing was structured around intensely felt personal experiences. |
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Some birds will overfly the lure the first time off the creance because of the lessened drag. |
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The paperback stubbornly fought to stay closed because it was new and the binding had yet to be creased. |
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He did not claim asylum at the airport because he was afraid that he would be returned forthwith to Malaysia. |
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Just because you're nearing forty doesn't mean you have to start having anxiety attacks. |
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But no creationist could ever pass a peer-review test, because there is a presuppositional bias against creation science. |
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People wouldn't pirate them in general, because people generally like to respect the rights of creators. |
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It's actually an act of being civilised not because of the element of personal service, but because it exerts control over your creaturely self. |
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Soccer develops great footwork because you have to be able to use either foot. |
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This is fortuitous because the acreage of this convention center is unfathomable. |
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Others aren't so fortunate, and may heaven help them, because they surely suffer. |
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Opponents certainly give little credence to these reports, in part because they know their own lists usually include some fiction. |
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That's a problem, because the credentials of professionals lend credence to their beliefs, however outrageous. |
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This lends credence to the theory that one channels the powers beyond when writing, because really, I don't think I could seriously write that. |
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We have to do this for moral reasons, and because our security depends on it. |
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In other words, we want to use our cars because we don't believe that there is any credible and safe alternative. |
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Travel is easy because so many people have stayed at home, and the office is quiet for just the same reason. |
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Some even thought of us as fraternal twins because I used to dress just like him and follow him around everywhere he went. |
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