We pass endless farmyards where cows doze under banyan trees in the morning light and goats bleat hysterically at the sight of her. |
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The chiefs of the association are unlikely to pay much heed to a rural bleat, even if the problem is almost nation-wide. |
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A llama's whining bleat sounded through the veils of sleep, jolting me to bleary awareness. |
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Here is a bleat from a disgruntled Indian, pointing out the obvious from one side of the culture war. |
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From the kitchen comes the less violent bleating of the baby lambs, and in the distance the occasional deeper bleat of a sheep or low of a cow. |
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The great philanthropist, in other words, is financed by mere mortals who stupidly bear their taxes without so much as a plaintive bleat. |
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I didn't want to go back to their circles and listen to them bleat like herds of sheep. |
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The silence of the presses is deafening and the telescreen continues to bleat. |
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Their MPs voted for the anti-democratic state of emergency without a bleat of protest. |
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There was that permeating smell of animals and damp straw, the bleat of a llama came from a neighbouring stall. |
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On TV screens across the globe, for more than three months now, the sheep have been jumping into the ditch without a bleat of protest. |
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Why, I remember when my own won the pig competition in the county fair, it made my heart bleat with pride and joy. |
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Their orcish pig-faces, smeared with spittle and filth, would bleat out their ice cream demands, randomly pointing to the array of pictures on the side of my vehicle. |
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The only bleat was City's failure to turn such superiority into goals. |
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Many of the foodies who bleat on about it could not countenance living without things like lemons, figs and galangal. |
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Why? Because the damage is underwater, and what the eye doesn't see greens don't often bleat about. |
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Such companies frequently bleat that personal data is secure and inviolable. |
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From one side came the cry of curlews, from the other the bleat of sheep. |
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Their typical call is a mingled bray and bleat, followed by a snorted inhale sounding like an oak dining table being dragged across a hardwood floor. |
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Their typical call is a commingled bray and bleat, followed by a snorted inhale sounding like an oak dining table being dragged across a hardwood floor. |
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Manifestation of my words came fourteen years after I'd spoken there but at the time it was only an honest bleat of frustration with a system that was reprehensible. |
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His voice is a harsh, nasal, confused, emphatic bleat, clamping down on certain words and rolling tricky internal rhymes around in his mouth until they come out all broken. |
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The eternal bleat from the Right is that they are being prevented from asking legitimate questions by an hysterical climate of political-correctness. |
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Seguis ends his pathetic bleat with this statement to the terrorists. |
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Incidentally, I don't know why whingeing has to start with a bleat. |
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The Goats' bleat is so consistent that it is sometimes confused with a recorded goat sound. |
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But the government cannot bleat about the high cost of the crisis. |
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What are we to do with advisers to the president who have such a low opinion of the kind of civil discourse, the democratic discourse, that exists in the United Nations that he terms as merely a chatterbox where people bleat? |
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In addition, vested interests will bleat loudly. |
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The assembly elections cannot come soon enough, let's roar like the Scotish lion, not bleat like Welsh lamb. |
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The Adepts who have remarkable powers of perception, whose faculties have been sharpened and purified, are not able to teach those who just bleat feebly that they, and they alone, are worthy of Great Teachers. |
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The conclusion of his story was that the Netherlands made the most money from the EU, so we did not need to bleat about money When Mr Zalm asked for that billion back, the Commission argued that with him also. |
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Bishops bleat that anxiety stalks the land. |
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Or behear ye the sheep, to the husbanding rams how they bleat to the shade! Or behear ye the birds, at the Goddess' command how they sing unafraid! |
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