I was brought up in a two-up two-down in Ordsall and taught to respect people. |
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Both of them speak Thai and Lao despite being brought up outside of Thailand. |
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Only ammunitions wagons and ambulances were brought up to the immediate rear lines. |
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Scotland's best golfer is no fan of links golf and played very little of it as a youngster brought up in, wait for it, Leeds. |
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I was brought up in the Northern Territory with Aboriginals, and many of my closest friends are indigenous. |
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Smith, the son of a war bride whose marriage to a Canadian paratrooper lasted only two years, was brought up on an estate in Acton, west London. |
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Motorists will also be able to have their bodywork brought up to scratch by a team of car washers, in return for a donation. |
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Though born and brought up in a conservative Sikh family in Norway, she always had a dream of acting in a Bollywood film. |
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He was born and brought up in Gorse Hill, and first showed his business acumen at the age of 13 when he began farming pigs in his back garden. |
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Iris was brought up to speak Welsh as her first language and was able to switch from one language to the other with great ease. |
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She was brought up in Michigan where her grandfather was an adman for General Motors and her father's sideline was boxing promotion. |
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Apparently, back in Iowa, or Kansas, or wherever, that is just the way young men are brought up. |
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I opted for shooting, which I have always been keen on since I was brought up as an Army kid. |
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All he said was that he was brought up to believe that the man went to work and the woman kept house. |
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These cousins are brought up worlds apart and have enormous differences, but also enormous similarities. |
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I asked if he'd bring home the extra mawashis I'd brought up for the contest, and he acceded to this. |
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I brought up the rear as the cloaked man in front of me made his way towards them. |
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The cops cleared the streets in front and brought up the rear, but along the whole enormous length of the demo there wasn't a cop in sight. |
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One ranger led the tour, and another brought up the rear to catch stragglers. |
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The Defence Minister was gunning for third and the Sports Minister brought up the rear. |
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Latvia, Hungary and Estonia brought up the rear of Mercer's survey, which covered 24 countries. |
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India came 2nd, Korea 3rd, while the young Malaysian team, which lost 6 of their 7 matches, brought up the rear. |
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As I later recalled my logic to Lauren, she brought up an interesting point. |
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Clare Francis speaks with the sort of received pronunciation you might expect from a former yachtswoman brought up in the Home Counties. |
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I was brought up in Shropshire, so I know all about fox hunting and saw them setting off, all excited, ready for the kill. |
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When Debbie brought up the matter, the other woman insisted she had said nothing of the kind and told Debbie she was imagining things. |
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Every child should be brought up to know right from wrong and to respect their peers and elders. |
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She had always been brought up to believe murder was wrong, regardless of circumstance. |
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Only about 50 of our homes have been brought up to regulation standard with new windows, heating and doors. |
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Boethius was brought up in the house of the aristocratic family of Quintus Aurelius Memmius Symmachus. |
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I liked being brought up in the Church and I'd like to think I could do that for my kids, but at the moment I'm fairly lapsed. |
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Those brought up in the punk rock era will have a twinge of nostalgia for the days when it was a badge of honour to be gobbed on by your idols. |
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When asked, I always say I am a lassie from Lancashire, having been born in Bury and brought up on Merseyside. |
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Icelanders are brought up to leap across waterfalls, spring through rivers, run down mountains, run up mountains. |
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Born in 1942 into solidly middle-class circumstances, he was brought up enjoying the pursuits of the leisured classes of the 19th century. |
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Lessig had in fact brought up the issue, arguing basically that retroactive copyright extensions have no value in promoting new works. |
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The most successful mixed marriages are those between educated individuals who have been brought up liberally and with religious tolerance. |
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He appears on the scene of action ready for battle on the appointed day, and there he meets others like himself, brought up by the same summons. |
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They are now demanding that the old sewers beneath the streets of the city be brought up to date in an attempt to rid the area of the vile smell. |
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Entwistle said he brought up this matter when lollies first came out, and a lot of children were suffering from sore mouths. |
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Much has been made of Smyth's family background, for he is the son of Renaissance art historian Craig Hugh Smyth and was brought up in Italy. |
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Since Labour came to power the proportion of children being brought up by lone parents has increased by a quarter. |
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So this theory of who is the bad wolf was actually brought up on the other thread as it happens. |
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Born and brought up in the Welsh town Port Talbot, music doesn't run in his family. |
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He was brought up in Trowbridge and was a talented athlete and sportsman at school. |
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Simon, born in 1589, was brought up to be a saddler, but spent much of his life in the army, in Ireland and on the Continent. |
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And good to her word, Anita brought up a neat bucket full of Lysol and Pine Sol, and bleach. |
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Stephen was brought up at the court of his uncle Henry I, becoming one of the wealthiest of the Anglo-Norman magnates. |
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All I was trying to do was list a few of the questionable attitudes attached to chaos magic that rarely get brought up, albeit in a sarky manner. |
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Her mother was brought up by ayahs, Indian nurses, and spoke Urdu as her first language. |
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Snarling, he raised a hand to backhand me, and I brought up an arm and braced myself for the blow. |
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The actual point of this post is to backtrack on something I've brought up in conversation many times to annoy my conservative friends. |
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Then came the terrible film in which we were expected to believe that she was a well brought up English gal gone to the bad. |
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I was brought up in a manse as a Presbyterian and I find Presbyterianism a comfortable jacket. |
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Women negotiate from their windows and balconies with the potato men to have large bags of potatoes brought up to their kitchens. |
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Hyslop and Sturgeon are both in their 30s, both brought up in Ayrshire, both driven and tough. |
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Mr Wilson was brought up on a market garden in Kent, but was a reluctant horticulturalist. |
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My grades need to be brought up, and I am scrounging for credits for college. |
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He brought up his other hand and pulled a remaining match from the pack, turning the matchbook over and showing it to her. |
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I was brought up on tales of Brits exploring the world and this has always inspired me. |
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I was born and brought up in the country, where people would talk of hunt meets and hunt balls. |
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This very process would be brought up by said media at every opportunity as a self-perpetuating prophecy, ad nauseam. |
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Browsing to a team will by default bring up the 1st team squad, with the reserves and youth players brought up by a tick box in a drop-down menu. |
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I was brought up in an environment where money was to be used rather than hoarded. |
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I was brought up understanding that there were certain courtesies and considerations to be extended to all fellow creatures. |
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Jerome, muttering and dripping thick mud and rainwater, brought up the rear of this merry parade. |
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My parents separated when I was eleven and my father brought up my younger sister and me. |
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Robinson had been brought up by a mother who tolerated men, while believing herself superior. |
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If you were brought up before the headmaster he would poke you in the chest and you fell back. |
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Where I was brought up, heroin and methadone was the big problem from age sixteen. |
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Though born and brought up in one place, they were ready to settle down in another. |
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Internally, four of the seven floors of office space will be brought up to standard, with plans to extend the work if it is successfully leased. |
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Mr Galloway was born and brought up in a tough working-class area of Dundee. |
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Being brought up with traditional jazz and the Edwardian music halls, we added a different approach to American blues. |
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Adam, who has the almost biblical language construction of the native Gaelic speaker, was brought up in the Highlands. |
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The issue was brought up at the recent biennial convention, where there was lengthy discussion on a proposed policy. |
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I was brought up bilingually in the Eastern Townships and don't know anything else. |
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I remember everyone drunkenly singing along to the chorus as the grizzly old bar manager brought up a half empty keg for us to polish off. |
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The power of the word froze Cordelia, while Joyce was brought up short by confusion. |
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I brought up my hand, either to punch her or to slap her, but she stepped back. |
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It's the way we're brought up, in a culture that prizes modesty and adores putting show-offs in their place. |
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I have been very fortunate in being brought up in a generation which has been mollycoddled. |
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Tribal rivalries meant that every male Mongol was brought up to be able to fight and hunting expeditions formed the ideal training ground. |
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His father was a stonemason and architect who brought up his children to be independent and self reliant. |
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Faraday had been brought up to believe that people, though capable of many good things, are basically corrupt and sinful. |
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Britain has the highest proportion of children being brought up in single-parent households in Europe. |
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She was the illegitimate daughter of a maid and was brought up in Paris in bleak and unaffectionate circumstances. |
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Most kids are brought up to regard cricket as a sissy game, most kids never even get to play. |
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I was brought up watching the painful grimaces of bonking cyclists attempting the inane. |
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Emma Watson, who has been brought up by a well-to-do aunt, returns to her family, who live unfashionably in genteel poverty in a Surrey village. |
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He seemed to have resentment in his voice whenever the matter of the song was brought up. |
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And why bring unwanted children into the world, why should children be brought up in an unloving environment? |
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Hilary Mantel was born in 1952 and brought up in an unpicturesque village in Derbyshire, in the northwest of England. |
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Not just a grudge, but a hateful, vindictive, nasty bitterness that I didn't even know existed until this person's name was brought up. |
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Leimanis was brought up in Latvia near the end of a long period of Russian domination. |
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My mother was an excellent needlewoman and, ever since I was little, I had been brought up with it. |
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They are wrecked on the Isle of Dogs, and brought up before Golding, the deputy alderman. |
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After pondering the philosophical elements of our individual upbringings, we discovered that both of us had been brought up in the United Church. |
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After the War he brought up bronze, copper and brass from the island's many wrecks, at a time when these metals were in short supply. |
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I wonder when I reflect under what influence I was brought up, that my heart is not harder than the nether millstone. |
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Abandoned by the stricken father, Paolo had been brought up in his mother's home. |
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Since Rebecca's death, her son Jordan has been brought up by her mother and sisters. |
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Born in Manchester of Welsh parents, he was brought up in Wales after the early death of his father. |
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I learned his father was killed at Dunkirk, and, one of five children, he was brought up by his mother. |
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I was brought up to believe that it was impolite to discuss one's financial affairs in public. |
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Suppose people in a given society were brought up to believe that women should be subservient to men. |
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She had not been expecting to go out, but the rather sore subject of marriage had been brought up. |
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If such sensitive matters are brought up in a matter-of-fact way, most patients will respond freely. |
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I stuck out like a sore thumb because I was brought up to be polite and people are not quite sincere there. |
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However, she was well meaning and kind and brought up her niece as a second daughter. |
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I was brought up during the space race and got my first telescope at 11 and have been getting more and more involved ever since. |
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There's been a recent spate of intimidating text message cases brought up in court. |
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During his long speech, he finally speaks about the silence in which he has brought up his beloved son. |
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So he called his dad who brought up the tractor, and he got into the digger bucket and they maneuvered it up high into the tree and rescued her. |
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Here, she spent the next ten years of her life, brought up in an atmosphere of love and affection. |
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Residents in these areas had to wait until the second week of August this year for grass to be cut and the estates brought up to basic standard. |
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Next, let's look at twins who have been separated very early in life and have been brought up in completely different families. |
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I brought up all this phlegm and spit into my mouth, and at first it was so, so foul I nearly choked. |
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Born and brought up in Sydney, Australia, he took up squash at the age of nine. |
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The son of Thomas Arne, he was brought up by his aunt, the actress Mrs Cibber, who introduced him to the stage. |
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Most of us were brought up on a diet that included dairy products as an essential source of calcium. |
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Other trees are from stock brought up by the early missionaries and Afghan cameleers. |
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I think you are lucky that you were brought up in regional Australia because you cannot dismiss it out of hand. |
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A classic off drive from Elliott brought up the hundred, and Somerset were in desperate need of a wicket. |
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I was brought up to cover my mouth when I had a cough and use a hanky when sneezing. |
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Now Hansard will record this, and I am sure I am right because that is the point that I brought up originally. |
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I was brought up by my grandparents, which is quite normal in Caribbean families. |
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After the cold war, leaders who had been brought up on a diet of protest and peace marches became the most hawkish political generation yet. |
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When they are brought up from the depths, gases in their bladders expand, popping the fish's stomachs and making their eyes bug out. |
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So issues such as occupation, control over strategic resources and imperialism are never brought up. |
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His parents were hedgers and ditchers and brought up their son to the same occupation. |
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Simply by being alive, by being brought up in south London and having mixed parentage, he was an original. |
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Conch brought up her left arm just as the man came within striking distance. |
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Linda and Sandy were brought up in orphanages and by foster parents in America who cut the girls' links with their Southampton family. |
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Before the wolves can get him, however, he is rescued by a wise old shepherd and brought up as a helot, one of the aboriginal population the Spartans have enslaved. |
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When she was little, she wanted to be a boy, like so many girls brought up in the 1950s with the tomboys Jo in Little Women and George in The Famous Five as role models. |
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A line of dusty, panting dogs, yellow and black, brought up the rear. |
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Prior was brought up as a Methodist, but while he was a student he came to consider Methodistic theology too unsystematic, and he became a Presbyterian. |
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It is interesting that you brought up heightism in your email. |
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The group brought up issues including obstructive parking, criminal damage, drug and alcohol abuse, and vandalism as specific problem areas for the estate. |
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The expression of your wishes in an informal letter to the trustees and guardians is often an easier way of ensuring your children are brought up as you would wish. |
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Her parents were imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution, and she was brought up by Red Guards as a child of the Revolution, not regarding her parents as her family. |
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An article in Nature three weeks ago brought up the devastation that could result if contact tracing were to be stopped. |
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However they will be on probation for a number of years while shortfalls in their economies, governance and legal systems are ironed out and brought up to EU standards. |
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The idea was first brought up by Minister without Portfolio Yeh Jiunn-rong, the leader of Taiwan's delegation to the summit, in Johannesburg last week before coming home. |
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Elizabeth Gaskell was brought up by her aunt in Knutsford, Cheshire. |
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On my backpacking travels around the globe I have stayed in many hostels, and the topic always seems to come up in discussions, but it is brought up by all nationalities. |
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We actually had a hypothetical phone call brought up before the candidates were asked about a real crisis, such as, eh, Mexico. |
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During those two days of April 11-12, the Nautilus didn't leave the surface of the sea, and its trawl brought up a simply miraculous catch of zoophytes, fish, and reptiles. |
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After their dance at the ball Kate had resigned herself to politely ignoring him and would most likely think him mad if he even brought up the subject of love. |
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From beneath the traymobile, he brought up a black leather bag. |
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They were brought up on sweet beverages and soda, and on caffeine. |
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When ew brought up the conversation with Garfield to Amazing Spider-Man director Marc Webb, the director cut them off. |
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As a boy who was born and brought up at the foot of Kentmere in the heart of the Lake District I remember treasuring each new volume as they were published. |
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This has been brought up by councillors under Any Other Business at their meetings at least 20 times and has featured on meeting agendas on six occasions. |
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We were brought up by our parents to be loving and respectful. |
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I was born and brought up here, the eldest son of Irish parents. |
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Having been brought up hearing nothing about wharfies save how they loafed around in the intervals between striking and stealing cargo, I got a rude shock when the task began. |
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He brought up his gun, holding it at arm's length with both hands. |
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Attempts to open the play up by occasionally taking it outside are not very effective, but despite the film's rough edges, the issues that are brought up are fascinating. |
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The ship brought up as suddenly and violently as if she had struck a rock. |
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While our youngsters, brought up without free school milk, were lolloping about mid-week, the home side darted about like greyhounds and finished like pit bulls. |
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Yet suddenly we are brought up short by an act of heroism so obvious and yet so unexpected that one can't help feeling somewhat ashamed of one's voyeurism. |
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For cooling the building during warm weather, naturally chilled groundwater is brought up from the aquifer through holes bored through 410 feet of London clay. |
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Having been brought up in the small village of Snitterfield he is likely to have received only a rudimentary education, and seems not to have learned to write. |
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We were brought up to husband Nature, to accept its uncertainties and to extend our being into human communities for subsistence and vitalisation. |
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Well even though I was brought up in the city for part of my life I moved to the country at a fairly young age so I have heard both sides of the arguments to this topic! |
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Men brought up on H.G. Wells and Jules Verne science fiction set their minds to solving the convoy crisis. |
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He'd been neglected by his mother and brought up by his aunty. |
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Seems to me like the blindness is a McGuffin, just brought up to generate suspense for that one sequence, then dropped as if the audience is just going to forget about it. |
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Many of my generation were brought up with a moral code based on the ten commandments, which impressed a watermark in us so deep that it underpins all our lives. |
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I was brought up thinking work is something you are morally obliged to do. |
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Edward was brought up in Normandy and during his reign many Normans came to England and gained important positions as advisors, church-men or military officers. |
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Generations of poetry lovers were brought up without any knowledge that Shelley's radical opposition to all tyranny and oppression was central to his art and his life. |
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Everything he'd been brought up to believe in was no longer enough. |
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Luckily, he was brought up on a small Americanised settlement on Ganymede, and was able to learn more about Earth than most Terrans from his parents. |
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A day passed before the subject of a plan was brought up and discussed. |
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Only if you were born and brought up unbeknown to the world in the darkness of deepest Dalby Forest, scratching a living from the land would you be truly a non-person. |
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She was watching a rebroadcast with her father when Barrett brought up the attack ad. |
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But as they hashed it out, and they brought up the inherent problems with establishing private accounts, he instead came around to their point of view. |
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Erial smiled gratefully as the hostler brought up three horses. |
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I mean my background weighed heavily, because I was brought up in this orthodox way. |
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Those born after 1980 often know nothing about what happened that day, and have generally been brought up to be apolitical. |
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I think it was on the Ashley Banfield show on CNN, and she brought up the speculation. |
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I was brought up Italian, and taught how to work a room and take care of the guests at the bed-and-breakfast my parents owned. |
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She was brought up in Sighisoara, a Transylvanian fortress town north-west of Bucharest. |
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I blinked to muzzy awareness, licked dry lips and tried to rub bleary eyes, only to be brought up short by the restraints and a lance of pain through my wounds. |
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I was brought up in very comfortable circumstances in a waspy Connecticut suburb. |
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If a girl could be brought up in the same way as a boy, her sexual potential and her sexual satisfaction, her sexual pleasure could be exactly the same. |
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He has been brought up by a lady of easy virtue in the bazaar. |
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Certainly, you can move away from a religious culture in which you were brought up in much the same way that one can change one's accent, or mode of dress. |
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On two occasions he brought up his time spent at Her Majesty's pleasure. |
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The son of a firefighter and a paramedic, Greg says he was brought up with the emergency services ethos and knew it was only a question of time before he too joined up. |
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Bichel went to tea on 45 not out with a series of arrow-straight slogs, and brought up his maiden Test fifty straight after tea with a driven single off Banks. |
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Mansfield, who was brought up sailing keelboats out of the Royal Cork Yacht Club at Crosshaven, seems to do better when he is battling in bigger fleets. |
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They will find themselves swiftly and bruisingly brought up against the limits of their own conditions, whatever those limits and conditions may be. |
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They are brought up with a character of boldness and unrestrainedness, simplicity and hospitality, and they have kept a rich and colorful culture. |
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Ashton smiled and brought up a disposable camera, snapping a picture. |
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In 2007, Rowling described having been brought up in the Church of England. |
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Griff Gleed Owen, who shares his birthday with the late Sir Winston Churchill, November 30, 1915, was brought up in Pwllheli. |
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I saw my sisters and parents working every day, so I was pretty much brought up to be a workaholic. |
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During an appearance on 'Chelsea Lately', Aniston slammed the veteran newswoman when host Chelsea Handler brought up her topic for discussion. |
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X is addressing gay men who know the scene firthand and don't have to be brought up to speed about cruising, tricks, hustlers, or glory holes. |
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The food is prepared in the main kitchen and brought up to the dining room in a multi-well steam table or a refrigerated table. |
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Anglesey-born ethical investment campaigner Keith Hebden was brought up in the Church. |
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It is said that he was baptised at Porthclais, now the city's port, and was brought up by his mother at Llanon. |
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Shrewsbury has also played a part in Western intellectual history, by being the town where the naturalist Charles Darwin was born and brought up. |
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Fuller was brought up in Sussex, where his interest in the police force was encouraged by an officer attached to his school. |
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His mother died when he was aged six, and he was consequently brought up by his sister, often with handouts from the local soup kitchen. |
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Vernon Watkins was born in Maesteg in Glamorgan, and brought up mainly in Swansea. |
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The singer Joss Stone was brought up in Devon and frontman Chris Martin from the British rock group Coldplay was born there. |
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The German Kaiser Wilhelm II had been brought up amongst the Royal Navy, when he visited his grandmother, Queen Victoria. |
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Several artillery units had been brought up from Boulogne, doubling the numbers of guns available to Schaal. |
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Adopted at the age of three, Safiya was brought up fully aware of some stark realities, including her congenital disorder, phocomelia. |
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Justin called himself a Samaritan, but his father and grandfather were probably Greek or Roman, and he was brought up a pagan. |
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Mungo was brought up by Saint Serf who was ministering to the Picts in that area. |
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He brought up their four children by himself while keeping a busy job as a specialist in sugar diabetes at Selly Oak Hospital. |
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Controversy surrounded the Whydah long before Clifford brought up the first artifacts. |
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The majority of the invertebrates brought up are corals, and are mainly used for the jewelry trade. |
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In October, the government brought up this issue again, proposing an amendment to put the western part of Lymington borough in Dorset. |
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He brought up the sweat lodge she put together to help me prepare for going back to Vietnam in 1993 on a mission of mercy. |
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It could have been after Henry VIII's death in January 1547 or even as late as 1549, when the last guns were brought up. |
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Mike and EJ live these days in a treelined avenue in New Dorp, Staten Island, just a few miles from where he was brought up. |
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Marble pilasters were straightened and the original chandelier was rewired, brought up to code and restored. |
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So I was brought up before a military tribunal for disobedience. |
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They brought up a set of bar shot, some copper sheeting and a square wooden dowel fastened with what appears to be square nails. |
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Between the ages of two and six, Marconi and his elder brother Alfonso were brought up by his mother in the English town of Bedford. |
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King was born and brought up in Cowes, Isle of Wight, off the south coast of England. |
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For those brought up in the decade of flares, power cuts, Cavs and Cortinas, we bring you this week the Ford Mondeo Graphite five-door. |
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Venezuela brought up again the settled claim, during the 1960s cold war period, and during Guyana's Independence period. |
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At this time, the lights are brought up and the church bells are rung, according to local custom. |
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Children brought up speaking more than one language can have more than one native language, and be bilingual or multilingual. |
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Not all Liverpudlians are brought up to speak with this variation but this does not make it any less Scouse. |
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It is expected that the Covenant will brought up for reconsideration in the next triennium. |
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Also, other writings of Coke were brought up but never Bonham's Case itself. |
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Several controversies relating to the technicalities of the bill were brought up in the House of Lords. |
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The Sox didn't replace him with a real second baseman until 1961, when they brought up Chuck Schilling from their farm system. |
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Often, the question of inequality is brought up when discussing how well capitalism promotes democracy. |
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John James was born and brought up in Edinburgh, Scotland, to a mother from Glenluce and a father originally from Hertfordshire. |
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Poet John Siddique was brought up in Rochdale and has referred to the town in several poems. |
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I was brought up on a farm in the Free Sate a long time ago. Jong, when I first came to Johannesburg I got such a skrik. |
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Well, I was brought up in a house where both my parents smoked and in those days the cigarettes were untipped, full strength. |
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There have been a handful of reallife tales about feral children, those who brought up by wild animals. |
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That Friday, which began like any other, when my fate was brought up from the kitchen, superscribed to me, and put into my ignorant hand. |
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It may take the new hires a week or two to be brought up to speed on the system. |
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She was brought up by her father the stockkeeper about whom there is a mystery. |
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In the changing world of the NHS, it is vital for all Unite members to be brought up to date with record keeping and duty of care. |
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I sing along with Bob Seeger because I was brought up on him and Dr Hook, not to mention Abba and Kris Kristofferson. |
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Later on I worked with the New Zealander film director, Vincent Ward, on a story about two girls being brought up by Tasmanian tigers. |
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At a lot of tracks the standard of kenneling is just old fashioned and they just need to be brought up to standard. |
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Their real son, Ryusei, has been brought up by a poorer, rowdier clan. |
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These additional centrifuges would need to be connected, brought up to speed and equilibrated with the already operating ones. |
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George Cook, a middle-age black man from the Bronx, brought up the rear. |
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The two armipotents brought up their respective legions, thirsting for glory. |
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She was brought up in a very religious household, but broke away from the church in her teens. |
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This case was brought up by writ of error from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of New Jersey. |
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Geoffrey of Monmouth says he was brought up at the court of Augustus and willingly paid tribute to Rome. |
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His son Edgar, who was then about five years old, was brought up at the English court. |
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Edward was a precocious child who had been brought up as a Protestant, but was initially of little account politically. |
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With authors awarding Jay Gatsby honors as most famous fictional individual, journalists jokingly brought up Wright's circumlocutory stylings. |
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She fled to England, and the Crown went to her infant son James VI, who was brought up as a Protestant. |
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Because the spacecraft is of highly modular design, the components will be brought up by the Skylon spacecraft. |
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A small number of people in Cornwall have been brought up to be bilingual native speakers, and the language is taught in many schools. |
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Mary Godwin read these memoirs and her mother's books, and was brought up to cherish her mother's memory. |
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He loved Sussex to the point of idolatry as the place where he was brought up and as his spiritual home. |
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She was brought up within a low church Anglican family, but at that time the Midlands was an area with a growing number of religious dissenters. |
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It chanced that I had written a tale about Indian Forestry work which included a boy who had been brought up by wolves. |
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Orwell's son, Richard Horatio Blair, was brought up by Orwell's sister Avril. |
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Caroline followed her husband to Britain in October with their daughters, while Frederick remained in Hanover to be brought up by private tutors. |
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Harry Potter is an orphaned boy brought up by his unfriendly aunt and uncle. |
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It follows a baby boy who is found and brought up by the dead in a cemetery. |
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He was brought up at Long White Cloud house on the right bank of the River Thames. |
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Button was born on 19 January 1980 in Frome, Somerset and brought up in nearby Vobster. |
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After his parents divorced when he was seven, he and his three elder sisters were brought up by their mother in Frome. |
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Mary I, Queen of Scots was brought up in France, where she adopted the French spelling of the name, Stuart. |
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They refused to accept that Robert, who had not been brought up in Cornwall, could know anything about mining. |
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It follows the adventures of a boy named Bod after his family is murdered and he is left to be brought up by a graveyard. |
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Both her parents were native Welsh speakers, yet she was brought up speaking English and learnt Welsh only as an adult. |
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Gilbert shows sympathy for his protagonist, the son of a thief who, brought up among thieves, kills his girlfriend. |
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She was an irritable, nervous woman brought up to expect high standards by her stern father. |
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Some are also brought up into the public display area on a rotation system. |
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Allegations of hacking have also been brought up in relation to former Prime Minister Tony Blair, and the Royal Family. |
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William Hamilton and a younger brother, Thomas Hamilton, were brought up by their mother. |
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Mill was brought up as a Benthamite with the explicit intention that he would carry on the cause of utilitarianism. |
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Mary, Queen of Scots, was brought up in France, where she adopted the French spelling of the name, Stuart. |
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James was brought up a Protestant, but resisted Presbyterianism and the independence of the Kirk. |
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Although born and brought up in Liverpool, William Gladstone was of purely Scottish ancestry. |
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Henry McLeish, the former First Minister of Scotland lived in Glenrothes, having been brought up in nearby Kennoway. |
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He was brought up in Patna, Ayrshire, and became involved in Labour politics, joining the Labour Party in 1967, aged sixteen. |
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The 114th Brigade would be held in reserve initially but brought up to exploit the success and push deeper into the German defensive belt. |
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She was brought up and still lives in the nearby village of Penygraig. |
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Sargent was brought up in Stamford, Lincolnshire, where he joined the choir at Peterborough Cathedral, studied the organ and won a scholarship to Stamford School. |
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Maunika, whose husband has an English mother and Indian father and was brought up eating roast dinners, is enjoying experimenting in the kitchen with Indianising British food. |
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His voice wavered when the reporter brought up the controversial topic. |
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It is brought up when we gather, often voiced by some of the most physically attractive men there, many of whom are objectively gorgeous, certifiably buff. |
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In foundling hospitals, and among the children brought up by parish charities, the mortality is still greater than among those of the common people. |
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Emin was born in Croydon, a district of South London, to an English mother of Romanichal descent, and brought up in Margate with her twin brother, Paul. |
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There is the safety factor, and I was always brought up to where you can race hard, you can race aggressive and they can race you, but you respect them. |
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At the time of Edward's premature death, his heir, Edward V, was only 12 years old and had been brought up under the stewardship of Earl Rivers at Ludlow Castle. |
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Meanwhile, Edward was brought up as a strict and devout Protestant by numerous tutors, including Bishop Richard Cox, John Belmain, and Sir John Cheke. |
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