From there, the race is on, as you have to catch up to and outdistance your rival. |
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The fighter escort was informed that we were at our rendezvous point and that we would do a navigational dogleg to allow them to catch up to us. |
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Long past last call, the two finally wander off out the door, only to have a third wheel catch up to them outside the club. |
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The driver offers him a bidon but Millar declines and pushes on to catch up to the bunch. |
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Wood's high fastball is tough to catch up to, and if umpires call it a strike, hitters must chase it. |
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Hopefully soon they would catch up to Ian's caravan, and would return to castle Laramont with Rana. |
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I want to catch up to all those affluential people who've wasted hundreds of dollars at the tanning salon. |
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They kept the track, and rolled off mile after mile before daylight in an effort to catch up to the leaders. |
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So every four years a leap day is added to the calendar to allow it to catch up to the solar year. |
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I quickly pushed myself and sped to catch up to her, but there were too many people and I had to walk. |
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Maybe it was for the best though, she thought, she had to deal with her own problems, they'd catch up to her anyway. |
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He did it in grand style too, winning his last two games to catch up to the seemingly uncatchable Kasparov. |
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In the long run, playing without both offensive tackles may catch up to the Packers. |
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She broke into a jog, trying to catch up to him before he reached the next piazza a hundred metres down. |
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If you believe that fundamentals eventually catch up to market behavior, this is not a particularly good portent for stocks going forward. |
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The film keeps fading out and telling us that it's one year or three years or six months later, and it's fun to catch up to where these people have ended up. |
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He'd catch up to the goldbrickers in a moment, he just needed to rest. |
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The opsimath, however, arriving late to the banquet and forcing himself to catch up to his peers in their cups, soon becomes tipsy and finds himself an object of ridicule to the others. |
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Infants may catch up to 8 colds a year because their defence mechanisms are still too immature. |
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Babies can catch up to 8 colds a year because of their immature immune system. |
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Some apparently delayed children may indeed catch up to their peers as they get older. |
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We need to play catch up to bring our system on par with the rest of Ontario and Canada. |
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Despite a voluminous outpouring of books and journal articles, historians are in some senses only beginning to catch up to certain facets of America's Civil War. |
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He was watching the dog catch up to its tail. |
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The medium-sized cats with short tails and ear tufts will catch up to two hares in three days' hunting. |
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In the Illinois River, the main such tributary, commercial fishers now catch up to 25,000 pounds of bighead and silver Asian carp per day. |
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When this person saw the first group pulling away, she decided to set out after them rather than wait for the assistant guide and the straggler to catch up to her. |
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Knowledge spreads more quickly than ever before, and the ability of also-ran regions to catch up to, or even leapfrog, traditional leaders surely has grown. |
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Will government regulation catch up to science? |
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Will their hitters' strikeouts catch up to them? |
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The laws had yet to catch up to this new world where blacksmiths could put out steam-driven mechanicals and the new industry raised country merchants to the big houses. |
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