While most of us are out partying, the family will be trying to come to terms with their terrible loss. |
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The best known Marxist economists outside the orbit of official Communism found it all but impossible to come to terms with what was happening. |
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During his stay Jan worked with his brothers Tim and Ben to help them come to terms with Sam's impending death. |
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Although unshackled from the 15 kg iron chains that fettered them for three years, they are yet to come to terms with their freedom. |
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Johnny is a complex man, working to come to terms with the haunting gift that has been bestowed upon him. |
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His dry humour and his lived-in face perfectly convey the hopelessness he feels as he tries to come to terms with his personal demons. |
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This is not going to be an easy hurdle for local government to come to terms with. |
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This programme is to help people to come to terms with loss through bereavement or separation. |
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The nursery teacher is still trying to come to terms with having a big, dark coloured cat loping along the side of her car. |
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So anyway, Gary was telling me that it had taken him a long, long time to come to terms with his boringness. |
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But he admits it took him a while to come to terms with the shock of being stopped for the second time inside 12 months. |
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By the close of the story, it seems that the narrator has only begun to come to terms with the self-deceit he has practiced on himself. |
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A young man looks back over his unhappy marriage and struggles to come to terms with his wife's suicide. |
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It will depend on the ability of Canberra bureaucrats to come to terms with problems that are totally unfamiliar to them. |
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Needless to say, they still haven't come to terms with their moral bankruptcy. |
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So long as one nurses the hope of civilized co-existence, one tries to come to terms with the ground realities. |
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As a young man David McInroy had to come to terms with the fact he was not destined for a career as a professional footballer. |
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I think the union movement has to come to terms with that and build a base to say that we want an egalitarian society again. |
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You may need to come to terms with a parent who treated you poorly or didn't raise you well. |
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Despite my initial slight dislike of the idea, I had not only come to terms with it, but also started to like it. |
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It's good to come to terms with thanatology as a psychospiritual initiation. |
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While the former long for the past, the latter try to come to terms with their dual identity as Chinese and Americans. |
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It is difficult to come to terms with the fact that his affable presence will be no more. |
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This makes the fact that the lyrics are so poor even more difficult to come to terms with. |
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Some saw the ad as providing explanation and making them think, but for others there were too many technicalities to come to terms with. |
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Defeat is never easy to come to terms with but when your team goes down as tamely and disappointingly as this it is all the harder to take. |
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She never thought she would be able to come to terms with the unbearable grief. |
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In light of this discovery, all three women must come to terms with a time thought forgotten. |
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Cleave is left facing a tragedy and having to come to terms with things failed and half done. |
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Crusader princes, atabeqs, emirs and even Saladin himself had been forced to come to terms with them or suffer the consequences. |
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I find myself sat despondently at my desk, trying to come to terms with the fact that I actually have to work for living. |
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So it took me some time to come to terms with the fact that he supports fox hunting and his son is a whipper-in. |
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The members have called for the deferment of the increases to allow tenants come to terms with the new rents. |
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You can make a good fist of doing it, but in the end you have to come to terms with the fact that you are not dealing with a tame beast. |
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Taking a moment to come to terms with what had just happened, I recomposed myself and returned to my candelight supper, dazed but undaunted. |
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Like the ponderer of a Zen koan, the viewer must come to terms with this paradox. |
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Loyalists are likely to dismiss the criticisms as a familiar refrain from opponents who have never come to terms with his leadership. |
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We must acknowledge and come to terms with the implicit cissexism in assuming that only women have abortions. |
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The description of him dancing the twist with his wife in an effort to come to terms with the New World Order is almost too sad to contemplate. |
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With its honeycomb of medieval streets, the centre of York has struggled to come to terms with growth of motor traffic over the last 50 years. |
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Will they ever come to terms with what was done in their names and, for the most part, with their tacit approval? |
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The young protagonist struggles to come to terms with his own racial and ethnic identity, and to accept and embrace his blackness. |
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People being told to leave their homeland and settle somewhere over a green line was something I could not come to terms with. |
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To come to terms with the facts, it is necessary to home in on more elementary errors, as Bastiat and Mises repeatedly do. |
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If only the director could come to terms with the fact that his dramatic tendencies are hokey and unoriginal. |
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With richly textured dialogue set in the midlands, the play tells the story of Hester Swane as she battles to come to terms with rejection. |
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The 5ft 6in caretaker ballooned to 25 st 5lb by bingeing on pies, crisps and chocolates as he struggled to come to terms with the tragedy. |
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The reason why I want others to contribute is that I haven't fully come to terms with what it is about, but I'm sure it pays repeat viewings. |
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She cannot come to terms with the unkindnesses she experiences or hears about, nor the countless suffocations of poverty. |
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Inquiries are still ongoing into the deaths just over a week ago, and the couple's families are still struggling to come to terms with what has happened. |
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The meetings and the alcohol program helped the offender come to terms with his drinking problems. |
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This was one of those days, one which is still hard to come to terms with. |
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I have even seen a pop-up book of the universe which perhaps fortunately fails to come to terms with the Big Bang, but these books seldom feature observers. |
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In a rapidly changing digital world, where many are stretched and stressed, we need to come to terms with the effects of such stress and pressure on the human psyche. |
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But that is in fact an almost expectable event around his age, when people must come to terms with their limitations and old dreams for themselves. |
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Those who dismiss God as a product of psychological conditioning or pre-scientific myth have not come to terms with the findings of modern science. |
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The rift put Washington at odds with countries like Brazil, Uruguay or Chile, which seemed to have come to terms with their past. |
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I had come to terms with death then, and I feel so blessed every day that I am still alive. |
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As states come to terms with the capabilities-and dangersof information warfare, it is not implausible that a cyberspace arms race could erupt. |
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They come to terms with the situation despairingly and without a clear way out of it. |
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Hemingbrough are struggling to come to terms with life in the top division although the signs are that they are improving despite their reversal at Stockton and Hopgrove. |
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A troubadour and bohemian with Texan and Quebecker roots, she has come to terms with her true nature on Greyhound buses between her two habitats. |
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He seems to have come to terms with the fact that popularity isn't necessarily antithetical to quality. |
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The play, set in 1982, depicts the struggles of three privileged slackers to come to terms with impending adulthood. |
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Claim settlements enable us to come to terms with the past and to move toward a better future. |
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The media experts were of the opinion that people had to come to terms with the past in order to achieve new rapprochement with one another. |
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Political foul play has become a part of everyday life in Russia, and unfortunately we too must come to terms with this. |
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I'm just going to have to come to terms with that and be patient? learning how to deal with it and hold on. |
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Once I got over the shock, I knew I had to quickly come to terms with this unforeseen direction my life was about to take. |
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One issue that you and your roommate will have to come to terms with is the idea of cleanliness. |
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We all have to come to terms with our own history and with the actions of our antecedent countries and states openly and honestly. |
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Such key issues merit extensive public debate, enabling everyone to come to terms with the challenges and choices involved in energy policy. |
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It is proving very hard for some people to come to terms with the disappearance of a concept that has been promoted for so many years. |
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Suddenly, on top of the present and future uncertainties, we must come to terms with the past. |
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We have come to terms with our horrendous past and it will no longer keep us hostage and looking at our past. |
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It can help you come to terms with your childhood experiences, and help with your healing. |
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There, he led a workshop that encouraged the children to come to terms with their past through artistic expression. |
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We need to allow first nations to come together and come to terms with this new challenge. |
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It can help if people understand what is happening to them so that they can try to come to terms with it. |
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Even though I have come to terms with my status, I do not want my close friends and family to know. |
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I do not know either how I must come to terms with him, or how to make him leave my spirit. |
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While positive law does not ignore this widespread social reality completely, it clearly has not come to terms with it. |
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This is of particular concern as the world begins to come to terms with environmental constraints. |
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It will have to come to terms with the ghost of Ronald Reagan, and it will have to come to terms with Rush Limbaugh. |
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The hardest thing to come to terms with is that ultimately you cannot make everything all right for people, Blaine says. |
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The men, middle-aged and raddled by the inevitable broken roads they have travelled, struggle to come to terms with their lives and damaged relationships. |
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Little Ray and Caz uncover some uncomfortable truths, and Ray and Jim have to come to terms with the prejudices of ageism, family loyalty and love. |
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He was diagnosed with sarcoma, a rare form of cancer, in August and had to come to terms with dying in a manner of months. |
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The scruffy, residential district of Realengo is trying to come to terms with what happened on Thursday morning. |
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You see that they've lost their sharp wit and edginess, but you've long come to terms with that. |
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Anyone who reads this site on a passing basis will have had to come to terms with my, erm, creative application of the rules of spelling, punctuation and verb modification. |
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He's trying to come to terms with the barbarity of the attack and is concerned that such scenes of violence are becoming more prevalent in cities. |
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I still remember the hurt that was etched on his face as he tried to come to terms with the defeat and more particularly, the manner of that defeat. |
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However, the oft-times champions struggled to come to terms with rather unaccomplished opponents, and they only scored twice in the opening 14 minutes. |
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Like many former mining towns in north-east England, Easington is still struggling to come to terms with the sudden loss of the major local employer. |
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It will be stuck with below par growth for the foreseeable future as it is forced to come to terms with the slump in the high technology sector, he said. |
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He added that seeing people come to terms with tragedy and catastrophe had played a profound role on his spiritual beliefs and influenced his faith. |
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Staff work around the clock to ensure these youngsters cram as much into their short years as possible while helping their parents to come to terms with the inevitable. |
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So, for instance, a good deal of the Greek language literature can be read as an attempt to come to terms with Hellenistic culture. |
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Louis fell ill and withdrew from the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry. |
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Henry's father advised him to come to terms with Louis and peace was made between them in August 1151 after mediation by Bernard of Clairvaux. |
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If someone dies you cry and people console you and after some time you come to terms with it but if someone disappears, it is the bitterest of agonies. |
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They wanted to be able to give the family time to come to terms with the change of plans, but at the same time, they did not want to unnecessarily prolong the suffering. |
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Such a coalition would hold 65 seats in the Knesset but in such a scenario, the religious parties would have to come to terms with certain laic projects of Avigdor Liberman. |
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While there, he befriends tunneller Jack Firebrace, who helps him come to terms with both the conflict and his lost love. |
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In the past few months, two high profile legal setbacks appear to have forced federally regulated employers to come to terms with the pay equity provisions in the Canadian Human Rights Act. |
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Once they are able to come to terms with the change in their circumstances, most parents are able to adjust remarkably well to their new situation and enjoy their children. |
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Canadians should not be smug about it, but they can say that they have come to terms with diversity in a world in which diversity is bound to become more common. |
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Berger never completely got over the circumstances of his split with Véronique Sanson, but at least his new album helped him partly come to terms with it. |
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We recommend that in a spirit of fraternity each Province find the means for helping the aged and infirm friars to come to terms with their human and Franciscan identity in a way adapted to their concrete situation. |
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It is necessary to help the child to slowly come to terms with the unpleasant experience which he has suffered and to realise that healing takes time and that he should wait before taking any action. |
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Whatever the budget, the European project is stuttering, unsure what to do about the faltering eurozone and unable to come to terms with Anglo-Saxon enterprise that the countries of Asia have made their own. |
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Based on its highly-respected core magazine, it offers practical insight to help marketers come to terms with the challenge of digital media and adapt successfully. |
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The competent magistrate or judge shall invite the support person to provide emotional support to the child to help him or her to come to terms with the outcome of the trial, if necessary. |
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In fact, Nzongo was struggling to come to terms with a radical change of status in the music world, having fallen from the status of national chart-topper to bar stand-up. |
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In the course of this relationship Noone is able to discuss, and come to terms with, his relationship with Jess and also with his own parents, particularly his provocatively prejudiced yet stumblingly loving father. |
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Especially, in view of the fact that these exceptional results have been obtained in a segment where companies usually only come to terms with the help of governmental subventions, and where most of them are in red figures. |
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When the Orsini offered to admit the French to their castles, Alexander had no choice but to come to terms with Charles. |
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However, gifted at judging political forces and sizing up a situation, Bismarck contended that conservatives would have to come to terms with other social groups if they were to continue to direct Prussian affairs. |
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Historians have not yet truly come to terms with the weaknesses of that muddled era of centralisation and Thatcherite socialism. |
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Emotionally confused, withdrawing from a wake at which people express crass sentiments, Alice finds herself on a psychological quest to come to terms with her feelings. |
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That opening burst was enough to seal victory over a Cameroon side that, following their premature elimination from the African Cup of Nations, now has to come to terms with playing the unaccustomed role of also-rans. |
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The Cowbridge resident, who struggled to come to terms with her hearing loss, spent the best part of a decade learning to lipread. |
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Each of these things is absorbed by one of his three personas, which eventually implode on a troubled family trip, when Martin must finally come to terms with the loss he has never accepted. |
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Palermo said the need to come to terms with war's bloodiness is common to veterans of all conflicts. |
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Unable to come to terms with a changing society, the identity of the Afrikaner characters in the novel is regressively tied to the past. |
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They struggled to come to terms with the fact there would be a new addition to the family with siblings Abbie, 12, Paige, 10, Ryan, eight, Milo, five and Lyam, four. |
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With Benson's help, Walpole had come to terms with the loss of his faith. |
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Ultimately, at the end of the campaign, Owain was forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east. |
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