So I left school at 17, supported my A-level studies through jobs and then when I got to university it felt like a doddle! |
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These days, thanks to the wonders of the Web, being a rate tart is an absolute doddle. |
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Being an MP may be a doddle for obscure Labour backbenchers, but not for party leaders, and Salmond will inevitably become UK leader again. |
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They're easy to use, make cross-platform file swapping a doddle, and they're incredibly convenient. |
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The clear presentation, category headings and search tool make browsing a doddle. |
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It is a peerless town car, being so quick and nimble, and it's a breeze to park and a doddle to drive in heavy traffic. |
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An electronic programme guide makes navigating schedules and setting recordings a doddle. |
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If I can import all these birds into the country then bringing in heroin must be a absolute doddle. |
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I still contend that if you can perform to thirty people and give them a good show then any bigger audience is a doddle. |
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With electric adjustments for not only the seat but the steering column as well, finding the right driving position is a doddle. |
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According to the lieutenant, playing rugby for a living is a doddle when you've survived cadet school. |
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It's also a doddle to make and takes no time to cook, especially if you grate the carrot. |
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Help is available throughout the process, which makes the online shop a doddle for customers to use. |
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Check any of your outstanding balances, print order confirmations and use it to make placing re-orders a doddle. |
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Filing may sound a doddle, but believe me some companies have weird systems devised by crazy employees who clearly didn't want anyone else to find anything. |
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Part-time work is a doddle compared to being a full-time mum. |
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The ten-mile trip from the AMF Bowl in Keighley will be a doddle compared to the 3,500-mile trip the couple journeyed to the Czech Republic and back last summer. |
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Three successive wins later, England occupy the commanding heights in Group Six, and the rest of the World Cup qualifying campaign ought to be a doddle. |
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We get it every year, in magazines, newspaper, on the television and radio, so-called experts spout forth with tips on how to make Christmas a doddle. |
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It's a doddle to descale – which helps maintain steam levels – but it does spit out lots of scale when you've finished. |
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The intuitive controls are a doddle to pick up, and a fairly forgiving Save structure means you rarely have to retrace steps. |
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Anyway, by climbing up the cherry tree, swinging across to the balcony and jemmying the window, we soon found that getting in through the bathroom was a doddle. |
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But if neutralinos take that long to find, the hunt for the Higgs really will look like a doddle by comparison. |
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During booms borrowing often seems attractive to leaders, who reckon that rising incomes will make servicing the debt a doddle. |
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And because they are designed to be interrogated from distances of ten metres or more, they are a doddle to intercept. |
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With a menu of options listed on the screen by time and channel, programme selection becomes a doddle. |
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I fear that cleaning up the environment may prove to be a doddle compared to the task of persuading the UKIP to clean up its act. |
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The best-paid of the three in his previous job, Turkmen found himself bankrolling the group for the first few years, and is mildly incensed by the notion that getting to where they are now has been a doddle. |
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This cruiser is a doddle to manoeuvre through a hairpin, remaining stable as you grind away its pegs, and its limited ground clearance is the only detriment to handling. |
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Retailing in Europe's biggest economy, with 82m mostly well-off people, may sound a doddle. It is not. |
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A cross between a razor and a depilatory cream without the mess and the smell, they make it a doddle to get rid of that unwanted fuzz. |
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The sound and signal strength are both very good, it's a doddle to operate and it's a neat unit that can be easily hidden from view. |
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So joining the French Foreign Legion for a month to find the truth behind the romantic Beau Geste image should be a doddle. |
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Nobody has gone after members of the Thatcher Government who lavished taxpayers' money on the disgraceful ad campaign that made personal pensions a doddle to mis-sell. |
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