The downside of this will be that if I ever do commit any kind of crime then the police will pretty much have me bang to rights. |
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The downside of computer images is their presentation of Nature at second hand. |
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The downside is that my nights are rather troublesome, and I'm not getting a lot of rest from them. |
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If there was a downside, you could argue that the bill was a little on the hefty side. |
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The downside is that if the umbilical connection to the internet is lost, there's no local persistent storage. |
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But we also learn that the downside of her implacable self-belief was a certain unapproachability. |
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The downside, of course, is that to restore the data, the entire compressed unit must be uncompressed to restore even a small portion. |
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The downside is that his brilliant musicianship was channelled into commercial hits. |
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But the markets are cruel and unforgiving places and Milne can see the benefits of a listing as much as understanding the downside risks. |
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The downside of this approach is that unscreened patients may present unpredictable problems. |
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With all the flashy braggadocio behaviour and senseless acts of violence, believe it or not, there's also a downside to wrestling. |
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As a downside, they're rather hot and unwieldy, being difficult to remove in a hurry. |
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So their upside potential is not as great as conventional hedge funds, but the downside is more protected. |
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The virtually inevitable downside of such a long-term focus is that it requires, to some extent, that we sacrifice depth for breadth. |
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That said, the sporty T5 version can thump and bang over bad bumps, the downside of its quicker, meatier responses and extra grip. |
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Despite the potential benefits, there's a downside to standardizing on a single software platform. |
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However, there was a downside to paying repeated homage to this oleaginous expatriate. |
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Tackling other people's problems head-on can't always be easy and Margaret admits there can be a downside. |
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On the downside he's noticed that the urban infrastructure has decayed immeasurably in recent years. |
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Though hendecagons are the most flexible polygons we have examined, there is a downside. |
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So the critics will continue to say that he is too unpredictable and over-elaborate, but that is the downside of genius. |
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The downside of this approach is that a high volume of network traffic can overload a system, and as a result not all packets are analyzed. |
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Key issues include the chattiness of people, how often cheery greetings are used and, on the downside, the extent of violent behaviour. |
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The downside to the car, like most superminis, is interior room for the family of young six-footers. |
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But, unbelievably, there is a downside to all the harrumphing pomp and pageantry. |
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On the downside it's 300 km from the sea, freezing in the winter, sweltering in the summer. |
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Distro helps a LOT of us indie peeps get noticed and there is NO downside to that. |
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The only downside is the vigour of the tree, which is weakened by the sap sucking of the coccids. |
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Really, the only downside was the variety of loud, rude, ignorant and stupid people encountered in duration. |
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Yes, women's liberation has given us choices that our grandmothers and even mothers could only dream of, but it has its downside too. |
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The downside is that tiny amounts of oil can force their way up past the piston ring into the combustion chamber. |
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The downside is you don't have as much independence and the upside is I get everything done for me. |
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For example, when purchasing a share of common stock outright, the buyer gets both the upside and the downside potential of the stock. |
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Technical intelligence's downside is that it can lead to information overload during a crisis. |
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The downside of this is that it makes the parts with the action not as interesting. |
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The downside is that a Socket 940 CPU won't plug into a Socket 939 motherboard, or vice versa. |
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The only real downside is that the process of convergence is likely to be messy. |
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The downside is that all we have here is a very long, very po-faced, mystic, pseudo-religious battle between our old mates good and evil. |
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The downside is that sometimes you end up publishing a very thin issue as was the case February. |
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Dealing with drunken fools who don't know when to quit is the downside to any bar job. |
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On the downside, a small minority of articles favour form over content to an excessive degree. |
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One downside of group dining is that chemical signals from the larvae and their frass can attract parasitoids. |
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But the downside will be societies with large numbers of sexually frustrated males and that could cause everything from internal unrest to wars. |
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The downside is, you have to close, or you walk away from your earnest money. |
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The downside was that a geocentric orbit placed the spacecraft in a more severe space environment. |
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On the downside, this dependency on biography and history means that sometimes the tales do not stand in their own right. |
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The downside is that the process of putting people into categories leads to depersonalisation. |
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This process also has its downside, such as low wages for supermarket workers, and unemployment and dereliction in some areas. |
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The upside and the downside are shared with the government, so the new franchises are substantially de-risked. |
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But the human passion for knowledge and discovery, as I've said, always has a downside. |
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The downside is that this election's emblematic hardworking New Zealander might be smart enough to resent this. |
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The downside is that they are not guaranteed to confirm one's opinions about the President in advance. |
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The prime minister is so enamoured of the European ideal that he ignores the economic downside, says his former adviser. |
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Instead of looking at the downside of things, when you walk into the fairway and find your drive in a divot, look on the positive side. |
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But there is also a downside to fame, the one in which family skeletons are dusted down in public. |
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The downside of the online boom is the worry that historians will lose a documentary record. |
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The downside is the social dysfunction I witness amongst the spectators because of alcohol consumption. |
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One small downside to the couple's do-gooding crusade is the official functions. |
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Although they offer a convenient and expedient method of obtaining a handful of cash, there is a significant downside to the business. |
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The downside is that if the feature makes a lot of money, very little of it will come back to Film Four. |
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The only downside is that driving slowly is difficult and finding a gear to settle into sedate mode is a challenge. |
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Apart from the obvious downside of having your teeth drilled, the potential damage to your bank balance can cause equal, if not greater, pain. |
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Another downside to this situation is that data, including GPS waypoints, will be lost when the plotters are updated. |
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So United are finding out that a stock market quote has a downside as well as an upside. |
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The downside is that one of the last times Fox moved a Sunday show to a weeknight, the results were far from encouraging. |
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A downside to the steeply raked windscreen is that taller drivers may find they are sitting just a little too high for comfort. |
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The only downside to my commercial adventure is the mischief being done to the American dollar. |
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The downside is that all the criteria needed to build a fusion reactor are rather difficult to achieve simultaneously. |
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The downside is of course that you may end up being boiled to death if the air con fails. |
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However, the downside could come years later if building use changes or if the building is altered. |
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The company also represented that they had helped it to hedge downside risk. |
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There is a downside to leaving it a while, the trees will have leafed up and you won't see so far, but I would wait. |
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The only downside so far is that orchid blooms wilt, but the rest of the plant remains healthy. |
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My sense is that you're going to do this anyway, so the question is really what can you do to avoid the worst possible downside scenario. |
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The downside of this small size was the limited amount of tape inside the cartridge. |
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On the downside technology-wise, I suffered a number of lockups on both test systems. |
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If I had to suggest a downside to the Patio, it would have to be the choice of tunes masquerading as background music. |
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Now the downside to this, as you may've noticed, is you can have some false starts. |
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The only good part about the rain was that it meant that the weather would be slightly less cold, but that, too had its downside. |
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The downside though, is that it's likely to mean you'll be packing your own shopping if you choose to participate. |
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The downside of this influx to the great megalopolis was the rise of the urban slum. |
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The downside to this top heavy parade of megastardom is that secondary characters barely get a look in. |
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On three occasions, this strategy has served him well, but his dog funds show the downside of this approach. |
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On the downside, MS-DOS is now so well hidden that it's a bit of an uphill task to create a boot diskette for tasks such as BIOS updating. |
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On the downside, it can cause sleeplessness, nervousness and shakiness in people whose bodies do not respond well to it. |
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While recognising the downside of such ventures, I am glad that the company had the courage to tackle something beyond its normal range. |
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For too long, he was caricatured as the playboy with the pun-friendly surname, an image to which he pandered happily until he realised its downside. |
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Politicians have been sold the idea that it is a big wealth-creating industry that must be cherished at all costs and now refuse to face the downside. |
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The downside of this was that he was often indiscreet and overambitious. |
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The touted gains of attack are intangible, while its downside is real and grave. |
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The downside is the price point locks you into a two-day turnaround. |
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Indeed, the downside to public spending cutbacks is depressed demand and job losses as well as reduced public services and continued inadequate infrastructure. |
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On the downside, I had projected a deep and profound unhappiness. |
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On the downside, mulching mowers work less well on wet or overly tall grass compared with nonmulching rotaries, and the cutting blade must be sharp. |
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That's why the shares look like a decent punt with reasonable protection against the downside risk of a modest slip back in the price of oil and no new exploration successes. |
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On the other hand, patients may not perceive much downside to taking the medications, even if they may not help much. |
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The downside, though, was that these were also the places where the disappointed Lotharios gathered, especially at the end of a long and unproductive Saturday night. |
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Of course, on the downside, his trial will be a media circus and the seriousness of the allegations will undoubtedly take second billing to salacious celebrity gossip. |
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In a horizontal plane, a square has an upside and a downside. |
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Centralizing security responsibilities has the downside of making our security more brittle, by instituting a commonality of approach and a uniformity of thinking. |
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Another downside is dealing with narrow-minded clients who don't allow you to move forward with what is clearly the best strategy for their business. |
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However, the downside is that the laminate may separate from the wood because the particle board responds to temperature and pressure changes by swelling and shrinking. |
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The downside to this is that you turn into a cautionary cynic, not trusting anything that comes out of a publisher's mouth and avoiding anything with a sniff of hype. |
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One downside with this mouse is the fact it only has 2 buttons. |
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But the real downside of media-sponsored rewards is that people seeking to cash in will pass information that sends investigating officers off on wild goose chases. |
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The only downside, as far as Dickson is concerned, was it was impossible to prevent bidders from downloading sensitive information and printing their own hard copies. |
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The glorification of merit, it turns out, has a profoundly threatening downside. |
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However, as the upside potential is exacerbated, so is the downside risk. |
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On the downside, Frederick and I agreed that the food was lousy and the staff were generally gormless, but the quality of the attractions is adequate compensation. |
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We've been hit particularly hard because what we export, which are durable goods, have the greatest cyclical swing, both on the upside and on the downside. |
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The downside of altruism is that closely bonded communities also tend to be more closed off to outsiders. |
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So this is a slight downside of the new machine. It isn't a problem in terms of functionality, but it is a little bit of a problem in terms of design and convenience. |
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By the time he was called to Washington by the parent club, Marrero was already on the downside of a three-decade pitching career. |
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The only downside is that you wake up the next day feeling like a cast member of The Walking Dead. |
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The downside of mezzotinting is that the plate does not last very long, for the depth of the pits was very shallow and a few dozen impressions could wear a plate out. |
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The downside to such foresight is that many girls undergo a variation in size as a result of dieting, comfort eating and general nervous indisposition. |
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But the downside is sometimes we give short shrift to everything else. |
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The only downside is that more than half the coho caught have had intact adipose fins, meaning they had to be released. |
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The main downside of publishing a site using MediaWiki is that it won't give you a great opportunity to use or improve your HTML skills. |
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Even GDP per capita measures may have the same downside if inequality is high. |
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However, the downside is that promotional costs will also be much higher due to having to employ a separate staff. |
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Grayson himself sees little political downside to his belligerence. |
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Drawing blood cultures in a decentralized environment seems to be among the most costly downside to decentralizing phlebotomy. |
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On the downside, it's more expensive and, if it dries out, difficult to rewet. |
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The big downside of oil paints is the paint thinner required to clean them up. |
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The only downside to me writing the Bueno Texas road trip article is that I didn't really go on the trip. |
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On the downside, it rewards them with fodder for nightmares. |
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The only downside for the Congressman was if their junket became public. |
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The only downside is I can't give up the day job to become a full-time ligger. |
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This derating is so geared by debt that the share price downside is extreme, said the broker. |
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The downside, though, was lugging the equipment back, with only wavering headlamps, over the boulders known locally as the Billy Goat Trail. |
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In fresh water, the bluegills, shellcracker, warmouth and redbellies will be on the downside of big spawns but will be plentiful. |
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The downside is that a servicemember may get overin-volved with a home problem that cannot be solved from overseas. |
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The downside is a lack of unique differentiators in the crowded, highly competitive smartphones and tablets markets. |
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The only downside for Dortmund was the broken cheekbone suffered by star stopper Neven Subotic. |
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That said, Renren already has a proven 10x winner in the mix with SoFi, which greatly mitigates the downside of its entire portfolio as detailed above. |
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The downside can be, occasionally, a less joyful sanctimony. |
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On the downside, people working for printing presses are facing the dire consequences, as they haven't reaped gold this time during the election season. |
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Stop loss orders, limit orders and protective puts provide an account with downside protection and an exit strategy should the stock decline in value. |
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The only downside is you'll look a bit of a numpty wandering around the shop with the mask on and your kids will post embarrassing snaps of you on Facebook. |
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The downside to goldens is their coats are magnets for cockleburs, stickers, and general debris, which requires extra maintenance at the end of a hunt. |
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The downside to many digestive enzyme supplements is that they contain specific amylases that facilitate that breakdown of dietary starches into rapidly-absorbed glucose. |
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The downside, though no one seems terribly worried about it, is that with new programs springing up every year, a lot of costly nurturing of nontalent takes place as well. |
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The downside is that this means pupils have a greater workload to complete, sometimes having to produce a large amount of work for a minimal part of the overall grade. |
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The downside of obtaining a higher rank is that far more work is expected. |
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On the downside, the cratering of attendance and the cloud that hung over the Mets until only Monday with the Madoff Ponzi scandal has taken a big divet out of club. |
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