Rumor has it she resorted using the charms to get ahead in both her career and her love life. |
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It identifies those most likely to get ahead and to be more successful in their working careers. |
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Then, as they approached the left-hand turn, he tried to get ahead, clipping the Ferrari. |
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But before I get ahead of myself, I would like to explain that our ship was equipped with Carley floats. |
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You have a lot more power plays and you get ahead and the other teams have to open it up. |
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If you want to get ahead in life, you can start by sticking with the things you start. |
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I think, for the most part. they're opportunists without much dignity or pride, people who would sell out their own kind to get ahead. |
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In a modern society, such knowledge logically ought to be valued most by the upwardly mobile middle class, who can use it to get ahead. |
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That is to say, he isn't the type of guy who will get ahead of you in speed, but he outsmarts you. |
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The game offers players the chance to get ahead of the curve in terms of leveling up and character customization via microtransactions. |
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If the only way to get ahead in a big organization is to toe the line, then you'll end up with a stolid stratum of cautious time-servers. |
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I think, for the most part, they're opportunists without much dignity or pride, people who would sell out their own kind to get ahead. |
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It should come as no surprise, then, that politicians are scrambling to get ahead of the curve. |
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Millions of middle-class families like these are working hard and trying to get ahead, but they just can't keep up with the health care costs. |
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While climbing, my instructor quickly directed me to switch to the small-deck radio frequency to get ahead of the game. |
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Are there things that a White woman can do to get ahead in the workplace that you think a Black woman never could do? |
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Like humans, apes and monkeys have to live in complex social groupings in which guile is needed to get ahead or simply to survive. |
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And now we are embroiled in another of track and field's endless efforts to get ahead of dopers. |
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Or maybe, we fear that if we pause for even an infinitesimal second, someone else will grab our place and get ahead? |
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You don't need to be having a bad hair day to sport one of the latest hats for man, so get ahead and try a bucket hat or baseball cap. |
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It's easy to get ahead of oneself in the evaluation process, judging things that are still under development to be final. |
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And appearances help people get ahead in their careers, an extreme example being a former beauty queen from Venezuela who ran for president. |
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I was very impressed with the notion that is bought up in the book on page 77 that one should not try to get ahead of oneself in golf. |
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Even now each state, moreover, seeks to get ahead of other states as it deals with its military and defense problems. |
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He's also constantly jamming left-handed batters with his cut fastball and using his 92-mph fastball to get ahead in counts. |
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The desire is all too common to get even with those who do us dirt, those who get ahead of us and those who hate us. |
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Our government wants to help women get the tools they need to get ahead when economic recovery follows the current recession. |
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You will have to cooperate with other breeders regularly to get ahead towards your breeding goal. |
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All women need to get ahead and be successful is their own determination! |
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You don't have to gossip or backstab the person in the next cube to get ahead. |
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All disciplines place emphasis on winning funding to get ahead, but competition is intense, particularly for early career researchers. |
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His motivation is to get ahead in life, so he can have his own house in the future, help his blood brother and sisters and help his NPH family. |
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The academic world is providing more courses than ever for people to get ahead in the games industry, but are the rewards clear-cut? |
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What message does it send if we allow people who are here without documents to get ahead of those who are playing by the rules? |
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We have had some health crises in this country that we were not able to get ahead of. |
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These resources allow research to move faster, and help European businesses to get ahead of world competition. |
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Employers must get ahead of this curve, finding ways to use social media itself to help employees achieve the proper balance. |
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But let us not get ahead of ourselves: for the moment, there are around a thousand miles to cover before rounding the famous rocky headland. |
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We aim to be the development partners our customers turn to when they want to get ahead of the field and stay there. |
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This brilliant presentation, coupled with his on-the-spot argumentation, allowed him to get ahead of the competition. |
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We do not usually get ahead of ourselves, but this project is so immense that we have to let our players know! |
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To get ahead of this curve, Hydro One has taken a leadership role, both within and outside the company. |
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We simply must ramp up all that we are doing to get ahead of the hunger curve. |
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Elected officials can only take so many risks and if they get ahead of their constituents they lose. |
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Marc was confident yesterday and thought he would be able to get ahead of Roxy by the Azores. |
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We can't afford to let others get ahead of us, and we are ill advised to compete solely on the basis of a low cost operating environment. |
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That's the only way to get ahead of what will inevitably be new rules and regulations that will impact an organization's operations. |
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It is when your family interferes with your career and your ability to get ahead at work. |
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Just as man walks on two legs, humanity can only get ahead by leaning at the same time on democracy as well as on development. |
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They want their children to get ahead in life and have the opportunity to develop their potential. |
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Working at Gimv is a creative search for success. Every day, you meet entrepreneurs who want to get ahead and aim high. |
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If they want to get ahead, they should look across the Tasman. |
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Hay puts the churchiness down to the type of people who wanted to get ahead, although the parsimoniousness of Hay the elder perhaps encouraged self-help. |
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They've seen in recent years how quickly it's possible to get ahead by job hopping, yet they crave security in the face of today's shaky business climate. |
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Political anoraks who want to get ahead of the game should read Winning Back America, the former Vermont governor's recently published campaign autobiography. |
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A filmmaker with as many misses as hits, like all great producers, Korda knew that to get ahead in the film business, you had to spend other people's money. |
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Nilai, I saw his score, I knew he could and would try to wager and get ahead of me. |
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Most come from rural backgrounds and are poorly educated, handicaps for anyone who wants to get ahead in the modern urban-commercial civilisation. |
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He was the proverbially smooth young man looking to get ahead, and he did. |
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By acting now, Canada can get ahead of the curve and create a sustainable competitive advantage for the future, an advantage that will bring economic and social benefits to all Canadians. |
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I am extremely grateful to Clause for giving me the opportunity to get ahead so quickly and achieve the professional objectives I had fixed, particularly that of being able to travel. |
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The horde followed the airport employee upstairs, with journalists running up downward escalators to get ahead, and the invitees were ushered through a service door guarded by police and into a hallway with a metal detector. |
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We will continue to examine those opportunities as they arise and hopefully we'll get ahead of the game and not simply be responding to accidents. |
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Modern rushaholics are always racing, always out of breath, always feeling behind schedule, always striving, but seldom managing to get ahead. |
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They let us get ahead of the outfit, then the rest of the guys came in. |
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A clever gambler wagers just enough to get ahead of the game, but not so much that he could be knocked out. |
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How do we take on these challenges to get ahead of the curve? |
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Although markets had been gradually softening over the course of the week, the investor feedback was extremely positive and the decision was taken to launch early on Monday morning to get ahead of upcoming corporate supply. |
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This kind of in-depth testing has helped us get ahead of our competition in the eyes of our clients as a more thoroughly tested and more stable application. |
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Do you require further education to get ahead? |
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It is difficult to get ahead on a road development of that magnitude because it would suck up the entire road building budget of the Government of the Northwest Territories. |
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In a village where social control is all-pervasive, an attempt to get ahead which ends in failure is a source of embarrassment, frustration and shame. |
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And those struggling to get ahead in the job market quickly find that the unsightliness of bad teeth, and the self-consciousness that results, can become a major barrier. |
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Last week's deal on CO2 from cars shows how easy it is to take the path of least resistance, to let vested interests get ahead of global interests. |
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Constantly changing with the times and adapting race conditions, Aintree should instead just get ahead of the game. |
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Meanwhile, new recruits to the workforce were told they had to get a degree – and a shedload of debt – to get ahead, only to come out and find there weren't the commensurate jobs for them. |
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Huawei is seeking to get ahead of this disruption of its core business by being a disrupter itself. There are good reasons to think Huawei may be up to the challenge. |
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People often interrupt themselves mid-sentence. Why? Perhaps they're excited over something and get ahead of themselves as they speak. |
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And so by doing this research, we are able to get ahead of this virus emerging in the field to test whether our last resource would be functional. |
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Their stories give a human face to the struggle to get ahead. |
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Access to child care and affordable housing has also shown little improvement over the years and is seen as a significant obstacle for those struggling to get ahead in our community. |
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There are two kinds: bonding networks that help individuals get by, such as close family and friends of the same social and economic background, and more diverse bridging networks that can help individuals get ahead. |
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To get ahead on the academic ladder, one is strictly assessed numerically. |
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If you want to get ahead, get a hat, and these folk have certainly taken the advice to heart with a spectacular parade of Easter headwear from the Mercury archives. |
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A recent study by Junior Achievement showed that students are willing to act unethically to get ahead, underscoring the need for early ethics education. |
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