More than 84 per cent said they hold onto trash until they find a garbage can where they can dispose of it. |
|
He did not, however, hold onto her car as he approached it, or stumble or lose his footing. |
|
What if, after all those years of talking to Beth to hold onto his sanity, he'd finally stripped his gears? |
|
There's no need to hold onto your tax return just because you owe the government money. |
|
Once the razzle-dazzle, show-stopping numbers end, there's not much to hold onto. |
|
Say what you will about the easy sharability of digital photos, sometimes it's nice to have an actual physical print that you can hold onto. |
|
The film will obviously come in a lightproof bag, but I am going to need that to hold onto the original film that is not shot yet. |
|
Again I feel that the volume of hoggs is not going to be there this year and if you can hold onto your sheep for a week or two it should pay. |
|
Sometimes we hold onto animals to monitor their physical condition or to check their paperwork. |
|
With increasing desperation, he looked for it, scanning the heaving landscape before him for something to hold onto. |
|
Both had to hold onto the shaky rails as they headed down, for the ship was swaying back and forth with the waves. |
|
Neville has made the right-back position his own over the last decade and will rightly hold onto it for the World Cup in Germany next summer. |
|
Make a player hold onto the ball after hitting the end zone to legitimize a touchdown. |
|
When businesses are not sure of what's happening, they want to hold onto their cash and not overcommit on space they won't need. |
|
All the girls were squealing while the guys were laughing so hard they had to hold onto the furniture in order to stay standing. |
|
I held my breath there for a sec wondering if they'd be able to hold onto the notes. |
|
Caleb tried to hold onto his fury but he could feel it slowly slipping away. |
|
For this reason, many landlords tend to hold onto such properties until 10 years have expired from the date of first letting. |
|
Structurally amorphous, there's little for the musical mind to hold onto, but, then perhaps that's the nature of an exaltation of larks. |
|
The defence and goalie shut out the Golden Hawk offence for the rest of the game to hold onto the win and remain triumphant. |
|
|
The cowboy uses one arm to hold onto the handhold and has to try to stay on for eight seconds. |
|
We need to be able to play these big teams and stay composed and hold onto the ball. |
|
Kimiwari continued to hiss and spit until Naomi could no longer hold onto her. |
|
Another part of me is afraid that it's temporary and that I'm not going to be able to hold onto it. |
|
In the onrushing, kaleidoscopic chaos of our life there is nothing substantial to hold onto. |
|
They're blind to reality, and they're determined to hold onto their power by any means possible at this time. |
|
As a newspaperman, there are some stories you hold onto and some you assign priority status. |
|
The latest Golf is set by its designers to hold onto the faithful and garner a few more congregations to the fold. |
|
Often they need to hold onto poles while navigating to their seat but at the same time they need relatively clear paths through the vehicle. |
|
If it continued to hook her attention she would hold onto it. |
|
I sometimes wonder if some of the bitterness that is injected into politics is just a form of demagoguery, an effort to hold onto this group of voters. |
|
While AOL purges customer e-mail from its servers after 28 days unless users specify otherwise, Gmail encourages users to hold onto their messages indefinitely. |
|
But it would signal a significant diminution of polarization only if the candidate were able to hold onto enough of the base to win the general election. |
|
Mr Hume will romp home in Foyle, while Seamus Mallon, the deputy SDLP leader, should hold onto Newry and Armagh. |
|
Do let your customers know you will bend over backwards to hold onto their business. |
|
I usually try to read on the trip home, but the way the train jolts around, you usually get thrown into people because there's nothing to hold onto. |
|
Grip the handle of your unstrung bow with one hand, and hold onto the end of the twisted limb with the other hand. |
|
We can become enraged at schoolchildren who want to hold onto their babyishness, in much the same way as we are infuriated by prolonged breastfeeding. |
|
I had to have something to hold onto after all the horrors I had seen every day for five weeks in Liberia. |
|
We also assumed that interest rates would increase gradually in both countries in 2006 and the Canadian dollar would hold onto its recent gains. |
|
|
If these conditions are in place, it is possible to recruit and to hold onto very promising scientists. |
|
For the Learning Club does not claim to possess knowledge, but rather knows how to hold onto it. |
|
We need to change the situation, but we need to hold onto our culture while we do it. |
|
The question remains as to whether the 16-nation currency can hold onto these advances throughout the coming week. |
|
Calcium, thanks to its two positive charges, is going to hold onto organic matter and clays as if with two arms. |
|
We do not have the forests there to hold onto the soil and stop the slides from happening. |
|
Important: You shall need old cards to activate the new ones, so please hold onto them. |
|
This disproportionate violence against civilians suggests that the military is determined to hold onto power. |
|
We obviously recommend that you hold onto your account statements with your respective financial institutions. |
|
In addition, NERA considers that a company ought in principle to hold onto the asset of a strong brand which brings market benefits. |
|
It is, to my mind, a fantastic achievement and something we should hold onto. |
|
That said, Francophones hold onto their linguistic and cultural heritage and maintain a dynamic Francophone space. |
|
We must therefore work constantly to gain and hold onto the preference of our clients. |
|
Our bodies are biologically programmed to gather weight, to hold onto it. |
|
He is busy building war rooms and planning important strategies to hold onto party leadership and the hereditary right to run the country that goes with it. |
|
Dempsey ended the 10th race in sixth place to hold onto his overall in fourth place overall, but the windsurfers above him in the standings pulled away from him. |
|
The important thought to hold onto here is that ethical claims cannot be empirically verified, but that this is so much the worse for empirical verification. |
|
I hold onto his arm and lift him while he closes his eyes and tries not to grimace. |
|
Please note tagua nuts are notoriously difficult to hold onto, are so dense that you may end up burning the nut trying to cut it if your blade is moving too fast. |
|
Pretty outlandish, but again, it just shows he is not inhibited in trying any sort of device that might let him hold onto power. |
|
|
It turns out that I was there for the last home win in Montreal Expos history, a small claim to fame that I'll hold onto tightly as the team fades down the memory hole. |
|
If after completing your canasta of sevens you draw another one you must hold onto it, and it will prevent you from going out, even if you have met all the other requirements. |
|
When mickey mouse came on the screen and there was his big head, my sister said she had to hold onto me. |
|
How to hold onto belief that colour and voice will bloom in this place? |
|
Sneak the book back into the stacks and tell them they screwed up because you returned it long ago, or else hold onto it until the next amnesty period. |
|
Marc's goal now is to hold onto this advantageous position to profit from a slightly stronger, better-directed wind than his rival on the approach to Guadeloupe. |
|
To put up a building here, in a riding that did not win a project last time, or to build a road there, in a riding they want to hold onto in the next election. |
|
Are we not witnessing the desperate efforts of a handful of powers to hold onto an order that serves their interests, but is falling apart on all sides? |
|
Too frequently, however, different departments and branches hold onto their own pieces of the ECLC puzzle and there is no effective mechanism for fitting them together. |
|
Kent made a snowcone catch and appeared to hold onto the ball just long enough for the out. |
|
She thought that the pregnancy was her chance to hold onto her boyfriend. |
|
What has changed about Washington that allows a serial scandalizer to hold onto his job? |
|
Officer Sesoko, with the help of a nearby resident, threw in a discarded box spring for the boy to hold onto, but it sank into the murky water. |
|
After several further unsuccessful attempts at boarding, the crew members mutually agreed to remain in the water and to hold onto the becketed grab lines on each side of the craft. |
|
Vidal then went clear but Tapia was able to hold onto her lofted shot. |
|
Ilirqorri and diegojuva remain at the top of the leaderboard, managing to hold onto their positions while the rest of the top ten were shuffled around. |
|
I think that that is how we can hold onto our prosperity. |
|
The seas are fairly moderate, which is enabling us to hold onto raised speeds, even though it's not a point of sail our steed is particularly fond of! |
|
When the body is dehydrated, vasopressin levels rise, prompting the kidneys to hold onto water. |
|
Many Congolese fear that Mr. Kabila is trying to wiggle out of term limits like several of his presidential cohorts across Africa and hold onto power indefinitely. |
|
|
Norway's consolidation of power in Iceland was slow, and the Althing intended to hold onto its legislative and judicial power. |
|
Desperate to hold onto power, Pervez Musharraf has discarded Pakistan's constitutional framework and declared a state of emergency. |
|
A change in a single position of a rice plant's genetic code lets it hold onto grains until harvest, new research suggests. |
|
What's more, the super cat can hold onto the entire pebbledash surface of the walls while making his vertical ascent. |
|
I climb onto the back of his banana seat and hold onto the sides of his shirt. |
|
With nothing to hold onto, the men resorted to dog-paddling. |
|
In most cases, the female's eggs float freely in the sea, but some species hold onto them with their spines, affording them a greater degree of protection. |
|
But, in the 21st minute, Mark Schwarzer failed to hold onto an eminently saveable Kevin Davies drive, allowing the ball to squirm into the net and handing Bolton a lifeline. |
|