City had not gone in to the interval with the luxury of a two-goal cushion since beating Watford in March. |
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The tokens may be dropped in to the school and we would be grateful of your support. |
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Moreover, I can now see why so few doctors will step in to help us against the futilitarians by taking over care. |
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The narrator then steps in to comment on the pointlessness and futility of life on earth before the credits roll. |
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Have you ever gone in to a high-street shop wearing a pair of cycling shorts? |
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Suppliers want in to introduce garden tools, furniture and gadgets to the biggest possible market. |
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Argue the point all you want, but virtually every modern car bar the hardest TVRs have understeer dialled in to safeguard the occupants. |
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I have a boat hook and gaff positioned on snap hooks that are screwed in to the glassed-in gunnel supports on the inside of the left hand gunnel. |
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I was actually pleasant sort of but then his companion came in to view and I nearly gagged on my own spit. |
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He earned another merit badge and turned it in to the chairman through his father. |
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Going in to dressing rooms after big games is an awkward pursuit no matter what the result of the game. |
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Experienced combatants expressed sorrow for the fledgling recruits, generally draftees, brought in to fill vacancies. |
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She was given so many flowers that three policewomen were drafted in to help the Queen's lady-in-waiting to carry them. |
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But as far as when you punch in to go to work you've just got to put that game face on. |
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Ska, dub, house, drum and bass, hip hop and UK garage have all been thrown in to The Streets' sampler for processing and rearrangement. |
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Hundreds of police officers were drafted in to monitor yesterday's march, which passed off peacefully with no arrests. |
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The other day I saw the same car at a gas station and pulled in to greet the owner before he drove away. |
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Extra police officers were drafted in to patrol a peace march after word of a rival, impromptu pro-war demonstration was circulated. |
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While you prove to be great at managing your home, you give in to some extravagant buys. |
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An astonishing five billion TV viewers tuned in to see the dazzling display set on a vast artificial lake in Athens' Olympic Stadium. |
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But I have a prepared piano down in my basement that I bring in to some songs. |
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Then one day, during my last year of school, I called in to say g'day and he offered me an apprenticeship. |
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At Harrogate, the hosts were put in to bat on a new strip hastily prepared because the intended pitch had been flooded by Friday's deluge. |
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Your wealth will increase manifold but try not to give in to extravagant and impulsive buys. |
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Though it was only 10,000 dong for the ride, I'm not sure how much it would have been for him to tuck me in to bed. |
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We're bringing people in to be disarmed, demobilized and rehabilitated to a program that will give them new values and give them new skills. |
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Others give in to some influences, such as friends and peer pressure, but aren't so malleable that they can be forced to do doltish things. |
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Will the all female group of domestic goddesses sweep the board or will they be kicked in to touch by the football supporters? |
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Half the executives took their golden parachutes and the other half never came in to work. |
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The lyrics intermittently scan as clunkily as the predictable doggerel people send in to newspapers' obituary sections. |
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In addition, about 1,250 officers from the surrounding states of Maryland and Virginia will be deputized and brought in to assist. |
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The only regular visitors are the labourers and derelicts who drop in to spend some time before the radio kiosk or the television set. |
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After we had waved everyone goodbye, the Gamekeeper wandered in to confer about concrete. |
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Police were immediately called in to evacuate the area and set up a 200m exclusion zone. |
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The city had almost become overrun by the desert, the sand sweeping in to cover the streets and all items left out. |
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The mere presence of restaurants we can't get in to makes city life seem more exciting. |
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For many, that left just enough time to nip home, take a shower, and head in to work, tired but still flush with excitement. |
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In addition, it is likely uncredited but well-paid script doctors were drafted in to rewrite certain scenes. |
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It began to slow down and pulled in to the side of the road, right next to Cannington. |
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When people are hungry and afraid and desperate, that doesn't happen, and they put despots in to take care of everything. |
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It detours the usual ways that you think about exercise and tunes in to what you really need. |
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A Dutch hoe glides through flowerbeds, uprooting any weeds that have crept in to your planting schemes. |
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Doctors drop in to visit him and when he's out walking down Carter Road, old patients walk up to greet the grand old man of medicine. |
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Once you dial in to your ISP, all you have to do is load whatever browser you want to use. |
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A guy came in to get his lip pierced and Robbie asked if he could do him first and I told him it was no problem. |
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Tomorrow I will wear high heels and stare evilly at any tourists who stray like slow demented sheep into my path, as I stomp my way in to work. |
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A border of low black wire fencing was put in to divide the garden from the sidewalk. |
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Among the more unusual vehicles contributing to the relief effort a duck boat drafted in to help flooded residents in Windsor today. |
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She seemed nice enough, her husband came too, they both wore jumpers and jeans in to the office. |
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She hated her father for leaving, for giving in to the disease when he should have fought it. |
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With Ced back in to start the second half, the Cardinals go on a 19-7 run to make it a laugher. |
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Police will start using a new radio system today meaning the end of the road for eavesdroppers who listened in to police messages. |
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He told the National Security Council that field officers and Special Forces personnel could be put in to call down precision airstrikes. |
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I disengage it, frown at the watermarks, put it back in to finish drying, glare at the man whose print lay on top of mine. |
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She fought feelings of panic as he moved in to kiss her, and successfully allowed him to continue a few moments before she pulled away. |
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A bird dashed across the window, flapped its wings and shot off in to the black void. |
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It shouldn't be news at all that plenty of people don't pay attention to the conference at hand when they dial in to a conference call. |
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The skiing is suitable for all abilities and ski pistes descend right in to the centre of the various levels of the resorts. |
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I paddled the rest of the way in to the beach, arriving just as the latecomers were hopping over the rocks that lined the shore. |
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The gun was now sitting useless on the small table in the hall, the ammo vanished in to his pocket. |
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A mate of mine, who is known as the Halloween Man, invites friends in to see his pixies and gives them pumpkin pie. |
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The others are getting into it a bit more, the confrontations, scheming and arguments have started and we're barely a week in to the show. |
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He guilts George into chipping in to buy her a new wheelchair, but they buy her a used model that ends up being a lemon. |
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The revelation that emos may have been responsible for the stencilled graffiti merely played in to an existing narrative of fear and distrust. |
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Find a bowling ball where the finger holes allow you to get in to the knuckle easily, but isn't so loose that the ball slips off your hand. |
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There is also planning permission in to develop a large outdoor exercise area. |
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I gave in to the compulsion to do a disappearing act at the end of the night. |
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I am a firefighter based at Bispham fire station and was horrified and a little upset to read what one of your readers had written in to say. |
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We as the electorate, have the ability to turn party political dirty tricks in to cold hard cash. |
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Suppliers rushed in to convert the hard currency into kwacha, causing the local currency to hold firmness. |
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A noise consultant has also been brought in to give advice on other ways of reducing the noise. |
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Specialist consultants have been brought in to advise on plans for Highworth's skate park. |
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David Obuya was the man sent in to stave of the hat-trick but he was yorked by Lee with the most perfect of deliveries. |
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However, she was admitted, given five more units of blood, and kept in to await a vacancy in the hospice. |
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An independent investigation in to the Trust's waiting figures is now taking place, at the request of the government. |
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An order has just been given to stand in to enable our coast pilot, Cooper, to fix our whereabouts exactly by his knowledge of the land. |
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Jeffrey borrows a bug sprayer from his father's hardware store and convinces Dorothy to let him in to spray the kitchen. |
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This is what happened when the government gave in to the armed forces' demand to convoke a special meeting of the National Security Council. |
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He points out that substantial funding is being poured in to the police areas worst affected by violent crime. |
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If you run out of juice on a long journey, a small petrol generator kicks in to keep the battery out of complete flatness. |
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Extra beds can be put in to create family rooms, although it's a bit of a squeeze. |
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Jonti instructed him to take the luggage out of the trunk and I went in to get our card key. |
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Tesco delivers to the house each week, though sometimes the food goes off before we have a night in to eat it. |
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Likewise, greed, a giving in to fleshly temptation, is a descent from human to animal. |
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He directs us to the site of the former convenience store, where we run in to explain why we're late. |
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Lofthouse flighted the ball beyond the last defender and centre half Stuart Dibb stole in to steer his finish beyond Mitchell. |
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I am currently in my third year and am conducting research in to why people turn to Wicca as a religion in contemporary Britain. |
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The Clean Streets Committee has dug in to bring its neighborhood up to Beacon Hill white-glove standards. |
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Sensing that their prey was cornered, the trio spread out a bit, moving to flank her before closing in to finish her off. |
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I noticed that Paul Johnson has dropped the whimsy and got stuck in to some serious vitriol throwing. |
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Well-intentioned parents, he says, mold their children from pre-school to high school in preparation for admission in to one of the Ivies. |
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Likewise, those who come in to play the ponies received coupons related to the machines. |
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The man turned himself in to police in Buritam Province as they searched for him on suspicion he had killed a greater adjutant stork last week. |
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Maybe this woman is grooming me, ready to move in to our flat as soon as I hand over the keys. |
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During emergencies, when a few wasted seconds can cost lives, the Jaws of Life are brought in to remove victims from the crashed vehicle. |
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When we popped in to see how things are going, there were half a dozen former regulars of the newly-refurbished Walker's Bar in there too. |
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All houses have waste disposal units and all food waste has to go in to it, not into the bin. |
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The Minister also popped in to meet the staff and students at Horsforth School during a busy return trip to West Yorkshire. |
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Officials from the town hall were called in to investigate and promised that the clock would be keeping good time again as soon as possible. |
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The couple kicked their runners off, grabbed two life-buoys and waded in to where the mother and son were floundering in deep water. |
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She was gentle and supportive, and these were qualities which carried over in to her work at the family centre. |
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The new co-ordinator has been brought in to help change that by promoting the area as an exciting port of call. |
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Charlie's father had drilled it in to him to keep his pockets empty and his wallet light. |
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Your back and hip muscles join in to assist your abs in holding your torso still as your legs move. |
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As she moved in to the living room she saw the curtains fluttering softly in the breeze. |
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If it gets too damp you can always put the dehumidifier in to run for twenty-four hours. |
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Jean just let a small smile escape her visage, and then turned her countenances back in to a frustrated manner. |
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I want to look in to the possibility of a rooftop garden on the roof of our apartment parking garage. |
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Instead of old-fashioned, high-dose liquid, doctors inject foam directly in to the swollen vein. |
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And his drug suppliers turned state's evidence basically, got immunity and turned him in to a multi-agency taskforce. |
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If I see someone come in to Ron's bar carrying a copy of it I will glass them. |
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I try convincing a couple of girls driving in to back out and go back in again, but they are too dim to understand. |
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But is it a little early to say that America is moving in to a post-racial phase or is this more the first step along that road? |
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Something's got you on Cloud Nine and I know it's not having to come in to work on a Saturday, so what gives? |
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When the writings were found by his parents, they turned them in to his probation officer and he was arrested. |
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There is currently an undisclosed number of such teachers brought in to cover for absent colleagues on any given day. |
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Brian opened the door and Rebekah walked in to see twelve little wooden cradles and beds. |
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Jazz fans crammed in to Westcliff's Cliffs Pavilion for the Echo's charity jazz night. |
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Local artists have been drafted in to transform the bottom end of the city which is fast becoming a ghost town as shops shut down. |
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He's a committed vegetarian who occasionally gives in to cravings for lamb. |
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One of my colleagues asked me, a few hours in to the working day, whether the dripping sound was driving me crazy. |
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Today we finally had the electricians in to rewire the bedroom so I couldn't do any more work in there. |
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I went in to ask them questions, and they ended up grilling me for about six hours. |
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Their chopper got into difficulties as it came in to land just off the Shetland Islands on Friday evening. |
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Carina Round drops in to provide the prettiest of pretty harmonies and for just one song the world is at peace. |
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Well a little research would have been helpful, are you normally prone to jumping in to things with your eyes closed? |
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Then, presumably, the state will be drafted back in to provide further subsidies. |
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The inmates drew up a list of grievances for the new unit manager who had just been brought in to run the death row. |
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How it works is that music on a station's playlist is entered in to a great big database. |
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Apparently knives and shotguns had just been wielded during a fracas in the bar and the local constabulary were called in to help out. |
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The approach of this paper was originally developed in to study the Hausdorff measure of certain parameterized families of fractals. |
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She threw it in to the garbage pile where the broken fragments of the instruments had been piled together. |
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Two young children had gone over the edge of the pier in their buggy and their frantic mother had dived in to save them. |
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From the ensuing free-kick wide on the right, the ball is crossed in to the Italy penalty area. |
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The Berea police were pressed to handle such a large crowd and the Ohio National Guard was brought in to assist. |
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It was a very grey, freaky and realistic glimpse in to the not so distant future. |
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Worcester Park were then awarded a free kick just outside the area, which was struck home in to the top corner. |
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It saw some Government employees peeping in to find out the position of the Congress and to see whether there was any cross-voting. |
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After checking in to our hotel and freshening up, we'll head into the national park. |
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A ship carrying unknown contents fails to clue the viewer in to the urgency ostensibly causing friction between the characters. |
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The towering apartment blocks are empty, although residents were allowed in to empty their fridges and pick up supplies last week. |
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Leara walked faster through the great house and almost broke in to a run in the garden until she came to the clearing. |
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When a President's political appointee comes in to an agency and does a good job, his or her peers are frustrated when he or she leaves. |
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Once you have completed the questionnaire drop it in to me at the clinic and make an appointment to discuss the results. |
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Surreal, then, to find a table full of fat men upstairs, shrouded by a fug of cigarette smoke, all tucking in to boeuf and pommes de terre. |
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I approached my father as usual, and fell in to a deep curtsy before his feet. |
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Do your 20 years in the army, get your pension, then slide in to a rather cushy job in the House on the Hill. |
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The local fire department had to be called in to extinguish the blaze. |
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Did you succeed by fighting your fate or by giving in to it? |
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If anything, it confirmed them in their resolve to do the right thing as they saw it and not give in to the pressures of one side or the other on this issue. |
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And, as the sound evened out, the dance floor filled and the wedding from the private dining room next door filtered in to continue its celebration. |
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So when I tried them on, the cutest little Latino boy came and knelt in front of me and sort pinched and plucked at me, showing me where he'd take them in to fit me better. |
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I went in to watch the first half, and despite the central character's life going well, in the face adversity, I could sense a plummet in the second half. |
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Around 1,500 armed riot police were sent in to enforce the status quo. |
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With crew members leading a lonely existence and having to stay away from their family for days together, they are tempted to give in to the pleasures of the flesh. |
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Now a survey detailing ground levels, boundaries and drainage will be carried out so that outline plans can be fleshed out in to detailed designs. |
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He was brought on to bowl with Fleming and Astle in full flight, and struck with his fifth delivery, which nipped in to beat the left-hander's bat and knock off the bails. |
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Then I went back in to the store and bought cheese and crackers on sale. |
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A long ball from Kevin Moran was gathered in the right corner forward position by Patrick Kearney and he cut in to send to the net from close range. |
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I heard her screams and then all her pain and fear came flooding in to me. |
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A similar dive plan can accommodate the current on the flood tide, dropping in to the south-east of the wreck and following the now-sheltered port side back from the stern. |
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My lovely friend Jane G has just popped in to work to see me. |
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Part Norman Rockwell, part Andy Warhol, Segal's work has been tossed in to every category from American realism and pop art to social expressionism and figurative sculpture. |
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I am hopeless at fixing things but when the toilet flush goes wonky I can always tell exactly what is wrong even if I have to get a man in to do something about it. |
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Ashley zoned in to find her doctor standing next to the examination couch. |
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It was a reclined position tricycle that you lay down in to use. |
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It charges you, it puts a dance in your step, it clears the fog from your senses and plugs you in to a glowing, blaring night that can be yours again. |
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Walter felt like a country cousin coming in to the big city for the first time, his first impression was that cooperation amid synchronized movement. |
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Groups of pot-bellied old men in seldom worn suits stood in clusters, leaning in to catch a word, laughing, lining up for photos taken by children and grandchildren. |
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Efforts were intensified in the summer battle against canal moss, and more men and equipment were brought in to fork it out of the canals and into dump trucks. |
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Slowly the sand crept over him and he gave in to the cocooned abyss. |
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Karla briefed the crew as Pilot Officer Kellogg flew the shuttle to the planet out over the ocean and brought it in to the LZ fast and low to avoid detection. |
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Roped in to crew for an older friend, they fed me cider until I wobbled. |
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The dog, a brown and grey cross-breed thought to be four or five years old, was taken in to the police station by someone who claimed it was a stray. |
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I wasn't too keen today, didn't feel like being jostled in the market-day crowd, so I determined to do no more than drop in to the supermarket, avoiding the crush altogether. |
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Add a crusty engineer and his manic assistant, and you have the makings of a team any law-abiding citizen should think twice before calling in to stop trouble. |
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I funded my habit by roaming the streets and beaches looking for glass softdrink bottles that I'd trade in to the dairy for two or four cents each. |
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Before we give in to the hype, we need to consider the practicalities. |
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Senator John McCain came in to last night's debate needing a game changer. |
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Several people have written in to observe that Frank Rich's column, printed on in the Sunday edition and datelined accordingly, normally goes online on the previous Thursday. |
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Soon there was enough daylight filtering in to see their way clearly. |
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I have a secret affection for the older hippie stores where incense strokes your throat as you walk in to check out the miniature Buddhas, candle holders and gauzy dresses. |
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Jo then delved in to the toy box and brought out a farmyard set before passing round a bag of plastic animals for the youngsters to pull out and identify. |
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Eagerly, her free hand, pouch set aside, delved in to count her treasure. |
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To me, I am pro-life because I respect the fact that a child should only be brought in to a world where it can be looked after and provided for sufficiently. |
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The North West Coastguard advises anyone venturing in to the Bay to follow the golden rules to ensure they do not become another victim of its treacherous sands. |
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Nicky went on his way and I headed in to bid Larry good morning. |
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Well, our puggish pal is flying in to lend a hand to his colourful environmental activist friends for a wacky protest against a big secretive conference. |
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Strange, though, exerts a pull, it draws you in to a place you've never been and may not understand, but which takes on a palpable and seductive existence. |
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As I pulled in to the side of the road, the crisis quickly vanished. |
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In pursuance of their goal they went on persistently staging plays, never making any compromises at any cost and never giving in to the temptation of commercial theatre. |
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There's a Pythonesque element creeping in to this conversation. |
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He had gone in to save his friend and then got into difficulties himself. |
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Yet this Saturday night I had the privilege of being present when Suzie McNeil, backed only by drums, bass violin and a lonely electro-acoustic guitar, gave in to the crowd. |
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An employee who forgot their password to log in to the corporate network would probably get a withering look from the support staff as they grovelled to have it reset. |
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I looked in to his bright, emerald eyes, wishing for an answer. |
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We have promised to go round and help Horace with his furniture winnowing before B's mum comes back from holiday and guilt-trips him in to keeping everything. |
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Indeed, had more investors paid attention to the company's poor performance, they may well have encashed their policies long before it ran in to trouble. |
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If such mass protests seem to be in the works, will the mainland Chinese government have to step in to clamp down, including dispersing the crowds with riot police? |
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Rather than giving in to the elements, weatherproof your tresses with gorgeous off-the-face dos, like the three low-maintenance styles we've highlighted this month. |
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My spirits were equable but not equal to adventure so I pulled in to a lay-by to eat my lunch, listening to a radio programme on Rachmaninov's second piano concerto. |
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More than two-thirds of Jack's mature and sheltered garden will disappear this week when builders move in to erect a wall along Anderson's boundary. |
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Micah's parents had come in to inform us that they were leaving for something-or-other and swept out the door in a whiff of perfume and exorbitance. |
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Now the feng shui doctor has been called in to exorcise the room. |
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This was the only way that the students could do their exams as all the other schools refused to take them in to sit the examinations as external students. |
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Pupils who are able to turn up for lessons face disruption as stand-in teachers are drafted in to provide cover for staff members who are not able to start work. |
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He then walked towards the pool and jumped in to get over the cold faster, he was a little bit worried his navy blue shorts would come off so he tightened the drawstring. |
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Expert tailors and dressmakers had been called in to make her dresses, for it was common agreement that none should outshine her in the coming celebration. |
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Shaylee forgot all the rules that had been drilled in to her head for twelve years, ever since she turned six, and pulled Shawn along behind her as she ran down the path. |
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If you feel, however, that the e-mail might be legit, log in to your account using the company's Web site and drill down to the personal account information page yourself. |
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As capital flowed in to buy gas reserves and ramp up production, drilling rigs and other equipment became scarce commodities, creating an upward spiral of costs. |
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Mary woke briefly from her dreams when the night nurse came in to see if she was doing all right and to make a small change in the settings of the drip in her arm. |
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So whether you are a restaurant owner or simply a food lover, simply join in to share your favorite restaurants with us. |
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You can search for something very particular or, if you're not fussy, dive straight in to a game with a bunch of other happy gadders. |
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You hone your skill with a pen instead of a paddle, lay bare your soul on paper, and send it in to a magazine editor. |
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You can add whole or crushed spices to the mixture when it first goes in to the J-cloth for the curds to be pressed. |
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Netviewer automatically reestablishes the session as soon as the computer restarts and the session partner logs in to the operating system. |
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Even comic book shops are drawing an unusual element, as a fashionable woman walked in to look around. |
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This changed in 1902, when Linotype lead-setting machines were brought in to set type mechanically. |
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If you parachute in to rescue him, you'll be risking not only your own life but your rookie partner's as well. |
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It will even step in to pinch hit for your Bluetooth-enabled notebook PC's keyboard. |
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Tell them that when you call and are feeling low, they should not let you give in to doubt. |
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A storm chaser in Australia has captured the extraordinary moment a Qantas passenger aircraft came in to land during a lightning storm in Sydney. |
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You don not have to give in to her all the time, for instance placing the kittens on top of a cupboard is not a clever move. |
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The few directors who tried not to follow the crowd ended up giving in to pressure from shareholders who wanted to be in on the action. |
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We start walking outdoors to randomize our experience of the city, and then life comes in to randomize us. |
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The little doll with soft body for cuddling and loving carries children aged 6 months and up away in to a sweet world of dreams. |
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If I have had the flu or feel unwell, should I still come in to the clinic perform my volunteer duties? |
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A refuge worker who called in to collect the pressies was overjoyed. |
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Fortunately for my waistline, I haven't been giving in to the temptation. |
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Protesters are planning two days of disruption this week to blockade roads, oil refineries and petrol depots unless the government gives in to their demand to cut fuel duty. |
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Santianni asked that as director of temps, he be plugged in to the work of the temp. review committee. |
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One astronaut recounted how she'd bungee-cord herself in to run on a treadmill and every time her foot hit the treadmill it was suddenly tingly. |
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The poet's mastery of language is apparent, with a conciseness that never gives in to facileness. |
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Safety protection built in to equipment may cease to function if the equipment is used incorrectly. |
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Customers have also been known to become irate if the restaurant's televisions are not tuned in to his games, she said. |
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The first person they brought in to notarize the deed, Don Aoki, testified that he refused. |
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With profits in mind, pharmaceutical companies and prescribing doctors may sometimes be tempted to give in to strong social pressure. |
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If you give in to resistance too easily, the ultimate result is no more than a pale shadow of the original goals. |
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Margerie, suffering from nervous exhaustion, checked herself in to a hospital. |
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Most users only come in to contact with one type of globoid worm, which is why the option is split into two, independent, parts. |
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Change the subject, crack a joke or have your partner step in to cool the situation down if you start to lose control or foresee a big fight. |
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The army, on the verge of breaking up, had to give in to his government as the last hope for stemming the popular insurgence. |
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The robust track markers leave a mark for the tractor centre and on switching over are folded in to the vertical position. |
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The best time to visit may be post-show, when the performers file in to relax with a wee dram. |
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In Pakistan, civil society is likely to cave in to extremist demands for changes in law and social conduct. |
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Just click and turn the pages! Yous can also zoom in to read the items descriptions. |
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They predicted that Mr. Romney would eventually have to cave in to the demands. |
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They are sickened by the way people give up their principles so easily, the way they cave in to pressure. |
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Council does not want to cave in to the blackmail, with the result that no solution is foreseeable before September. |
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Was it already earmarked for that purpose because the government knew well in advance that it would cave in to U. S. demands? |
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There is a tendency in the upper levels of government to cave in to extortion on the part of some aboriginal organizations. |
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We want our representatives to be sensitive to our concerns and not to always cave in to the dictates of the party. |
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Or he can have a weak bill and cave in to the big interests of the tobacco companies. |
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First of all, we have reformed the CAP in order to cave in to the demands of the US Administration in the Uruguay Round negotiations. |
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After the switch, back when they started dumping all this stuff in to recoat the pipes, that's when we started having all the issues. |
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When re-logging in to this machine as a different user or as an administrator, log out once, and log in again. |
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The first user must log out of Windows, and then a different user can log in to use the scanner. |
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That is what will happen unless those Liberals clue in to what is really at stake here. |
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I put in a report about this to the governor, who called me in to talk about it, frazzled and overtired as he was. |
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There's a life-affirming energy even to her negations, as when she calls Benedick in to supper by swinging a huge hand bell in his face. |
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If the government caves in to special interest groups and political correctness then it should call a spade a spade. |
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You should then be able to use ssh to log in to the remote server without being asked for a password. |
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His sneeze count, currently just over 4,000, has a healthy online following as people log in to read about his latest sternutation. |
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It is therefore common for judges to give in to corruption or ask for money from the parties or from lawyers. |
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Saeed was part of the plot two years later to kidnap Daniel Pearl and turned himself in to brigadier Shah. |
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Michonne broke the news and GREATM swooped in to the rescue, or so they thought. |
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When you are safely out, you give your password to the smuggler who calls it in to the broker to release the funds. |
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We must look ahead to be able to shape our common destiny, and we must never give in to fatalism. |
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In the confusion that reigns in the world today, it is so easy to err, to give in to illusions. |
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The next day the others who had skiied in to a terminal moraine failed to appear. |
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Women have also been sworn in to the shura council, the consultative body that advises the government. |
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Dancing is an excellent and enjoyable way to blow off steam, burn-up calories and can easily fit in to your daily schedule. |
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What remains is just bigotry, and probably a spiteful resistance to being seen as caving in to the relativists. |
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That thing where you log in to the internet for a second and see people idolizing the guy who raped you as a feminist. |
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Most of the time his gentleness dominated, except when rightfulness came in to play, he made no concessions. |
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He was sent in to see the boss who wanted to know about his experience, tec. |
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District service managers dialed in to the war room in Hopkinton, where Alderson and his team sat with stacks of paper that listed every job scheduled for the coming weekend. |
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Galvanized by Papineau, armed groups began to organize in order to beat back the British military which had been called in to restore order. |
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The Estany des Peix is a small lagoon with a narrow opening to the sea, allowing small boats in to anchor there. |
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This means that each Master Spirit is tuned in to a creative spirit of his own design and six foreign ones. |
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Hot north-east winds gusting up to 75 kph resulted in erratic fire behaviour and two water bombers were bought in to reinforce suppression resources. |
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To quote my own example, during the period that I spent writing this book, I learned to open myself even more, to give in to this inner guide. |
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He then rolled his opponent in to the casket and closed the lid to gain the victory. |
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The city's oldest drinking establishment, recently transformed in to a gastropub and comedy and music venue. |
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To fully inhabit one's delusions, to give in to every kooky aspect of one's freakishness — it's a handy survival strategy. |
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The anesthetist came in to discuss what palliatives she might be allowed to take home with her. |
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Last night we had the unexpected bonus of Trudie Styler popping in to play Mrs Thrale, who charmed the normally unsusceptible hero. |
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Québec pluriel will thus provide another form of personalized support to those who are not able to find the way in to the job market. |
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Always a bit of a pain when strapped in to jump seats facing sideways in the plane, but that was a minor discomfort compared to some places he'd been recently. |
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Speed ramps along College Road, put in to try and dissuade boy racers who use the road to cut from one side of the town to the other, have been branded useless. |
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In the battle against HIV, they serve as fresh troops brought in to help support your body's immune system. |
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How can legislators both condemn an activity that is considered as contrary to ethics and then give in to force of habit? |
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Governments have stepped in to bail out and nationalize large sections of the banking sector. |
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Hairdressers from Williams and Griffin were drafted in to perform the shave and Grace very bravely kept her chin up as her beautiful locks were chopped. |
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Customers come in to a friendly welcome, chat while he counts the cash and leave with a cheerful ade. |
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We'll be playing all the hits from January 1990 to June 2011, taking in to account synths, guitars, keytars, drum-machines, girl bands, and boy bands. |
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One week later, he left work at 11:00 a.m., picked up a customer's car and took it home, intending to bring it in to work the next day. |
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It is not a sad or happy piece but a work in which the audience will see a family from outside in, peeking in to a very intimate world. |
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In these modules, there is an isotherm cover in to which dry ice is introduced. |
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