The British used it to taunt the Americans, the Americans then used the same version back ironically to taunt the British. |
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And, ironically, I found the ashram far more Indian than most of the Hindu ashrams I visited, which were overwhelmed with foreigners. |
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Somehow they kept going and ironically were given a penalty and a last-gasp chance to win. |
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Real estate prices too have zoomed, ironically pushed up in the first place by the IT companies themselves. |
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The US, ironically, has been a leader in many areas of tobacco control but has been weak on the framework convention. |
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Knowledge rhetorically induced from a representative anecdote will ironically contain both of Ransom's two knowledges. |
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But, ironically, one of the unexpected by-products of his efforts is the availability for consumption of large populations of wild goats. |
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It looked ironically enough, like the most expensive house in the area, even though the wooden window frames were rotting away. |
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It is ironically fitting that he should successfully lure her with promises of enjoying the glitter and gaudery of Naples. |
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It almost appears as if his story's rejection of faith is also, ironically, an espousal of predeterminism. |
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There is no longer a show, the theatre is dark, and The Mirage ironically lives up to its name. |
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Yet ironically he is, of all the African slaves, the one farthest removed from both his African heritage and his fellow slaves. |
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Here's one of the videos about, ironically, how to get more followers on Twitter. |
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To make it more intelligible, ironically, photojournalism is often deconstructed as art. |
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He wants to sack loads of bureaucrats, who will, ironically benefit most from the tax cuts if they are in their current jobs. |
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Among the survivors, somewhat ironically, was one who was wearing a suicide belt. |
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This morning, I came across an article, ironically, about the dead making noise and speaking! |
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Boxing day was ironically better than both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. |
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And ironically most of the riots are engineered by those politicians who claim to be most patriotic. |
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He loves so much that, ironically, he's a constant source of pain to anyone unfortunate enough to love him. |
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It is this struggle that creates the heat and turbulence in the Earth's core, ironically the same heat that life needs to survive. |
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Farming, ironically, is the mainstay of the economy, but the agricultural sector is in shambles. |
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A whole plane-load of fans, who ironically had just landed from Cork, were roundly ignored. |
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This engendered a longing for normalcy, a sense of fatalism and passivity, but, ironically, also a willingness to take risks. |
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So, ironically, even the economic consequences of the neo-liberal program are likely to be quite perverse in practice. |
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It soon became embroiled in a controversy, one which ironically made co-belligerents, if not allies, of the divided parents. |
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But, ironically, so many football coaches do deeply believe that the toughest sport teaches virtues. |
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Well ironically, that was on an ice yacht in Antarctica, and that would have been in 1971, and of course I was able bodied then. |
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They speak with a somewhat clinical detachment that ironically casts many of their observations and findings in a rather dramatic light. |
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At the time, ironically, the review was dismissed as being by an obscure, sulky no-hoper rubbishing the likely winner. |
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It is precisely this defiant sense of outmodedness that, ironically, gives the film and its characters such an edge. |
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Affecting this sort of nonchalant style seems, ironically, to involve more work than putting together a seasonally on-trend ensemble. |
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Christopher has been to York only once before, ironically when he had another injury. |
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Now, ironically, it was time to fill the space formerly occupied by indigenous people with indigenous people. |
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For a while it looked as if the ruin of the province of Britain would now ironically be achieved at Roman hands. |
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Before Night Falls, ironically, was the film that helped to catapult Bardem into the American spotlight. |
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As they pushed Stewartry, gaining a succession of penalties, the ball spun wide to be knocked on, ironically, by Smith with the line in sight. |
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He had the same bounce in his step, the same inexhaustible energy and, ironically, the same tendency to laugh at everything I said. |
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He was a life insurance broker who ironically died with no life insurance, leaving his bookkeeper, our mother, unemployed. |
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Well, there's ironically post-modern and then there's almost unintelligible. |
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Flemming has in a way tarnished the image of mythicism by promoting bad arguments, and ironically will drive people away from mythicism. |
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This tasty anti-globalization bonbon may have a slightly hollow centre, however, and the weakness stems, ironically, from a lack of information. |
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Perhaps ironically, for a business whose potential rests on the World Wide Web, on-line grocery retailing is a local undertaking. |
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The last time I'd been in Hoch, ironically enough, we had dropped acid and gone to a showing of Fantasia. |
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Mr Smith said that, ironically, it was his book that created the swell of support that actually resulted in the Judge examining cases. |
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Euripides' Electra ironically questions belief in a metaphysical system that encourages crime only to punish it. |
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Do not dredge the pasta in flour to prevent sticking, as the flour turns to glue when cooked and, ironically, causes the pasta to stick together. |
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And so, ironically in a land whose enormous wealth depended upon its control of seaborne trade, this entire vast sweep of coast was almost empty. |
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With the dust now settled on him, he muses that this push for the local may, ironically, have precipitated its downfall. |
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Despite his smooth exterior, the arrogant person is, ironically, restrained and inhibited from expressing his true self. |
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Rolfe Kent's sunny up-tempo soundtrack bubbles ironically along, its sixties Italian jazz the quintessence of carefree. |
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In our earnestness to romanticize the cowboy we've ironically disesteemed his true character. |
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However, ironically, it was its apparent lack of objectivity that weighed against it for most North American psychologists. |
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Owen Wilson has a smarmy-cool, utterly natural screen persona of smiles, cheeky ad-libs and ironically understated wisecracks. |
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You've turned him into your spiritual project, and, ironically, you're nothing more than an enabler for his own negative pattern. |
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This event marked a downfall of popularity for the hot air balloon, and an increase in popularity, ironically, in hydrogen. |
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These chronicles became the handbook for future travellers and ironically, for gold prospectors and desperados planning quick gains. |
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If diversity is always imagined in the same ways, it becomes, ironically, homogenized, and loses its power to unsettle established ways of thinking. |
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The comment is not intended ironically, no inverted commas are used. |
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After she left Lehman, callan went to work at Credit Suisse to develop a business that, ironically, deals with hedge funds. |
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The grey horse just made too many mistakes over the big obstacles, though ironically it was a bad error at the smallest fence, the water jump, which ended his chances. |
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For now, the coherence and scale of Moral Mondays is a success ironically founded in shared defeat. |
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Shakespeare himself, the book describes, coped with ironically similar struggles. |
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But ironically the family's decision to opt for Majorca the following year had nothing to do with the quality of the redcoats ' entertainment or even the shared toilet blocks. |
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It's instructive to read it in tandem with his collection of Italian Folktales, which ironically turn out to be more architectonically constructed than the stories in Castle. |
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With her absolute loathing of the working class, she ironically created a species of vandals whose sole purpose in life seems to be to destroy the society they live in. |
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Although, ironically, the lack of rain in recent years has made the problem worse, as winter flows can help flush sediments through the system and out to sea. |
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The disconnect points ironically to the subtitle of this book and the concept of liberalism. |
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Some, like the bus from Terminal Norte to Teotihuacan, are decorated with such baroque flourish, visibility can become seriously and ironically impaired. |
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One other big movement behind the push for legalization is, ironically, feminism. |
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The shamefulness of this act is ironically pointed up by the fact that it follows the description of two English knights chivalrously dying in each other's arms. |
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And, ironically, in the darkness, he sees the luminescence of the jungle around him. |
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Pieces that, ironically, untether women from their devices while keeping them connected. |
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Although ironically he has never raced at Mondello, this determined former motocross champion is looking forward to the challenge of racing in front of his home crowd. |
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In any case, this is nitpicking, and, ironically, Klingman does the same thing in his essay. |
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Some undersuits come with uninsulated mesh areas at the wrists which, ironically, have a big blood supply near the surface, causing chilling as a side-effect. |
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But ironically the former slum houses are now sought-after properties following regeneration and the flats have become increasingly unpopular with residents. |
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They continued to control matters and doubled their advantage in the 67th minute, ironically on a breakaway from a promising attack led by Mark Betts. |
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But ironically the conduct that led to him spitting the dummy was the evident, gross and habitual bias of insurance company expert medical witnesses. |
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Unfortunately, and ironically, this renders the renditions superfluous as, especially with Bachman singing, they're almost note-perfect versions of the originals. |
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Congress itself ironically recognized as much in its effort to rein in presidential use of force after Vietnam. |
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I mean, jeez, if I'm going to wallow in obvious hipsterism, I want it to at least be fun and well-executed, not ironically arch, foppish and bloodless. |
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It is thrilling to see how this desire for deeper spirituality, redemption and grace suffuse the poem even as it ironically ends with the beggar's spirited demands. |
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It was too superficial an examination of the subject, which ironically reminded me that there is quite a bit that I don't know about history in general. |
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Beggars can't be choosers, but ironically this is the situation in which the second-richest club, in what is now the most lucrative league in the world, find themselves. |
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But if we seek direct power and social control, we will, ironically, be assimilated into the very idolatries of wealth, status, and power we seek to change. |
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But ironically it could be the best of times for the Indian infotech sector, which has been witnessing annual growth of 50 per cent in recent years. |
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However, matters of clarity are, ironically, often contestable. |
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The fellow with the cell phone, ironically named Virgil, chats obsessively on it with a number of intimates, including his former girlfriend Alice. |
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He is seen in the film apologising in his plummy tones to the man and, ironically, it is this stiff upper lip that sees him through some sticky patches. |
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According to a brief article in the New York Times, research has shown that pessimists are, ironically, more likely to die earlier than optimists. |
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A quick glance at some of the figures, ironically, and several of the figures seem to resemble one another, with their pointed headdresses and bug-eyed countenances. |
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The demand, ironically made by parents as well, is for crash courses. |
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Anticipation is intuitively, ironically proleptic in that it both foresees things in their absence and, in the very act of apprehension, presents them unwittingly into being. |
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In practice, rather ironically, Buddhists often have a slight tendency to eternalism. |
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And, ironically, in this age of austerity, CGI has been doing quite well. |
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His attempt at kingmaking ironically rallied support to Henry VIII's eldest daughter, Mary, instead. |
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This would mean, ironically, that production of ozone-friendly chemicals is actually releasing some ozone-destroying gases into the atmosphere. |
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Will Raul Castro ironically be responsible for ushering in a wave of Cuban ballplayers to the Yankees or other MLB teams in time for next season? |
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His proud association with the Kennedy family sigil ironically created his chief limitation as an actor in the century's great events. |
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We are now seeing this process repeat itself but ironically the fool's gold here is actually gold. |
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But some of the people who received the letters, which ironically bear the numbers 999, thought the letters could be letter bombs. |
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To describe that as misleading is, ironically, itself misleading. |
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Private detectives and bounty hunters flooded the region, ironically provoking more violence, which in turn led to more negative publicity. |
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Most of these were food exports that ironically went to supply their enemies in Britain or British colonies. |
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Somewhat ironically, the text contains many features that distinguish insular from continental French. |
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It is, ironically, based on the well-established model of the USDA's own plant quarantine regulations for nonrecombinant organisms. |
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Veronica Petrillo's typical virgin is ironically similar to her streetwise actor, except for a certain added buoyance. |
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Both Antony and Octavian were vying for an alliance with Pompeius, who was a member of the republican party, ironically, not the Caesarian faction. |
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However, Christopher Awdry found himself increasingly coming into conflict with his publishers, which ironically arose through the success of the television series. |
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The company was stranded in Paris first by the outbreak of World War I, and then by the Russian Revolution in 1917, and ironically never performed in Russia. |
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The book reduces a number of complex gray areas to simplistic black and white, making the volume's title, ironically, more apt than the authors may have intended. |
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After seven consecutive losses they found themselves marooned at the foot of the table, 5 points adrift, but ironically with the second best defence in the league. |
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This is why the former Soviet Union seized East Prussia, displacing about 15 million Germans and why Poland seized part of Silesia, including ironically Auschwitz. |
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He often explored these topics ironically, making comedy out of suffering. |
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He adopts for his names Greek words that either confirm the character or undercut him or her ironically, and sometimes lead to, or depend on, wordplay in the text. |
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But Kenny's analysis of how Aquinas individuates thought ironically confuses Aquinas's account with that of Averroes, whose explanation Aquinas rejected. |
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He said a combination of finding new ways to hunt and fears that last year's Boxing Day foxhunt would be the last has ironically boosted interest. |
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Alas, the pair have collaborated on Miley's not ironically titled new album Bangerz with a track called SMS, so they have probably had time for some chinwags. |
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The mosque, visited by all Muslims, has ironically become one of the most symbolic battlegrounds of the increasingly sectarian fault line between Sunnis and Shi'as. |
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Mols wasn't playing that night as he had suffered a serious knee injury in the Champions League, ironically also in Germany against Bayern Munich. |
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Philip Kane's solo album, somewhat ironically titled Songs for Swinging Lovers, is a stunning mix of styles but through it all shines the singer's treacly tenor. |
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Ideas to rebuild the city's downtown were numerous, ranging from hotels and new stores to, ironically, a strip mall, with few buildings left for historical reasons. |
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Forrester is generally recognized as the first appearance, although ironically in this case the judge found the victim to be the sole proximate cause of the injury. |
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Salty Scioscia, ironically the king of gamesmanship, overreacts, and then Robinson, who has never been accused of failing to take himself seriously, really overreacts. |
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But other difficulties with this book include name-calling, belittling, adolescent obscenities, political oversimplifications, and, ironically enough, a truncated theology. |
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In a letter addressed to the King of Spain, he expressed, somewhat ironically, that he had to act as a conciliatory force during the course of his expeditions. |
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The political and economic defeat ironically sparked what is known as the Danish Golden Age during which a Danish national identity first came to be fully formed. |
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Ironically Arnold himself liked to express the occasional dislike of hereditary honours and titles. |
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Ironically though, Ashley, who has always had an exhibitionist streak, says the job has built her self-confidence. |
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Ironically Radio Australia's Cantonese service was closed on the same day, July 1st 1997, that Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule. |
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Ironically it was Shier's own new hand-picked team of executives, imported at great expense, who voted him out! |
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Ironically enough, his foray into racing was an attempt to ease off from a life of monomania, to prepare for retirement by finding new interests. |
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Ironically this mine of medical misinformation about sexuality was intended to exalt the state of matrimony. |
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Ironically one is now safer wandering the streets of Luxor than in many European cities. |
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Ironically the figures consistently confirm that fear of crime is completely out of proportion with reality. |
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Ironically this process was endorsed and socially legitimised by the Varna system. |
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Ironically detached, they will not test, one-by-one, the proposed septuple functions of Christ's hand, nor will heptamerousness appall them. |
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Ironically among the largest grants made was for archaeology, museum conservation and the teaching of ancient Mesopotamian languages. |
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Ironically enough, debate continues over the division of labor and the artist responsible for the design of the central panel. |
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Ironically while it won't grow here, its close relative the camphor laurel grows only too well. |
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Ironically it is during the hongi that I begin to feel the deep differences between them. |
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Ironically the only covers which seem to fall flat here are the film tie-in editions which look stodgy next to the originally designed covers. |
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Ironically it was the French who put strong pressure on the Acadians to relocate to French territory. |
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Ironically it was a backfire, set to contain the prescribed burn, that was caught by unexpected wind gusts and roared out of control. |
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Ironically the media had reported the successful deposition of the leader before the coup had even taken place. |
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Ironically this year, the winner of this African beauty contest comes from the United States and has never been to the continent before. |
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Ironically both pictures quickly returned to the London market and were then effortlessly acquired by the gallery. |
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Ironically the very same day, a leading Urdu daily, the sister publication of the eveninger, carried the story with a positive angle. |
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Ironically red spinels, often referred to in ancient texts as balas rubies, are actually more rare than ruby but, unlike ruby, they can sometimes be found in very large sizes. |
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Ironically the man who was a world champion in wood chopping, loved trees. |
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Ironically Webber, doing commentary for NBA TV, joyfully nailed James during the finals. |
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Ironically Gourlay now spends much of the year plying his professional trade in Australia and is expected to base himself Down Under in the not-too-distant future. |
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Ironically for someone who is supposed to be a champion of clean politics, he has fallen afoul of the very rules that were introduced to stamp out political corruption. |
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Ironically though, it was this lack of ports which brought the Dutch to trade at Banda instead of the clove islands of Ternate and Tidore. |
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Ironically it was this same Duke to whom Mercator would turn ten years hence. |
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Digestive problems Ironically, giving up gluten when you don't need to may actually result in digestive problems. |
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Ironically as he was feted abroad, he left many Mexicans cold. |
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Ironically it was another war that led to a resurgence in Tenby's fortunes. |
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Ironically it was the same sceptic which made me the perfect candidate for a master class in feng shui. |
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Ironically enough, Laurence Olivier is less gifted than Marlon Brando. |
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Ironically this handed Nelson Piquet his 23rd and last F1 race win. |
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