Flesh Sunday's narrator is a nosy parker who mistakes a murderer for a fellow peeping tom. |
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Police are hunting a peeping tom who stared a teenage student as she undressed. |
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We're a peeping tom looking at our neighbor. |
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A peeping tom who filmed women as they relieved themselves in bushes at the start of the Great North Run was yesterday warned he was going to jail. |
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Reynolds contended that the Chinese was a peeping tom whom he caught spying on his wife one night last March while she was toweling herself after a shower. |
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Look out also for how a shapely housewife helped the police to catch a peeping Tom. |
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A peeping Tom used hidden cameras to videotape women in their house in Galway city. |
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And I think I've got a pretty good idea of who our peeping Tom was. |
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A hi-tech Peeping Tom who set up a secret spy camera to film a younger female friend in the nude was caught after she spotted the lens, a court heard. |
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He consents to being an admiring observer but not a peeping Tom. |
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Relying on the government to protect our privacy is like a peeping Tom installing our window blinds. |
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Peeping tom Gareth Treasure, 40, from Blackwood, was previously found guilty of six charges of voyeurism following a three-day trial. |
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The Peeping Tom story is absent from the few sources contemporary with Godiva. |
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He became known as Peeping Tom thus originating a new idiom, or metonym, in English. |
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A PEEPING Tom who rigged a hidden camera to record women in a fish factory toilet was caught when his own spycam filmed him setting it up. |
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But can you bring yourself to vivisect that peeping Tom, Ken Starr? |
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My colleague, the hon. member for Ottawa Centre, said that relying on the government to protect one's privacy is like asking a peeping Tom to install one's window blinds. |
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It is the first time a Peeping Tom has been banned from McDonald's after committing a sexual offence on its premises. |
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According to legend, the original Peeping Tom was a tailor who watched Lady Godiva as she rode naked through the streets of Coventry. |
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Qasem had had the gun nearby and loaded because she had seen a Peeping Tom outside her house previously. |
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The child as spy as reader as peeping Tom as writer. |
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Just one person in the town, a tailor ever afterwards known as Peeping Tom, disobeyed her proclamation in one of the most famous instances of voyeurism. |
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Bob explained how the nosy old man had got the nickname because he was a right Peeping Tom who had even spied on Bob's wife by drilling holes in the back garden fence. |
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This was an improvement, but in 1837 Macready employed limelight in the theatre for the first time, during a performance of a pantomime, Peeping Tom of Coventry. |
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Additional legend proclaims that Peeping Tom was later struck blind as heavenly punishment, or that the townspeople took the matter in their own hands and blinded him. |
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