There was no disgrace in their defeat by a Leigh team who will be red-hot favourites going into the play-offs. |
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Gloved workers, their eyes shaded, manhandle glowing, red-hot bars of old iron from a furnace into a rolling mill. |
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From that point on her focus had been on the Olympic marathon, for which she started a red-hot favourite. |
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She stared into the depths of the fire and saw nothing but the curling tongues wrapped around red-hot coal. |
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The big news story of the Athens Olympics was Paula Radcliffe, Britian's red-hot marathon gold-medal favourite, failing to finish. |
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Manchester United, now six points clear, are obviously red-hot favourites for the title. |
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The England men's Ashes success has ensured that the red-hot favourite for the Sports Personality of the Year is a man. |
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Chester defeated the Giants three times out of four last season and start red-hot favourites to make it four out five. |
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Imagine there's a religion that believes in burning children with a red-hot iron. |
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A seaman in the US Navy in World War II ran barefoot across the red-hot deck of a burning ship to save a fellow sailor's life. |
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In retaliation, the bewildered girl says, one of her small hands was burned on a red-hot stove. |
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Today, he is the red-hot favourite to win the classic 12 km race for the third year. |
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Walking down the road in those thin-soled sandals was close to walking over red-hot coal. |
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A single pot balanced on the mecha-stove, the two glowing iron coils red-hot beneath it. |
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With the help of professionals we are inviting the public to walk over a 20 ft path of red-hot coals. |
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A surge of passion could turn you into a red-hot lover, but you must not allow it to make you foolishly impulsive. |
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Higher interest rates could cool the red-hot housing market in some parts of the world, Rajan said. |
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Why is it possible for bare feet to touch red-hot coals without getting burned? |
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Show-stopping Irish dance leads into passionate flamenco and red-hot salsa routines. |
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The campaign will include recipes which, it is claimed, can turn the coldest of fish into red-hot lovers. |
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It isn't easy being a red-hot lover these days, but take heart, help is at hand for those with a penchant for penning a love poem. |
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Mozart is the dominant composer at the festival, which also has traditional and jazz aspects, including the red-hot tangos of Astor Piazzola. |
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To an astrophysicist, red-hot foods and red-hot lovers both leave room for improvement. |
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The hosts, red-hot favourites to win the match at the start of play yesterday, were left to ponder if they had left their declaration too late. |
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He pulled the metal out of the fire, examining the red-hot tip, then put it back in. |
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Unlike our boys in Japan, Steve is the red-hot favourite to win both the first round downhill race in Fort William and the World Cup itself. |
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Alexander watched the twin red-hot points of fire smoulder in the figure's flesh, but to his amazement, the wound healed before his eyes. |
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In our turf-fire environment, the unusual smells of coal slack and hooves burning when a red-hot shoe was fitted, although unpleasant, are nonetheless memorable. |
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He made each of his players run barefoot over red-hot coals. |
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They show animal claws scratching across concrete, red-hot rusty wires glowing orange in the dark, and bloodied knives arranged along the body at the sites of pain. |
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We can make transport an interesting, attractive, galvanising, inspiring, or perhaps red-hot issue, but buses, trams and even Freudian trains are not and never will be sexy. |
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There's nothing like gaining a reputation as a red-hot creative shop for turning up the pressure in a business where you're only as good as your last ad. |
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Back in 1971, the mercurial Alex Murphy pulled off a minor miracle when unfancied Leigh toppled red-hot favourites Leeds to win the Challenge Cup final at Wembley. |
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They have come from behind before but Arsenal are the red-hot favourites. |
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The United States will be red-hot favourites to successfully defend their gold medal in Athens as they call on a who's who of the best in the game. |
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When the Ryder Cup was originally scheduled for last September, the Americans were red-hot favourites with even the most optimistic European golf fan. |
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The Irish are red-hot favourites after winning their first three matches while Wales are fighting to avoid the wooden spoon after losing to Italy, Scotland and England. |
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Whether he gets to face Shane Warne at any other time during the Ashes series remains to be seen, but he should be a red-hot favourite to go to India in the winter. |
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Gardens are pub-bright with lots of geraniums and red-hot pokers and little spiky palm trees. |
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He broke three of her ribs with an umbrella and on another occasion hit her with a red-hot poker. |
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Others blame the owners of established resorts, who may have pressed banks to call in loans to their red-hot competitor. |
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The tech-services industry has been whipsawed as the red-hot demand of the late 1990s turned into the deep freeze of the past few years. |
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I like the grassy foliage and orange-yellow torchlike blooms of kniphofia, aka red-hot poker and torch lily. |
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Her abdomen was a sea of agony, flames of red-hot pain searing out from the convulsed muscles. |
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Sparks flew out from underneath, showering the road with red-hot metallic pieces. |
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They had managed to scrounge enough coal and coke to keep the stoves roaring away, with the stovepipes red-hot halfway up. |
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Downtown at 7 a.m., well before the tourist town stirs, I'm scarfing a breakfast of red-hot blue corn enchiladas. |
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Ordeal by fire required suspects to carry hot irons, or to walk blindfold and barefoot through red-hot ploughshares or over heated coals. |
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Something that burned worse than a red-hot branding iron lodged itself in her left leg, and she snarled, hissed, and yelped in pain. |
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In the fluid milk category, meanwhile, dulce de leche is becoming a popular flavor, especially in the red-hot single-serve segment. |
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Native plants are preferable, but many enthusiasts swear by exotics such as single varieties of fuchsia, as well as lantana and red-hot poker. |
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Already in the 18th century chemists were splitting water by passing steam through red-hot tubes of iron filings. |
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The common name red-hot cat-tail describes the fluffy, maroon-red, droopy spikes that hang from the plant throughout summer. |
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To others, it is like a red-hot poker shoved, without remorse, up the wazoo. |
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Behind the man Drillian could see a couple of the smiths hammering red-hot chunks of metal. |
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Inside, red-hot stones are sprinkled with botanicals and water, creating an aromatherapeutic steam. |
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Other refinements were the tearing of the flesh of the condemned with red-hot pincers, the cutting off of hands, and the cutting out of tongues. |
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Then, while still contracting, the star cools through yellow and red-hot, and the protyle condenses into progressively heavier elements. |
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An igniter was inserted into the cylinder, heated to red-hot temperatures by supplying current. |
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The red-hot favourite got in a real fluster on his way down to the start and Philip Robinson had to wrestle the reins to keep him under control. |
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The arrangement of pendulous petal groups has a similar appearance to that of the red-hot poker or some aloe flowers. |
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It's also an easy plant and not quite what you expect from a red-hot poker, as its colouring is gentle and receding rather than dominant. |
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Native plants are preferable, but many hummer enthusiasts swear by exotics such as single varieties of fuchsia, as well as lantana and red-hot poker. |
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And then the next red-hot development on some other front will emerge rendering the acronym to oblivion. |
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The red-hot temperatures are expected to send demand for water soaring. |
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Putting a red-hot branding iron to an animal's flesh must be excruciating! |
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Woods were shredded, the earth trembled and the ground exploded in showers of stone and red-hot metal splinters. |
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Winner of three of his four races, he has made significant strides this season, his latest success coming in a red-hot handicap at Newmarket last month. |
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Zumba is a one-of-a-kind exercise program that pairs Latin rhythms with red-hot international dance steps so you can have a blast as you party your way into shape. |
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Designer Frida Giannini let the collection scream not-so-subtle sexuality, with florescent pinks, silk and red-hot silhouettes. |
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Moral equivalence and malaise, rather than red-hot ideology, motivates haydon. |
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Alternatively, you can create a similar effect by grilling the aubergine slices dry, then using a red-hot skewer to mark scorch lines before drizzling with oil. |
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White wedding gowns are still red-hot, but more adventurous brides are bringing in more colour to their gowns, wearing dresses with a tan or beige or pink hue. |
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A beam of red-hot light seared past her, missing by mere inches. |
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Fire walkers do not walk on fire but the fire bed, which is made up of the red-hot glowing embers of the wood. |
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The smith's apprentice was still wary of manipulating the red-hot metal. |
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The red-hot starter was trying to become just the sixth pitcher to throw two no-hitters in a season after he threw one last month. |
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With other hunters entering and exiting their stands or attempting to still-hunt, these high-traffic areas can be red-hot throughout the day. |
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Did you see that red-hot picture of Liv Tyler in today's paper? |
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At rear, the wine-tinged leaves of Abyssinian banana echo the red-hot foliage of Coleus 'Oxblood' and orange-red flowers of 'Gartenmeister Bonstedt' fuchsia. |
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Winner of the Grade 1 Frizette Stakes at Belmont by more than six lengths, You had earlier surprised red-hot favourite Cashier's Dream in the Adirondack at Saratoga. |
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Here in their season grow the blue agapanthus, the wild watsonia, and the red-hot poker, and now and then it happens that one may glimpse an arum in a dell. |
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A police source on the Algarve said the torturers even cauterised his wounds with red-hot tools to stop him bleeding to death and prolong his agony. |
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