Staff at the estate agents spent today and yesterday contacting owners, but there are still a number of people they have been unable to speak to. |
|
Her words speak to a gamut of music lovers from teeny-boppers to grown folks and the gay community. |
|
Each fighter was asked to speak to a video camera, to frame them telegenically and to provide a glimpse into their character. |
|
In a statement, Jessica said she was on her computer before answering a telephone call from someone wanting to speak to her dad. |
|
If I ring the WRONG telephone number I will not speak to the person I want to speak to. |
|
The first person to speak to you will be the telephone operator, who will ask whether you require the ambulance, fire, or police service. |
|
On the contrary, Hamlet's manifestation of courage and the words that speak to that courage are thrilling. |
|
Don't be shy to ask friends to help and speak to you in Bahasa Malaysia on a regular basis. |
|
The reasons for eliminating terror are clear, and speak to simple self-preservation. |
|
While she scrubbed him she would invariably speak to him of the importance of personal hygiene. |
|
But then he arrives, smiles warmly, asks for a glass of wine and a moment to speak to his wife, and scuttles off. |
|
Of course, if Kingston had been bothered to speak to us when we called, we could have set the record straight there and then. |
|
My first call was answered by a woman who sounded very sharp-tongued and who gave me the third degree when I asked to speak to Derek. |
|
A former England player who roomed with him now has to call Hoddle's secretary to get an appointment to speak to him. |
|
If necessary, counsel may contact my secretary to arrange an appointment to speak to the issue of costs on this motion. |
|
He said he was keen to speak to anybody who had seen Mr Hutchinson, possibly on Saturday night, on the path or in local pubs. |
|
I was at Lime Cay during the morning and early evening, so I can't speak to the G. G.'s bashment, but the Prime Minister's was in the night. |
|
You must speak to her Logan, she'll do herself an injury if were not careful. |
|
He went to the door to speak to him and while he stood on the doorstep, some boys fired a BB gun at him. |
|
He told me the Queen was bearing up bravely but that Charles couldn't speak to anyone at the moment. |
|
|
I was almost positive that enlisted men were not supposed to speak to their betters in such a familiar manner. |
|
We became fast friends and I was the last man in England to speak to her on the day she died. |
|
But seriously though, I speak to you today as someone with experience in writing for the daily print media and as an author. |
|
Police want to speak to anyone who witnessed the crash or who saw the motorcycle beforehand. |
|
If I speak to you less often and seem less cordial than before, do not be offended, I beg of you. |
|
Police are keen to speak to, or receive information on, a man in a red-hooded top who was standing near to the incident. |
|
Activists in the Campaign for Yorkshire set out their stall in York city centre to speak to shoppers and gather support. |
|
You need to speak to the local people who don't mix with tourists, who don't know the West's version of the yetis. |
|
It was put to you that it has previously been necessary to speak to you about your attitude and behaviour towards female colleagues. |
|
He told campaigners that he would speak to representatives in the licensed trade to see if he could find a buyer for the pub. |
|
If they speak to sheriff's officers and so on, we go into all these things and they are examined in courts of law. |
|
I was encouraged when college presidents, provosts, and professors at about half of the 70 schools I contacted were willing to speak to me. |
|
I tell you what, as things are at present, I cannot possibly speak to Lord Treasurer for anybody. |
|
He is no more likely to shout at one of his team-mates than he is to speak to the press. |
|
Nevertheless, these poems speak to me more truly than Bertrand Russell's glib quote. |
|
The way one modulates the voice, its pitch, tone and tenor to speak to different persons is nothing but mimicry. |
|
From time to time people cast doubt on the ability of such ancient texts to speak to people so far removed in time. |
|
My parents told me that I really had to speak to the press, who were laying siege to the hospital. |
|
After blagging our way into the company's central London offices we waited for someone to come and speak to us. |
|
The equipment is needed to allow rail staff in the Sheffield area, including signallers, to speak to one another. |
|
|
I'm a bleeder, someone just has to speak to me sharply and I'm gushing pints, so no blood means hopefully no big deal. |
|
Perhaps, the cricket coaches and psychologists should speak to them about how to motivate the team to win the mother of all cricketing contests. |
|
Mere color, unspoiled by meaning, and unallied with definite form, can speak to the soul in a thousand different ways. |
|
It was a most unattractive sound, and I had to speak to him quite sharply about it. |
|
In strikes previously unconfident people speak to mass meetings of workers to raise solidarity or argue for more action. |
|
He has no reason to speak to the Queen like that, even if she is uncrowned. |
|
The worker, who would not be named, said employees had been told by management not to speak to press. |
|
They went to speak to him and smelled alcohol, saw his eyes were glazed and his speech slurred. |
|
I'm sorry to bother you but I wondered if I could speak to you for a moment. |
|
That's a language with several thousand native speakers alive now who you can go and speak to any time you like. |
|
If you turn to speak to a passenger or look down to set a navaid while rolling, for example, a swerve is a distinct possibility. |
|
For the next several weeks, Grandma refused to speak to Mother, openly snubbing her not only in public but in her own backyard as well. |
|
We have tried to speak to people at Irwell Valley, but so far we have not had that much response. |
|
His jaw dropped, and I felt ashamed of my answer, for who was I to so speak to a Brother, even if he be a solitary? |
|
Network news newscasts speak to somewhere between seven and 10 million homes each. |
|
When the man reappeared, along with several others, Buckner began to speak to them in broken English. |
|
His openness and willingness to speak to the media sowed confusion rather than clarity. |
|
When they speak to him and about him, they behave differently than they did with the painter, or the veejay, or any of the other folks. |
|
Maybe I would have never spoken to you, but that's because you don't speak to anyone. |
|
After I had spoken to all of them, there was still one person who I felt as though I still needed to speak to. |
|
|
Oh how I wish now that I had spoken to you, instead of waiting for you to speak to me. |
|
It was her decision to go and speak to people she hadn't spoken to in years, not his. |
|
She hadn't really tired to speak to Mark but then Mark hadn't spoken to her or shown any interest in talking at all to her since they had kissed. |
|
They speak to readers and other bloggers who speak back, through e-mails, comments or on blogs of their own. |
|
These are all the people who normally never get to speak to film-makers about these issues. |
|
Be a good mummy and give Nicky the phone so he can speak to the bad boy and make the bad boy be nice again. |
|
He refused to speak to inquiry agents sent by his solicitors to obtain a proof of evidence and she was reduced to tape recording in conference. |
|
The man continued to speak to the police, all the while looking through the zoom lens of his video camera. |
|
It's less about creating minimalist abstract objects that, by virtue of their existence, speak to formal concerns. |
|
So I asked a friend of the film to speak to the issue and what came back, I thought, was worth printing. |
|
These cases, however, do not speak to the issue of when or why maternal custody is justified. |
|
I merely need to soak it in, bathe in it, let it speak to me the way it has spoken to others. |
|
Imagine you are the captain of a sports team facing an important match and you want to speak to everyone to persuade them to do their best. |
|
Detectives today released a videofit of the man they want to speak to about the robbery. |
|
If she feels the urge to spill her guts again, recommend that she speak to one of her friends instead. |
|
Staff said she was unable to speak to the press as she had lost her voice, believed to be as a result of a cold. |
|
I promise I'll write to you when I get a chance but for now I'll only speak to you in my mind. |
|
Now, Secretary Richardson did send his number two, his deputy, to speak to Congress. |
|
The museum will have its own call sign and visitors will be able to speak to other radio amateurs all over the world. |
|
The police are eager to speak to anyone who can help us to find and arrest the culprits. |
|
|
A department official manning the roadblock said he and the police officers there had been instructed not to speak to the media. |
|
Then got angry and told him where he could stick his job, and put the phone down, vowing that I was never going to speak to him again. |
|
But speak to old-timers and they mention two suspicious deaths in the 1960s, both recorded as accidents. |
|
He talks constantly about his conscience but fails to recognise that the still small voice does not speak to him alone. |
|
I remember, one of his stock lines when he'd speak to high school students would be, you know, you've got to get out to vote. |
|
Police would like to speak to anyone with information on these crimes or who notices suspicious activity in the area of a cash dispenser. |
|
Anna started to speak to me again, and I listened, nodding, although not really hearing anything she had to say. |
|
I have even heard tell that some people don't answer the phone if they recognise the number and don't wish to speak to that person right now. |
|
Police also want to speak to three men who caught a train about 8.40 pm and were overheard talking about the incident. |
|
Clients will have the chance to speak to others who have suffered similar ordeals. |
|
While at the desk he is reminded that he has been cautioned about obtaining legal advice and asked twice if he wishes to speak to a lawyer. |
|
The plan had been to lock strike-breakers in spare bedrooms so they couldn't speak to current workers. |
|
The custom commands are simply instructions you speak to the computer and then it performs the designated task. |
|
The official was attempting to speak to six subcontractors working on the project. |
|
As well as enforcing the speed limit, police will speak to bikers to drive home the safety message. |
|
But every time I almost get up the nerve to go and speak to her, I chicken out. |
|
They will be able to meet and speak to special advisers about finding work, childcare and tax credits. |
|
It seems like every time you speak to a Hong-Kongese, the subject of property is bound to surface at some point or another in the conversation. |
|
He assured him that his intentions with his daughter were honorable, and asked if he could speak to her. |
|
Not all great books are able to speak to us before we have done the work to ready our intellect and literary palates for them, but many are. |
|
|
People will be able to press a button and speak to someone directly in the CCTV control room, who will pan the camera to observe them. |
|
Police are keen to speak to witnesses to the accident which involved a Citroen panel van and another small van. |
|
Human Personality can still speak to modern psychology and parapsychology in different ways. |
|
The tank destroyer pulled up beside the foxhole to speak to the young paratrooper. |
|
They have the characteristics of honesty and humour and they speak to audiences at their level, not from on high. |
|
She would like to speak to any youngster, whether living at home, in private rent or council accommodation. |
|
Second, I want to reach across party lines and speak to Democrats in both houses. |
|
Dad would refuse to speak to us all for a week as he manfully kept his secret hypochondriacal worries to himself. |
|
It was bizarre to speak to someone when I had absolutely no idea what they looked like. |
|
The animals will be penned so that people can pat them and speak to Santa before a final high street parade at 1.45 pm. |
|
And Graham had no ifs, ands or buts about what he thought, and that's what I was hoping Kerry would speak to. |
|
I speak to you as a father, as a grandfather, and most of all as someone who cares deeply about all of you. |
|
He was conscious when tested and was even able to coherently speak to the doctors despite having a high blood-alcohol level. |
|
Yet the atmosphere pervading their writings and the very style of the fine arts and music in that period speak to the contrary. |
|
There are many ways to speak to someone, shouting and whispering can be very impactful in the right context. |
|
He quickly grew impatient with it, though he could not speak to Isobel of why. |
|
Did this debate speak to you, or were you embarrassed by some of these inane questions? |
|
Ms Flynn resplendent in a suit of white was obliged to leave after her speech and walked commandingly out to speak to reporters. |
|
I intend to speak to a proposed motion to amend the resolution to commit the bill to select committee. |
|
I speak to many people every week who are just as fed up with the law-breakers as police officers are. |
|
|
The infirmarer was allowed to speak to the inmates of the infirmary, but was to do so quietly and in designated areas. |
|
They are particularly keen to speak to a person seen on the film posting a letter in a pillar box. |
|
With web conferencing the students and teachers will even be able to speak to each other. |
|
You should speak to your insurer or broker before taking on these more costly projects to assess their benefit to you. |
|
One does not normally think or speak in one's conlang, much less speak to another, except through a laborious process of translation. |
|
These are both goal-oriented symbols, which speak to us of making plans in order to achieve our desires. |
|
This will allow residents to look at detailed plans for the proposals and speak to council officers about how they will be implemented. |
|
He now refuses to speak to Swedish journalists and he chooses his words carefully when answering questions. |
|
In particular they want to speak to the driver of a large articulated lorry which had a curtain-sided trailer with gold writing on it. |
|
Students care a lot about their future and they want someone powerful to speak to them. |
|
I want every member who wants to speak to be able to have his or her say, and to be heard. |
|
He wants to speak to me tomorrow, or rather, as he put it, he wants me to speak to him. |
|
Their children attend private academies and may occasionally speak to one of the Peasantry as the latter mows the grass or cleans the house. |
|
I am entitled to speak to an audience who I know accepts my fundamental premises. |
|
I just rang my brother to ask his advice but, as is always the way when you really want to speak to someone, he's out! |
|
Make a careful note of who you speak to, their job title and when you spoke to them. |
|
If league want to continue with the scrums let them watch Union scrums or speak to the players of the 50s or 60s how to pack and play a scrum. |
|
Police would particularly like to speak to a jogger who helped the boy at the scene. |
|
When I went to speak to the admiral who sailed the fleet over, he asked me where I hailed from. |
|
Karen has already interviewed about 40 adoptees but is hoping to speak to more before holding a seminar in November. |
|
|
After a pause, Huw tries to speak to fill the gap, just as the track comes in. |
|
This is when Vaclav Havel came to speak to Congress just after the fall of the Soviet Union. |
|
She claims she was not advised of alternative pharmacies as the pharmacist refused to speak to her. |
|
All you need do is open whichever book you choose, and it will speak to you and tell its stories. |
|
She had been sick before but when I rang last night they said she had kept her food down and I was able to speak to her and she seems all right. |
|
You are not my keeper or my chaperone, and therefore you have no say in who I choose to speak to. |
|
And for an immediate reaction to today's events I think we can speak to Tom Hilton. |
|
It is with pleasure that I stand in the House to speak to the final reading of this bill. |
|
You get to speak to an adviser straightaway after that and don't have to press buttons on your telephone keypad. |
|
Children address their elders by using the honorific form of Nepali, while adults speak to children using more familiar language. |
|
Mr Miller is believed to have gone over to speak to Mr Holt, who was loading 40 bales of compressed cardboard onto a trailer with another worker. |
|
Last night she was still recovering in hospital, and too ill to speak to detectives. |
|
I have still to speak to the school, but I wouldn't think this would bring out any issues. |
|
Initially he had said he would pose for photos but wouldn't speak to any journalists. |
|
But the rhetoric of Marxist exploitation and alienation does not speak to the needs of non-labourers, and may indeed oppose them. |
|
All of the verbs in this excerpt are polysyllabic, strategically alliterative, and speak to various kinds of action that jolt the reader. |
|
He was also quite a yaffler so I find it hard to believe he would not speak to his client during a service. |
|
Bankura superintendent of police Anil Kumar said that the family members had relapsed into sullen silence, refusing to speak to anyone. |
|
They in turn would identify the relevant vehicle and stop it at a safe place in order to speak to the driver. |
|
Although technically sculptural reliefs, these works speak to a number of painting's traditional formal concerns. |
|
|
He alternatively encourages residents with any concerns to speak to the Ilkley parish councillor who represents their part of the parish. |
|
She said it was wonderful to see everyone again although she wished for more time to speak to them all. |
|
Now, Simon is lapsing into Hollywood speak to say he didn't do anything wrong. |
|
He refuses, but later does speak to Tribunal representatives, although still says he will not travel to give evidence. |
|
Officers are keen to speak to anyone who saw him after that date and in the four days leading up to when he was found. |
|
Staff were reportedly angered by the way the news was broken to them but have been ordered not to speak to the media. |
|
Seeing him, but firmly resolving not to speak to him, hurt more than he'd expected. |
|
Instead of getting a chance to speak to her mother, she was shot dead by a stranger who accompanied her mother. |
|
We know at the very least that he was one of the last people to speak to her. |
|
Police have been able to speak to her, but she is still receiving medical treatment for her injuries. |
|
Also, the article lends a bit of credibility to my presentations when I speak to families on dietary, biomedical, and other types of therapies. |
|
After the initial assessment, the medical team must speak to the senior fire officer. |
|
Police said they wanted to speak to a man seen in the area who might be able to shed light on what happened. |
|
He seemed distressed and anxious but refused an offer to speak to someone else. |
|
He doesn't so much speak to you as he lulls you in lilting, mellifluous tones. |
|
Police officers should not speak to eyewitnesses after the lineups regarding their identification or their inability to identify anyone. |
|
A satellite link-up enabled viewers to see Vaughan speak to the rest of the team, who are currently on tour in Pakistan. |
|
Any attempt to speak to them is routed to a vast office where harassed and underpaid staff attempt to deal with routine inquiries. |
|
They also want to speak to a stranger who appeared to be looking for her just four hours before she went missing. |
|
He rubbed his thumb and index fingers together, before he tried to speak to her again. |
|
|
I am passing out the rubric now, if you have any questions please come and speak to me outside of class. |
|
Garda are anxious to speak to the owner of an articulated lorry who may be able to assist with information. |
|
Remember children hear your tone of voice more than your words, so speak to them with respect and loving kindness. |
|
Her voice still reached him as she continued to speak to her caller in low tones before hanging up. |
|
It tends to be a case of take it or leave it, so now what we have to do is speak to more clubs and see if we can get a better deal elsewhere. |
|
Nobody can accuse him of not finding the time to talk to whoever wants to speak to him. |
|
She uses the oud and the tamboura which speak to her unique personality and creativity. |
|
The only thing that really annoys him is when Laura begins to speak to the children in Finnish. |
|
We want to speak to anyone who thinks they might have seen him or spoken to him after teatime on Wednesday. |
|
He refused to speak to the mama-sans because his parents told him not to talk to any girls while he was overseas. |
|
Other team-mates refused to speak to him or tried to run him out. |
|
Rivers, it had emerged, had told them she was Ruth Madoff in disguise, and not to speak to her or approach her when she walked in. |
|
I want, therefore, to speak to the short title and to the amendments. |
|
Cody also invited actual sufferers of dissociative Identity Disorder and doctors who treat the disease in to speak to the staff. |
|
The upright, wardrobe-like posture and rectangular headlights of the seventies Mercs speak to me of a style and distinction that is somewhat missing from the cars of today. |
|
But because we have assisted trusts at other clubs in similar situations then we should be able to tip them the wink as to who they should speak to. |
|
Today, the Hinde Studio photos, the same images blown up to large-scale prints, speak to the optimism of the times and our nostalgia for that cheerful sanguineness. |
|
As I waited to speak to Manning, a cleaning woman poked her head out from one of the adjacent rooms to peer at me. |
|
Not only would Moses not speak to him, neither would family members, friends, aides, city officials, or state officials. |
|
The company has tried to muzzle its employees by forbidding them to speak to the press. |
|
|
My friend goes over to speak to her, and starts chatting her up. |
|
Assuring me that he can be found in Village One during business hours, Koelewijn also suggested that students can speak to either of the two head chefs about their concerns. |
|
Volnovakha Mayor Sergey Denchenko said through a secretary that he was unavailable to speak to reporters. |
|
Audiences are led on a tour and entertained along the way by singers, dancers and storytellers and are given the opportunity to speak to residents. |
|
Our anchors and reporters regularly speak to community organizations. |
|
It's nothing for someone to walk up to me in the store or at a restaurant and ask for an autograph or speak to me. |
|
Members of the public can speak to a police officer on neutral ground in the supermarket's entrance area or, if they would like some privacy, in an adjoining office. |
|
Instead of contacting their line manager, an employee calling in sick must now speak to a nurse from private health care organisation Active Health. |
|
He also sponsored events at which high-achieving black men came to speak to the school students, helping them to raise their sights to a higher level. |
|
If you want to speak to us then speak in a language that we understand. |
|
Barely a day goes by without news of a terrorist incident, and speak to any objective observer and they will tell you that, for all the progress, big problems remain. |
|
A short time later police again had to speak to the youths in the post office carpark where they were skating around parked cars and again they were moved on. |
|
And, oh, by the way, they only speak to the dealer, United Nations envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, not to each other. |
|
The Parties may speak to me on the issue of costs, if necessary. |
|
Equally, the United manager may possibly be one of the few figures down south who can speak to referees in such a brusque, accusatory manner and not incur their wrath. |
|
It's not too keen on some of my hardware, refusing to speak to my camera and refusing to even boot half the time when my card reader is plugged in. |
|
The LDS Church's expulsion efforts speak to the intellectual crisis the Mormon community is currently facing. |
|
But our president simply has a tin ear for how to speak to people. |
|
How can we speak to their fears in a way that gets them to understand that there is nothing to be fearful of? |
|
No one would have to speak to her and she would not have to speak back. |
|
|
Ellen dashed from the convertible and went to speak to the police. |
|
When dark imaginations seek images that speak to fear of contagion and plague, rats scurrying out of garbage piles and sewer holes supply a metaphor for humans. |
|
We struck up an instant rapport and I speak to him regularly. |
|
Players' movements and activities are so closely monitored that it is hard for anyone to approach or speak to the players, leave alone attempt to fix matches. |
|
If they start mucking you around speak to their complaints department, get them to send you another form with a self-addressed envelope so they cannot say it's gone elsewhere. |
|
When I get home I speak to my wife and we don't talk about football. |
|
For scarlet fever patients were kept in hospital for six weeks and only allowed to speak to visitors through the window for fear of the contagion. |
|
Obviously, I had to book a dental appointment to speak to the wizard and ask him where I could find my beloved cat, Cleo. |
|
I've never known a gay man before, so I cannot speak to those issues. |
|
I demanded to speak to the proprietor, a weak-willed man who claimed that the youths were only enjoying some music before attending a scout meeting. |
|
Nawasi, I speak to you of the future of your people, hark, child, listen. |
|
It was approaching lunchtime and Jake's stomach was rumbling, but there were still a few more members of staff to speak to before he could think about eating. |
|
Every night, I speak to the islands of the Caribbean in the language of hysterical storms. |
|
I returned to the towel section and attempted to speak to a shopper who'd just thrown a few in her cart. |
|
They do have some contact with service staff at the special dormitory in which they stay throughout the conclave, but staff members are not permitted to speak to them. |
|
He feels safe knowing that Brian May lives nearby in L.A. and believes that Freddie and Princess Diana speak to him from the heavens in skywriting. |
|
Stephens' comments speak to another critical issue regarding confidantes. |
|
But he did speak to the issue of the razzle-dazzle camera moves, at least indirectly. |
|
Here we speak to a first-time mum, a mother of four and that other essential to baby-making, a father, about their experiences of life after childbirth. |
|
These studies only speak to one of our ingrained mental habits that make us particularly susceptible to religious belief. |
|
|
I have always thought that Stanley was saying, in coded form, that he was being so bold as to speak to a gentleman to whom he hadn't been introduced. |
|
The Babysitters Club would have been a first-rate film had they simply scuttled the stupid story points and let the characters interact and speak to each other. |
|
After each session, she would sit with those who obliged and speak to them about their past, problems and desires. |
|
He set a further court hearing for May 31 to rule on defense requests to compel interviews with witnesses who decline to speak to them voluntarily. |
|
The fact that the link transcended age group and demographic does speak to its relevance. |
|
And so, closeted in our jury room, sandwiches ordered, mobile phones removed and under strict instructions to speak to no-one, we sat down to make our decision. |
|
But I doubt it, and so do many of the attorneys I speak to who work in the white-collar crime business. |
|
Police have this week issued four video stills of men they wish to speak to in connection with the theft of money from an in-store cash dispenser in Marlborough. |
|
If they speak to women readers of their personal vicissitudes in a way that is helpful, if they offer incantations for women to use in time of trouble, so much the better. |
|
I couldn't speak to housing patterns and other forms of segregation. |
|
Firstly you must try to speak to local horsy people, they often have a good knowledge of the schools in the area and will tell you which ones are good and which ones to avoid. |
|
I have a lot more detailed information to this case but I would need to speak to someone person to person and have time to explain myself more clearly. |
|
If you have concerns about dental fillings, speak to your dentist. |
|
If the property remains unsold after the auction i.e. your bid was below the reserve price, speak to the auctioneer to register your interest before leaving the saleroom. |
|
In investigating domestic violence, it is tempting for academics to speak to only those more easily accessible women who are resident in refuges, rather than other victims. |
|
I would speak to Panamanians, El Salvadoreans, and Guatemalans to find out why, despite all the talk of how terrible free trade is, they still wanted to sign a deal. |
|
Labor says Peter Garrett lodged an open enrolment form yesterday and neither Peter Garrett nor any Labor Party official was available to speak to AM this morning. |
|
Throughout both days the divers would speak to the public via underwater communications, play noughts and crosses with the children and generally entertain the crowd. |
|
John let Smart Alec sit there on his desk in his study, and at one in the morning he heard it speak to him in his mind. |
|
I took any means to get access to you. O speak to me, Sophia! comfort my bleeding heart. Sure no one ever loved, ever doated like me. |
|
|
A text that could not speak to the present was dead, and the exegete had a duty to revive it. |
|
Anselm then slept, awoke returned to Aosta, and then retraced his steps before returning to speak to his mother. |
|
On a number of occasions he also visited his former school to speak to the students and look around. |
|
Saint Andrew is invoked to ward off wolves, who are thought to be able to eat any animal they want on this night, and to speak to humans. |
|
Shortly after this, a representative delegation of barons, clergy and knights was sent to Kenilworth to speak to the King. |
|
The Force Switchboard can also be used to request to speak to individual officers or departments within the organisation. |
|
Some cabs have a CB radio in addition to the company radio so they can speak to each other. |
|
Luxembourgish is the language that Luxembourgers generally use to speak to each other, but it is not often used as the written language. |
|
He had a guard of two hundred chieftains lodged in rooms beside his own, only some of whom were permitted to speak to him. |
|
Ron is jealous that Harry is once again in the limelight and refuses to speak to Harry. |
|
Finally we gave him the silent treatment, and for weeks before he died we neither spoke to him nor did he speak to us. |
|
And if you don't have faith in your waitron, you can always ask to speak to the resident wine expert. |
|
But speak to your average Quebecker and they will dismiss the Francophile political parties out of hand. |
|
Officersr wanta to speak to anyon newhomaya havea seen the car,r a browr nw Seat Ibiza, or Stephen in the moments leading up to the collision. |
|
As a deontologist would put it, these are moral causes that speak to us directly. |
|
They want to speak to another youth who was with the rapist before the assault. |
|
Wait times to speak to an assistor averaged about 10 minutes, slightly longer than last year. |
|
The PSNI want to speak to the pharoahs, who they believe may be from the Cookstown or Mid-Ulster areas. |
|
While Titan Rays has a wide audience appeal, it may especially speak to a younger, trendier consumer. |
|
Save hifalutin vocabulary for other lawyers, if you must, and speak to the jurors in plain English, she recommends. |
|
|
The committee members separately speak to feuding families to convince them to put an end to their vendettas. |
|
We speak to Hilal Sde, sales and marketing director, Le Gray Beirut, about doing business in a strife-ridden country. |
|
How do you gamble on hiring Pete Rose to speak to a bunch of a baseballers ages 7-14 and not expect some pottymouth language? |
|
If anyone is a victim of a loan shark, or knows of someone who is, we would urge you to speak to us in confidence, as we can help. |
|
I'm Billy No-Mates actually but I speak to the players and it is not a question of them wanting to go anywhere. |
|
This made me dumbstruck, that someone would happily speak to random strangers on public transport and try to help them in any way they can. |
|
By 5pm, around 200 people had got through to speak to the trio, with thousands more getting an engaged tone or a recorded message. |
|
Officers are particularly keen to speak to the female driver of a silver 4x4 vehicle, which was pulling a horse box. |
|
To protect your dog from lungworm, speak to your vet or join the pledge at www. |
|
A premium-rate telephone number lets you speak to a qualified GP seven days a week. |
|
I will try to synopsize what she said, but I encourage you to hear her speak to feel as empowered and connected as I did. |
|
It occurred before midnight near to Brandling Park and police say they would like to speak to a man who was in the area at the time. |
|
Adam stopped dating interracially, and he asked Brownie to speak to the girls he had been seeing to let them know that he was black. |
|
A REVELLER dressed in a bunny girl outfit is among four people police want to speak to in connection with an unprovoked assault on a train. |
|
Canvassers will go door-to-door in coming weeks to speak to those who are yet to register. |
|
Staff at North Highland College at Thurso, where Calum was a gamekeeping student, plan to speak to his family about a possible memorial to him. |
|
During their sequestration, jurors were not allowed to speak to reporters. |
|
Because of our Lash Out Lashes, we're part of a global beauty network so I speak to people all around the world and through those contacts I found out about this training. |
|
Geoff visited the service's drop in sessions on a fortnightly basis to speak to his stop smoking service advisor and used an inhalator to help relieve and prevent cravings. |
|
He has cat nip rubbed on to stairs, food is tipped in to a metal bowl, all of his toys are noisy, and you must speak to him and let him smell your hand before fussing. |
|