It can't be easy getting all tarted up a couple of times a week in the hope that your blind date could be the one. |
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Knackered already, one tarted oneself up and headed off to Blackheath to meet Chris and his girlfriend. |
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So I went and tarted myself up on Tuesday and got a new passport picture done. |
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In Scotland, the seaside towns tarted up their piers and decked out their main streets good and gaudy. |
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If you go to seek it in the new tarted up smartest international hotels, you will nearly always be disappointed. |
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They're labeled anything but show-biz aspirants, which, tarted up and abdominally perfected for ABC's commedia dell'arte, they unmistakably are. |
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So too for most other chief executives who are tarted up and shoved on stage to booming rock chords. |
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They have tarted them all up quite nicely, compared to what they used to look like. |
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It is tarted up with shopworn absurdism, as when a moronic computer programmer jumps off that roof only to reappear without explanation to continue being moronic. |
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After sleeping late, Wade and I tarted ourselves up and walked a few minutes down Cheltenham Beach to North Head where Byron and Briar were to be married. |
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For the last ten years, news divisions have tarted themselves up. |
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Older structures, such as the parliament, were to be tarted up with domes and other accoutrements. |
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I know the city is tarted up now, with too much Thai, Chinese and Singaporean money. |
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Except for one bed from Ikea which I tarted up, everything else is secondhand. |
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Accommodation was in London schools, tarted up with curtains, flowers and raffia mats. |
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The room, which was splendidly tarted up by Count Robert de Beauchamp in the 19th century, is now a honeymoon suite. |
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He has tarted up his list of candidates with some 40 mayors and the province's governor, even though few are likely to take up congressional seats. |
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Tenements have been thinned down and tarted up. |
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