Joe's relatives tell him to stick to his own kind, yet the toughs that beat him up don't see him as of their own class. |
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The advertisements tell us, endlessly, that unlike any other family hatchback on the market it has rear-wheel drive. |
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You could immediately tell that it had been shampooed, and their hair turned out to be very curly. |
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Can someone tell us what commonsense reasoning the highway officials are applying here? |
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As someone who spent eight years doing drug research, I can tell you that we're not going to be able to even make reasonable guesses. |
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At last, gathering her wits about her, Daphne waddled back to her master to tell him what had happened at the river's edge. |
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I could not tell if it was a sigh of relief or a sigh of lucklessness, but nevertheless he sighed. |
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I still find him sexy and am attracted to him, but I can't tell what he is thinking. |
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I could tell by looking at him that he also had muscles under his tee shirt and khakis. |
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That may very well be true, but how do you expect me to offer help unless you tell me what ails you? |
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The players might tell you they enjoy the occasion, and maybe they do, especially if it results in a win. |
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They welcomed the journalists who arrived in their beleaguered country to tell their story. |
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Right now at this moment you're lugging heavy boxes of books down the stairs and I can't even begin to tell her how much that means. |
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He would later tell his of monks cranking out tracts and pamphlets, hands stained with the bluish-purple dyes of a messy-smelly technology. |
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I could tell because there were a couple of wisps of purplish smoke wafting around the light fixtures a minute after I said it. |
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What do you wish you could tell your viewers that you will never be able to tell them on the air? |
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Sara thought it was a kingfisher and, let me tell you, she knows kingfishers. |
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As for your particular situation, what kind of idiot lowlife would tell another man that his wife was great in the sack? |
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You're not suddenly going to tell the world you have a claim on me, or try to hold me to some sort of commitment? |
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Now, I will be the first to tell anyone that there is a lot more to being an announcer than knowing the names of moves and holds. |
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I could tell you that at least one person would not hold his manhood cheap and that he still has the moustaches to prove it. |
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Up to this day many communities still hold these traditions dear and the names of certain places tell stories of the people who once lived there. |
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It's much harder to get traction with editors, let alone readers, to tell that story. |
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If I planned to blow us all to kingdom come, would I tell my secret to someone wearing epaulettes? |
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Once I did run a rather lukewarm review and I can tell you, I felt bad about it. |
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Do you have any suggestions on how to tell a good rebuilder from a not-so-good one? |
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If you see anything suspicious, please, for your sake, tell me immediately. |
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I tell the tourists something costs 15 million and they say I must be joking. |
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Well, don't tell Elle, but everyday after practice we head over to the rec center and hold our own practices. |
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So tell me, John, why is it that all your so-called friends and family hate you so much? |
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Watch one funny movie, or read a funny story, or tell your friends three funny jokes, every single day. |
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He always had a great sense of humour and even during his illness he could still tell a joke or funny story. |
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The car search rolls on, and I tell you, I'm feeling mighty petulant about it. |
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And, when a spokesman from the breakfast show phoned to tell him the good news, John put the phone down thinking it was a wind-up. |
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Any secondary school physics text or pilot licence manual will tell you that aerofoils generate lift because of the Venturi effect. |
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Well, the experts in the trade tell us that your favourite soft drink tastes best when it's chilled right down to four degrees Celsius. |
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Instead of trying to tell the players how to attack, he gave them more freedom. |
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That will give him enormous confidence and you can tell his mood is lifting. |
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Jane went on to tell of the fabulous reaction Shaylyn received from the people who attended the show. |
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My mother did know who my father was, but she was too afraid to tell anyone for fear of the reactions she would receive. |
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The only way someone would be able to tell it wasn't a full-grown woman by her voice, was by the way she shaped her words. |
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Just looking at Joe, you can tell he's got the size and strength to really kill the ball. |
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Here is a hotel old enough to have a history, not just ersatz nostalgia, and the squeaky floorboards to tell it. |
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Based on the physician's response and receptiveness, the victim may or may not choose to tell others. |
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I tell my patients twins are not twice the fun. One is hard enough. Two at a time is a killer for some people. |
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Whene'er he likes to tell his mind mair plain, I'se tell him frankly ne'er to do 't again. |
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University law teachers and legal executives may be considered for the bench, he will tell the Woman Lawyer Forum in London. |
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There is no need to tell you what immense pleasure and instruction Liszt gives his silent and attentive audience. |
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The only way, it seemed, that we could convince my buddies to tag along was to tell them that there was unlimited food and beer awaiting them. |
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After scratching off the sealed panel Dennis knew he was on to a winner and rushed off home to tell Brenda the good news. |
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Since I know something is weighing on your mind anyway, you might as well tell me what it is. |
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It can only tell a voter whether the data sent to the printer is the same data he recalls entering at the touchscreen. |
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And how can we tell the difference between marketing hype and the complex actualities of production and consumption? |
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I was just going to tell you how to turn on the radiator, because these rooms freeze at night. |
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Anyone who saw him could tell that the driving was reckless and very dangerous. |
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And you can't tell how many joeys they've got in their pouch when you shoot them. |
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You start locking up folks and then we tell people we are serious about this. |
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He gave them all a puzzled look but could tell they were in a serious conversation, so he didn't push it. |
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Anonymous sources generally are cowards, who often tell more than they know. |
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Anyone who is physically active can tell us how important it is to eat and sleep well, as well as not pushing our bodies too far. |
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If your mom's worries are driving a wedge between you, ask her to tell you honestly what she's afraid of. |
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As best as I can tell they're more like Fordists and resemble the Social Democrat parties in Europe. |
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So its probably a good job that this is an anonymous blog, or my boss, the Great Leader would tell me off. |
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The congressman behind the report will tell us how he's planning to take action. |
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Members of our group recently went down to the army recruitment centre to tell them we'd like to enlist. |
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And tell your husband that you are going to cut the time you spend in the kitchen by half or even more. |
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Paul Revere tells Johnny to tell Robert Newman, the sexton at Christ's Church, to hang two lanterns. |
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They're all fab and they tell me when I'm acting up, and laugh at me as much as possible which, I think, is very important and very British. |
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Lawrence, like Richard Pryor before him, uses his stand-up act as a forum to tell his side of the story. |
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I hope I can show and tell you the real, true Japan that cannot be seen in other mass media. |
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It can be difficult tell a brown monk's cowl from a soldier's dark dress when all look nearly black. |
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Bully for you go visit a drug rehabilitation centre and tell the others where they went wrong. |
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I know you are but what I am asking you is, can you tell me where I am wrong in that analysis? |
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It's a typical case of townies trying to tell people how to run the countryside. |
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I hope you will not take it ill that I asked my son about your doings, we tell each other everything. |
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By the time you're done mixing it all together, it's hard to tell which is which. |
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All you need do is open whichever book you choose, and it will speak to you and tell its stories. |
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Activists are holding rallies to raise awareness, urging families to tell schools to keep their personal data private. |
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My friend was only 14 and was thin as a rake with tell tale signs of drug abuse which I didn't know then. |
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I can tell him what's going on in the foreground, middle ground, background, the left, the right. |
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Hunter replied, but I couldn't tell if he was sincere or just putting on an act. |
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By the way they were all paying attention to him so raptly, I could tell he was the ringleader of the group. |
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Many people are shaken by a sense of vulnerability, and nobody can tell how all this will finish. |
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Whenever he does call you a bad name or threatens to whip you or anything else, tell your mom ASAP and have her talk to him and again. |
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I almost didn't come because I was afraid you would ask me to tell you what I know before admitting me to your cloister. |
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My sources tell me that this story is nowhere to be found on IRNA's Russian language wire, just the English. |
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I demanded that she tell me what was wrong, but she just laughed and said that she had a secret admirer. |
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I have always been fascinated by how people fictionalise their lives, how they tell stories and act them out. |
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Now before you all go jumping on me for being intolerant, I'll tell you all a few things about being intolerant. |
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It's about time the health service was shaken up though time will tell whether it will be a success. |
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Companies must act responsibly and tell the truth to avoid their shareholders being added to the list of victims in this grim tale. |
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On one occasion, the spruiker refused point blank to tell me the name of the company he was representing. |
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But he didn't get an opportunity to tell them this information before they jumped down his throat and accused him of being unsupportive. |
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I tell you, I certainly did not expect a young college-aged girl, and her teenaged companion to get the jump on me. |
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While, the administration is not responding to the article, but they tell us, trust us, we follow the law. |
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I can tell you that over the past five days we've done a count every hour on the hour, and it's well under 10 minutes. |
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He has a tale to tell and I'm afeared that our lives depend on us listening. |
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Scheme auditors and actuaries will have to act as whistle-blowers and tell Opra if they think something is wrong. |
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Once the nurse forgot to tell me to breathe normally and after about a minute I started gasping for breath. |
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To tell the truth, folks, there are so many debates running in parallel here that I'm inclined to give up the ghost. |
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Rob employs two assistants at the shop, or rather they just started showing up every day and he didn't have the heart to tell them not to. |
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In other research some experienced wine drinkers in a blind test were unable to tell a red from a white. |
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Some of them you could tell were recent and touristy, but others looked pretty authentic. |
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He has also lambasted the European Union and declared verbal war on whites who tell blacks in Africa how to run free and fair elections. |
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He was happy to tell me everything he knew about lower class being unfairly dismissed. |
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I have Ford fans come up to me all the time and tell me they can't believe I'm out here racing this car. |
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Plugged into an interactive whiteboard, it could tell a student if the answer proposed was correct, for example. |
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Most people cannot tell the difference between a ruby and a garnet, which is worth considerably less carat for carat. |
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Remember, you don't need a team director with a map, weather charts and a radio to tell you what to do. |
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I can see whitecaps out on the water, but the ship rides so smooth that I can hardly tell we're underway. |
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I think that they wouldn't mind a rainout, although the weather people tell us that that might not be the case now. |
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So she's a fibber to boot but she still seems nicer than lots of people who tell you how wonderful they are. |
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He then proceeded to tell me that without a shadow of a doubt he should be able to get online right now or he was going to cancel his account. |
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His voice was still slightly flat though Elizabeth could tell he really did like Sam. |
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It will be good enough, for your purposes, to tell him that the jig is up and you are outta there. |
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Sure, I had to coax her with hints of juicy, interesting news that I said I needed to tell her, but still. |
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Arab craftsmen produced complex astronomical instruments, astrolabes, which helped them plot the positions of the stars and tell the time of day. |
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As any manager of a boys' team will tell you, ranting and raving on the touchline is of limited motivational value. |
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He told police he was too afraid for himself and his family to tell the truth at first. |
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Now before you sneer and condemn me to 1,000 strokes of the lash, let me tell you about a little experience I had recently. |
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While acknowledging he did not tell the whole truth, he insisted that white lies are commonplace in politics. |
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Everyone can contribute, but primarily it's the musings of the founding members who tell their stories to the Afrikaans massive. |
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Next he went on to tell me how hard it was for him to pay the astronomical education fees for his daughter on the money he made as a taxi driver. |
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If he flouts these rules, then it's time to tell him the jig is up, and he is out. |
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Why not do some research, screen some little-known or largely forgotten films and tell us something we don't already know? |
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Shannon's mommy told her that babies are delivered by the stork and don't you try and tell her any different. |
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I can tell the member that the kea badge is proudly displayed on my fridge. |
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If you tell your assault team to fall in as you move in on a suppressed enemy, they'll do just that. |
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And he loved to tell the yarn about how he and a pal pilfered a barrel of whiskey out from under the noses of the police during Prohibition. |
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They tell of an innocent Austral lad stumbling into trouble amongst the great and good of Pommyland, months out from an election. |
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He is better placed than a clutch of US management gurus to tell us what the business landscape is really like in Scotland today. |
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When she was younger, I kept on telling her to elope and then return to tell everyone she was married. |
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Sign up, and the likes of Brad will buzz you Thanksgiving night and tell you to go to bed. |
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For the first time, scientists could accurately track weather balloons, and tell much about clouds and the direction that they travel in. |
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Prison stories abound, but the keepers of the prisons and the keepers of the information tell very different stories from the prisoners. |
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Of course, we don't plan to be the ones to tell the big man of the error in his judgment. |
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I used to tell her again and again not to open the door to people at night. |
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I do read newspapers, and you can ask about my politics and I will tell you. |
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Having reflected on these questions for many years, I shall tell you my conclusion. |
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I mean, this is the United States of America, and who am I to tell someone they can or cannot serve their country? |
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I could tell by its position in the sky that it was almost noon, over twelve hours from the last thing I remembered. |
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I bet she doesn't tell any female customers to change their photo on their railcards just because they've had a new hair-do. |
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As anyone who's done it will tell you, backpacking is a great way to travel. |
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All that is by the by, as anyone who's been watching the news lately will tell you. |
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Several people have written to tell me that these books are readable online. |
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Surely that is their job, to be independent, fearless, and tell the whole truth. |
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The smallest dude on the biggest rails, Evan frontside-bombed the big 18 and lived to tell about it. |
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Rob can tell that teenage hoodlums who raid his store are stealing for someone else because of the records they turn over when caught. |
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Good karma, as any scholar of Buddhism will tell you, has to be balanced by an equal amount of bad karma. |
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I kept putting the decision off, until my friend persuaded me to tell the baby's father. |
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All community groups have to do is get in touch and tell us how they believe broadband would help them. |
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I can't really tell you how to do your job Ms. Strong, but I just don't see how putting Jeremy away is going to help him. |
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He was a pleasant man who tended to tell horrible jokes and reminisce too much about days gone by. |
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I once went to a fashionable function when alfalfa sprouts were all the rage, and I don't have to tell you the evening lacked a certain pizzazz. |
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Any noob can tell you this is not the way if you want to motivate your students to study hard and do well. |
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The defendant refused to talk to him about the weapon or tell him where he had got it. |
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As any school text will tell you, this was primarily an age of invention and rapid material progress. |
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So they said they would tell me when a place became available for me to sit until a table became available. |
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They assured us we had caused no problem and continued to tell us about their open-mic nights for poetry readings every Monday. |
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I don't know what to do, it's not my place to tell about you know what, but they expect me to. |
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If you are a non-smoker it is not your place to tell others what they can and cannot do in a public place. |
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Even Teb will stop arguing with me long enough to admit that I can tell a whopper to beat all whoppers. |
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And the next thing you'll tell me is that kelpies and unicorns steal your lunch money. |
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I'm polite, educated, have good table manners and a stash of preppy clothes for work purposes, and once in a while, I even tell a clean joke. |
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They tell us bus fares are going up and buses are being withdrawn to provide a better service for passengers. |
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I have spoken to numerous FBI and CIA counter-terrorist agents, all of whom tell a similar story. |
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It hopes to give people whose opinions are rarely heard the chance to tell their story. |
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The guy was reluctant at first and refused to come with me, but I could tell he needed my help. |
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I also started going out to meet with recruiters to get buy-in for our new curriculum, to tell them that we were going to become a powerhouse. |
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She could tell he was chained to a wall with iron shackles on each wrist and she assumed on his ankles too. |
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He could hear an odd rushing sound, but he couldn't tell if it was real or imagined. |
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How would my friend know what a forbearing and saintly person I am if I didn't tell her the challenges I face from my neighbor? |
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You go to him and tell him that Ramacandra does not have any intention to fight with him. |
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I whole-heartedly welcome proposals to tell children about atheism and agnosticism in schools. |
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Borges talks about not being able to tell whether the tail wags the dog or the dog wags the tail in his own writing of poetry and stories. |
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We filled it with water and added blue dye, so that if it leaked then we could tell easily. |
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Please tell me how he is better, given that he's lost two elections, and probably would have tailed after the president during the invasion. |
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There is merely an earnest desire to spread some Yuletide fun and to tell a straightforward story of devotion, determination, and delight. |
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Who really imagines it's possible to tell from one frame whether or a tape is genuine? |
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Stepping inside he tried to see any lines any contours that could tell him it was a safe room. |
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My husband and I still disagree, but I just tell him to go and get stuffed. |
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You tell her one thing but out of spite, she goes and does the exact opposite. |
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Many nonworking mothers, like myself, would tell you that the stigma lies with us. |
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I should just go home to bed, because I can tell it's gonna be one of those days. |
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I have calculated it to the day and I can tell you that it is fast approaching. |
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If you want us to do the whole job from go to whoa, you simply supply the art and tell us how you want it framed. |
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After a pause, Marlow goes on to tell his shipmates about his experience as a freshwater sailor. |
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Hence the Golden Jubilee Web site that will tell you what's going on where and gently encourage you to celebrate as well. |
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From nature to human tragedies, the photographs tell tales reams of paper cannot. |
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You don't have to be drab and sexless, but color psychologists tell us that blue inspires trust. |
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As any gambler will tell you, when your luck is out, it's well and truly out. |
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I think some had come in twice, but they were so alike one couldn't tell t'other from which. |
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You can tell when people really got it or, well, that's not for me, and you always get a bit of that. |
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You really can tell some pretty wiggy things from looking at someone's handwriting. |
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In an agony of panic at this point, I beseeched her to tell me whether I needed medical attention. |
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Teachers often tell students their grades out loud, so that each person knows what grade the others received. |
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As anyone who has experienced addiction will tell you, changing addictive behavior is not an easy thing to do. |
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I can tell you, caramelised onions are addictive, especially with goat's cheese on olive and walnut bread. |
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You can tell when the team has played well or badly by the atmosphere in every pub, club, shop, office and factory. |
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Another feature of the bus, with a maximum speed of 40 kmph, is that it has sensors that tell the driver of vehicles approaching from the rear. |
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I really want to tell parents about what I think they should look for in rearing their children. |
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During his first season with the Cowboys, Curry cooperated with reporters seeking to tell his salacious story and didn't hide from scrutiny. |
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I'll tell you, if he is anything like Ronny, you will have really lucked out. |
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He added that more new destinations for next summer would be announced soon, but he did not want to tell his rivals which they were. |
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I can tell you're not from the local Chamber of Commerce or the Welcome Wagon. |
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But I can tell you what it feels like to be attacked by a grizzly bear, gored by a bull, bitten by a venomous snake or attacked by African killer bees. |
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Johnson would tell the grand jury that he never saw Brown stick his hand inside the car and grab the gun. |
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Unfortunately, few professors tell their advisees how to both finish their dissertation and obtain a full-time academic position at the same time. |
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I can, like the animals on the farm, no longer tell which is which. |
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He can tell by the rapidity of the bleeps that he is close by now. |
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It's also normal for them not to tell you until the last minute. |
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They survived the Depression, won a world war, put a man on the moon, and educated all of us young whippersnappers who are now trying to tell them what to do. |
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It is impossible to tell which staff members have begun their sensitization and who already has the potential for an anaphylactic or asthmatic reaction. |
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Plus, great thinkers from cornel West to Robert Reich tell us what they're angry about. |
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We can't tell you what to do, but we can give you the low-down on lying. |
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Don't tell me you'd say no to a few of those chilling your whiskey sour! |
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He always said that he wouldn't tell on me but he always ended up ratting. |
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When Mal could come back each sort of week or weekend with the film rushes, he'd tell me the latest of what had gone on the set, and it was quite unusual. |
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This is backed up by an overwhelming 96 per cent of British women who admit they lie, with almost half saying they tell little white fibs most days. |
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He could tell she didn't believe him, and began to give him the evil eye. |
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I still tell raunchy jokes, but now it's for a bigger audience. |
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Kate Mulgrew and Lorraine Toussaint tell the behind-the-scenes story about how they nailed the brilliant scene. |
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Then with a patronizing tone they tell me that I can keep the change. |
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Cotswold District Council and Gloucestershire County Council have been working together to contact travellers and tell them to keep off the field until next week. |
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She would tell me to pull myself together and kept my spirits up. |
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Don't tell me you guys were going to TP my locker! That's so last year. |
|
It is much longer, so give it a read and tell me what you think. |
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I just wanted to tell her that I didn't have any grudges against her! |
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Today I'm going to tell you about my favorite dish in the whole world. |
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My quest to tell the truth led me in midlife to my dream career. |
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The God Clause and the Reinsurance IndustryBrendan Greeley, Businessweek The risk business can tell us a lot about catastrophes. |
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Even experts can't tell if they are real or fake at a glance. |
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The applications tell you at a glance which of your colleagues are available at any one time and exchanging information becomes an effortless breeze. |
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Overground buses serving each of the major routes in and around Leeds are colour coded so passengers can tell at a glance exactly where a bus is travelling. |
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In the end, there may be no way to tell just how much Reaganomics helped create and foster the environment that has led to today's tech-driven, high-productivity economy. |
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I love Kelly, and as for her love life, I tell her to not do all this at 45, to get it out of her system now. |
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At a country-house dinner in Wiltshire, my hunting friends tell me the cubbing is fantastic this year and the sabs seem to have disappeared to the guinea-pig farm. |
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It is impossible to tell if this film is in anamorphic widescreen or not. |
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You're not going yet, are you? I was just about to tell you my plan. |
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Only the results will tell us if Labour is on the right track. |
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And now I find myself wanting to tell you about hair colour and wigs. |
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He was now recognized as one of the finest editors in the business, skilled at letting a scene tell its story with terse economy but with no loss of lucidity. |
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The brand evangelists will tell you that brands are a force for good. |
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I can understand people's concerns about animals such as wolves, but as anyone who has worked with them in the wild will tell you, they don't represent a threat to humans. |
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But her husband, who could tell she was gritting her teeth just to get through the encounter, bailed out. |
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Time will tell whether Spurlock's capable of arriving at conclusions rather than telegraphing them in advance, but for now, he's a voice in the wilderness. |
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Then your luck is in and they tell you it's the operating theatre in the morning and next day you get the pre-med to make you feel drowsy and at ease. |
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But for now, sources tell me, Michael Jackson will be stored in a crypt almost directly underneath the Last Supper masterpiece. |
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Before the envelope containing salacious details makes it into the grubby hands of the media, tell everything. |
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You didn't even tell your editors who sounded a little miffed. |
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I wanted to tell her all about my lumbago, but she gets that all the time. |
|
Yvonne attaches significance to the fact that James told his girlfriend, another recruit, that he had something interesting to tell her after his spell of duty. |
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It's all about winning, kids, don't let anybody tell you different. |
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When Downing Street phoned to tell him, he thought it was a wind-up. |
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Part of me wanted to tell her that Lydia had happily left home to be with Matty and was looking forward to their marriage and becoming a proper little housewife. |
|
I don't wanna tell tales outta school, but the grand dame may very well be a calculating, emotionless killing machine, a veritable monster amongst us lambs. |
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Don't tell dad, I replaced his beef patties with fake dog poo! |
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I've been pooed on a few times, and it's not very pleasant I can tell you. |
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Then, in the warmth of the moment the other side of the winning post, Peter would elegantly put the record straight and tell us all who had really won. |
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The reply from the lassies came from a bloke, naturally, and you could tell his heart wasn't in it by the look of disbelief accompanying his recitation of male idiosyncrasies. |
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He cannot tell if the flashes of wit and intelligence he witnessed in private were more revealing than the president's bumbling and ignorant moments in public. |
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The witch doctor then proceeded to sponge the medicine all over the mirror, and asked the elder to look carefully at the mirror and tell him what he could see. |
|
How many times had he wished that the moments their fingers touched, their shoulders brushed, their eyes met, that they could tell each other what the both already knew? |
|
Mum will tell you that it's not a cheap business paying for uniforms especially with the added wear and tear caused by skateboarding and playing footy in the schoolyard. |
|
The weather-beaten faces staring out from old photographs are no longer around to tell of the hardships of life in a remote mining community 100 years ago. |
|
So can world experts tell a red from a white in a blind test? |
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There was a strong clutch pedal to depress, a right hand gear shift, and a tachometer to tell you when you reached 7,000 RPM and it was time to change gear again. |
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One of the company's rules is that users aren't allowed to tell anyone what they're webcasting, or respond to requests for specific songs to be webcast. |
|
Having a secret ballot means that there will be no way to audit the results and we will have to trust a system that has known security weaknesses to tell us who won. |
|
What do actuaries at life insurance companies have to tell us? |
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I radioed the team and they told me that they could tell that there had been a change to the aerodynamics on the car and the handling was very bad. |
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To tell the truth it's a bit weird being out here on my own. |
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This shambolic mess of a man in Florida may be able to tell Selig whether his testing regimen is working at all. |
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Most people can't tell the difference between milliseconds and microseconds in the throughput specs and, anyway, with chip prices so low, cache is king. |
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If you encounter children who are well-behaved, considerate, remarkable, tell the parents how much you appreciate their commitment to raising these kinds of kids. |
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The water rushing underneath the beam had a slightly dizzying effect on her, but she had to keep her eyes on the beam so she could tell where she was putting her feet. |
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I should have let it drop and said we'd speak in the morning, but instead I lose my rag and tell her I'm going back to the pub and she can sort herself out. |
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The next day, the Shasta County coroner's office called to tell her that Wade's body had been found in the room. |
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Type in your country and city and it will tell you when the ISS can be seen in your local time. |
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It is a well-turned phrase but it doesn't tell the whole story. |
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I want to tell the other children at my school not to climb on railings. |
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This nuanced study of the U.K. shows how difficult it can be to really tell if Strasbourg judgments and decisions have in practice been properly executed. |
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I can tell it's his way of being nice so I take it as a compliment. |
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Ask any salsero and they will tell you salsa is more than a dance. |
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Whatever you said to them can come in and there's just a minefield of things, if you actually wanted to represent this low-life that you tell him to go ahead take five. |
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Would they tell them to take it or leave it, this is what we offer? |
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The way she stared him down and walked away...everyone in the room could tell she was ice-cold. |
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He likes to tell people that it's a Hitchcockian thriller, but that's kind of like saying Happy Gilmore is a homage to Woody Allen. |
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While his friend Jack goes to London to find Tony's wife Brenda and tell her about John's death, Tony is left with a house guest, Mrs. |
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He went down to tell her to stop and could not remember picking up the shillelagh. |
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Impossible to tell the stories, to rekindle the grander times. |
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You were right to tell the teacher about the girl who you saw cheating. |
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The man didn't know the difference between a whelk shell and a clamshell, and he couldn't tell a horseshoe crab from a fiddler crab. |
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He is sideswiped by an emu, has to dodge a giant 'road train' and manages to tell jokes at the end of it all. |
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I tell thee, Jack Cade the clothier means to dress the commonwealth, and turn it, and set a new nap upon it. |
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Many Free Staters will tell you that one of their biggest wins so far was the passage and strengthening of jury nullification laws. |
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You know, I actually hired Arati three years ago, and I'll tell you, I've never regretted it. |
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My only option was to tell the off-site building manager, a nasally guy named Russell Sepulveda. |
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This Web site isn't very navigable. I can't tell which image links to which page. |
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I can tell straight away who are the ratbags who are going to come in here and pick my brain and disappear. |
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