In short, Amiana proposes that writers of amatory fiction write something other than amatory fiction. |
|
Although wool can be damaged by moths, it contains lanolin, a naturally occurring oil that protects it from these insects. |
|
Check your fabric stash, or purchase remnants that can be cut and used for patches. |
|
It is precisely because the characters' amatory trials are so real that we are moved by their final Mozartian resolution. |
|
His power over her is such that when he dies her voice collapses, she loses her eminence, languishes, and finally dies herself. |
|
Her hair, which normally hung lankly over her shoulders, was all fluffed out and piled up on top of her head like that of some Greek goddess. |
|
This is the only way to ensure that the people of Taiwan receive fair, objective and independent perspectives. |
|
The discovery suggests that many other fossil bones may contain well-preserved remnants of bone marrow, the scientists say. |
|
I'd never seen her flustered or hurried, so that her movements were always languid. |
|
I was a little confused and don't know whether that was professionalism or pure amateurism. |
|
It amazes me that we are right in the heart of the city centre, while simultaneously being away from it all. |
|
There is no remonstrance that carries its message so clearly as a reversal order which upholds due process. |
|
To see that happen in front of you is still an amazing, exciting experience. |
|
He was very tall and muscular and bronzed and lightly tattooed, with long blond hair that hung lankly down his back. |
|
Since I spend so much of my waking day in my car I've got myself a stereo that is also an MP3 player. |
|
No one will take seriously a body that is not seen to be independent and impartial. |
|
Such an argument suggests that language acquisition and language socialization are independent from each other. |
|
So the message is clear, if you want to make music that sells then it makes good sense to give remixes a try. |
|
At that time the ruling party captured 193 seats, though many of these candidates ran as independents. |
|
There is little evidence that Victorian lovers used the language of flowers for secret communications. |
|
|
I thought that most of the farmers would have better things to do but to my amazement more than 70 showed up. |
|
The result is productions that, regardless of cast, budget, time and effort, cannot drag themselves up from amateurishness. |
|
Sally, you've stumbled upon one of those irritating dilemmas that face just about every remodeler at one time or another. |
|
What amazes me is that the President himself is not clamoring for an investigation. |
|
The excited crowd stood wide eyed in amazement at the spectacle that lit up the night sky. |
|
I think that X-Press needs to rethink and remodify its content so that it supports and promotes a more eclectic range of local music. |
|
This process is the only kind of yoga that you can actually practice by eating. |
|
Yet the most amazing thing about all of this is that it is just a coincidence. |
|
Immediately after his second murder, he disappeared so amazingly that no one can guess how he went. |
|
It's important that all of us become very big ambassadors for our own industry. |
|
The case may turn out to be one of those terrible incidents that provide a wake-up call and a catalyst for positive change. |
|
This was the wake-up call that Newry needed and in the 24th minute they almost got the equaliser when Curran's cross was met by Maguire. |
|
They are also a form of social policy that has the objective of making people more independent and thus self-reliant. |
|
Providing minimal information which is not capable of independent verification should alert you that something may be wrong. |
|
The requirement that the tribunal should be independent and impartial is one that has long been recognised by English common law. |
|
It should be mentioned that these 11 requirements are not independent from each other. |
|
But many boaters today use ablative bottom paints that don't require stripping. |
|
The contract includes a full-scale reusable system that will provide the capability to test technologies in a launch pad abort situation. |
|
However he also showed that linear sentence systems do have independent axiom systems. |
|
After a somewhat cursory examination, the Commission told the independents late in February that it was doing nothing. |
|
|
Mrs Tarpen had no problem with that idea, and she rather liked the idea of helping a homeless waif off the streets. |
|
Choose plants from the Victorian language of flowers that exemplify traits of the person to whom the garden will be dedicated. |
|
It's an essay that suggests that it's unethical to use oral contraceptives because of their abortifacient properties. |
|
Looking back to that first World Cup in New Zealand 15 years ago, it all seems laughably innocent and amateurish now. |
|
The bottom line is that it is amateurish and will threaten the safety of our children. |
|
The morning journey was relaxing and I was able to read a lot that will help me at work. |
|
It is this lack of knowledge that makes pregnant young girls turn to illegal abortionists. |
|
Now whether it's a vestigial remnant of a day past is something that I question very much. |
|
Leigh steers clear of the religious dimension, arguing that abortion is a human moral dilemma, not a religious conundrum. |
|
It amazes me that it has taken so long for this matter to come to court, when it has for many years been a contentious issue. |
|
He had brought the pictures for us to see and other ones that would totally shock and amaze you. |
|
Much to our amazement and surprise, on our return we found that the car was gone. |
|
They propose that high levels of homozygosity due to inbreeding may lead to high rates of seed abortion. |
|
I wanted a book that showed us how ambiguous we are, or how ambivalent we are. |
|
I know for a fact that there are simply far too many good Kiwi websites that are languishing through lack of adequate promotion. |
|
Everything seems to billow, there are clouds of this and drifts of that, totally in harmony with the languor of a drowsy summer day. |
|
You have restored my faith in human nature and it proves that not all young people are yobs or thugs. |
|
I feared to sip a drop of water, and I am sure that the timpanist saw me looking at him in awe and amazement. |
|
The most amazing thing about these performances is that they were all improvised. |
|
As it turned out she's had an amazing life, and the family that raised her are wonderful. |
|
|
This tool copes amazingly with that, its curved end even allowing me to get at weeds that are almost touching a plant. |
|
He also indicated that various foreign ambassadors and high commissioners had expressed similar sentiments. |
|
Eight inflorescences carried one or two abortive ovaries that turned yellow, instead of green, and dropped off when touched with a probe. |
|
Belinda was surprised to find that she had managed to drop off when a mid-morning wake-up call woke her. |
|
She watches her father's departure by ship from a rowboat that is nearly swamped in the ship's wake. |
|
And I think that Republicans did have a wake-up call, and I think they're starting to react to it. |
|
But most of all, what stood out was the fact that these women aborted to preserve relationships. |
|
She was fiercely independent and very self sufficient and I got the idea that she didn't like being babied or fussed over by men. |
|
This had meant that Chris was very independent and more than capable of fending for himself on his own. |
|
I suggested that attracting backpackers and independent travellers would be a good way to get that ball rolling. |
|
He had told him to be five minutes early and if Smolensk failed to show up, that would count as an abort. |
|
Georgian forces were driven out during fierce fighting that killed thousands of ethnic Abkhaz and Georgians. |
|
The sacking was for unspecified professional misconduct after an independent investigation into allegations that he had an affair with a patient. |
|
The result is that for most of the game the board cannot be broken down into independent components. |
|
We are ordered to make ablution before prayer, and also to make sure that our places of prayer are free of contamination and filth. |
|
I always thought it was pulsing wah-wah reverb guitar that made the Whigs sound so Whigs-like. |
|
Songs, arias, and operatic scenes are mixed together, and that works well too. |
|
The situation was set up to provide conditions that might closely resemble an actual NASA emergency abort landing. |
|
Experts estimate that China has at least 150,000 waifs between the ages of 10 and 15 wandering its streets. |
|
He pointed out that the university's hostels are run as a separate and independent business. |
|
|
We need to prove to the moderates, independents and western libertarians that we are tough enough. |
|
I felt myself reaching for the megaphone to release that energy and wairua. |
|
I believe that this can and will be done within the confines and wairua of our tupuna. |
|
He has one of those narrow, washboard waists that most of us can only dream about. |
|
Oh and it has also been pointed out to me that this shirt will only look good on people with super skinny waists like this model here. |
|
Perhaps it is the language of flowers and people's associations with flowers that makes this a timeless subject matter. |
|
The result is that the typical female form is almost straight, in contrast to the narrow waists and curves of the 1950s woman. |
|
I let out a tired sigh that had the effect of setting the whole dormitory ablaze with laughter. |
|
His comment set the internet ablaze with speculation that the entire episode was a hoax. |
|
Here, playing a priest who has lost his faith, he comes off as amateurish and unlikable, a second rate character that is not very funny. |
|
For all her brother's enthusiasm, she imagined that the end product would be three amateurish pop songs, all with the same four basic chords. |
|
While one can dismiss much work at a glance as amateurish or badly crafted, that is not the case for this mark. |
|
It takes a brave man to argue that empire is good, but Niall Ferguson ably and admirably makes the case. |
|
Be that as it may, I am now ably positioned to inform you that dancing is not necessarily good for the body. |
|
Days are a bit more wakeful, though he's taken to having a long late morning sleep from around 9.30-10 am that can last for up to 3 hours. |
|
But it can help prevent that unwanted pregnancy, that abortion, or that misguided marriage which ends in divorce. |
|
It is the Romantic-humanist heresy which holds that we should nurture our egos rather than abnegate them. |
|
She had come to forget that she had it most of the time, just another remnant of the childhood she couldn't remember. |
|
Given that the abnegation of the ego is enjoined by almost every spiritual tradition, this becomes relevant across the spectrum of faiths. |
|
The struggle between abundance and abjection is an age-old story that has left physical and psychic scars on the watery landscape of the Delta. |
|
|
With the reference to raptures, Herrick returns to the amatory imagery that links profane, sacred, and poetic themes. |
|
It will undoubtedly stun and amaze you to know that my fashion sense has always been a bit dodgy. |
|
In the next segment we shall look at the rise of Wahhabite power and the principles that informed that movement. |
|
He didn't bring up one single argument in respect to the abortion of a budget that was tabled this year. |
|
It amazes me that somebody can say very little, and not very loudly at all, and everyone listens to what she has to say. |
|
To my amazement I found that she was interested in me and she made the first moves. |
|
I find it very disturbing that a pregnant woman's wish for a healthy child is being redefined as being an expression of ableism. |
|
How lovely to think that even those with 24-inch waists will be forced to cover them up from now on. |
|
It is arguable that other forms of oppression, such as gender oppression, sexism, ableism, ageism, etc., are also produced by capitalism. |
|
How I manage is buy things with either elastic waists or things that have overblouses. |
|
It seems like yesterday that he was the wakeful baby who nursed incessantly and rarely slept through the night. |
|
Conversely plants that languish in the too hot summer can survive happily in a shadier place with more humidity and slightly damper soil. |
|
I quickly succumb to the languor and indolence that harks back to a more leisurely era. |
|
The sea breezes, the tropical languor, that old susegad, had conspired to make Goa an oriental fleshpot. |
|
It is true that the military channelled logistical support to Abkhaz separatists during the war. |
|
It just haunted me that people could get to a place where bombing clinics or shooting abortionists is seen as anything other than an atrocity. |
|
It is part of the abnegation of learning and the senseless worship of youth that now distort our values. |
|
The evidence suggests that action against yobbery and vandalism should bring many benefits. |
|
The only solace we find is that the result of the abortive poll was nullified. |
|
The choruses consist of some Mark Solomon-like wails, followed by screaming of such ferocity that it is almost disturbing. |
|
|
Tate's sobs and the anguished wails of relatives will not do much to change that. |
|
She speculated that abnormal electrical activity in the heart or brain may have been the reason. |
|
His life has been so abnormal it is no surprise that he has such unusual views. |
|
We used an earlier, abortive, suicide attempt to show that Sylvia had taken a decision not to commit suicide, for the sake of the children. |
|
The ancient Greeks believed that there had been Amazons and celebrated their victory over them. |
|
The ancient Herodotus thought the Amazons did exist, but were extinct by the time that he lived. |
|
An ablative heat shield is made of a resinous composite material that slowly vaporizes during descent. |
|
Lee said that as an Aborigine, he could sympathize with the Hakka people's status as a minority group. |
|
Fredrik Ljungberg was running with the ball when Olof Mellberg decided that he needed a little practice in the art of the waist-high tackle. |
|
Well, we all know that Kelly Ripa has an early wake-up call every single morning, but she was out pretty late last night for a good cause. |
|
There was little in Georgian or Abkhaz national mythology to explain the depth of hatred that arose during the conflict there. |
|
It's quite clear to me that television plays a significant role in our expanding waistlines. |
|
A Basque waistline, or any drop-waist style that angles downward, will lengthen a short torso. |
|
The trousers have an enormous waistline that is loose around him and rise up to his chest when he sits. |
|
But that ablative armor of your's isn't going hold out under this punishment. |
|
Your fruits and flowers, your birds, your tree frogs wakening me every night, man I have to return just for that! |
|
Seeing that fewer than half the EU electorate picked these MEP characters, is it any wonder that apathy abounds? |
|
It was during her remonstrances at his delay that the alleged assault took place. |
|
Tashakawa suggested that David should be appointed as official lullaby maker at bedtime, and morning melody waker upper, flutewise. |
|
It is partly due to his weaknesses that I became independent and self-reliant. |
|
|
In my forties, I go to sleep at night, and upon wakening, I find that a month has passed. |
|
The advantage of being part of a tour is gaining access to experiences that would be practically impossible for an independent traveller. |
|
It recommended unanimously that all Australian Aborigines should have the right to vote. |
|
The result was that in many cases the Argentine pilots aborted their attacks or were otherwise unsuccessful in targeting the British ships. |
|
For those who like the darkest of red roses, Raven is always abloom with small, velvety red roses that grow in large clusters. |
|
Ordinarily I assume that things are as they look, unless it occurs to me that my vision is being affected abnormally. |
|
A melody tumbles from Connors' hands with hints of processing and wah-wah to make a tone that bubbles up from some waterlogged dream. |
|
International law requires that every criminal court be competent, independent and impartial. |
|
In a stunning affirmation of the artistic impulse, they made beauty out of abjection, and that, at least, is a triumph. |
|
Most of the time they have to stand and wait because it remains true that governments lose elections rather than oppositions winning them. |
|
To get the longest term go for a card deal that waits until the money hits your new account. |
|
Postpone those decisions that can wait until you feel more able to deal with them. |
|
Around the corner, in a narrow, cobbled lane that runs alongside the synagogue, an old Iveco tanker truck is waiting. |
|
There was a taxi waiting where the aircraft came to a halt so that they could avoid the muddy dirt of the airfield. |
|
It used to be that you couldn't wait to turn 18 so you could go to the Republik. |
|
It hadn't occurred to me that people taking an acting class would find this scary, when I couldn't wait to get started. |
|
It was my first present from him and I felt so gorgeous in it that I couldn't wait to show it off. |
|
And even though the event is eleven months away, I'm sure that like me, you just can't wait! |
|
The only member of that group who will wait on tables next Sunday is Sean Carroll who has served at all of the 45 parties. |
|
Now she has been told that her operation has been postponed for two months in addition to the usual wait of three to four months. |
|
|
Also today, news comes that British holidaymakers heading for the United States face a five-hour wait to check in. |
|
Occasions that cried out for a drop-goal attempt, especially with Eric Elwood and McHugh in wait, were passed up, as Connacht went for broke. |
|
It calmed me so much so that I was totally unalarmed when I saw a large black spider go scuttling by along the wainscotting. |
|
It is at this point when he abjures legal justice that he articulates the notion of a just revenge. |
|
I don't know what plans he had but he was probably hiding in wait for the lights in the house to go out so that he could break in. |
|
Thankfully, that gap has now been closed by the arrival this year of the Festival of, wait for it, Politics. |
|
Oh that reminds me I also have to brush up on my French, because I'm gonna be fluent by the end of summer, just you wait. |
|
It states that any deputation waiting on a Minister or member after a demonstration is limited to six. |
|
As the nation waits on Florida, Bruce Morton takes a look back at past presidential transitions that have not always been clear-cut. |
|
There were other monitors that switched views between empty hallways and vacant waiting areas. |
|
The inevitable result is that waiting times have grown and now stand at a staggering 53 weeks for a routine MRI scan. |
|
I climb aboard the train a minute or two before it pulls out of the station and find to my horror that my seat is taken. |
|
But almost anyone who has tried to reclaim her waist can point to weeks or months when it doesn't seem to work that way. |
|
Did you know, that in the Victorian language of flowers, hydrangeas stood for boastfulness and heartlessness? |
|
He said that the restaurant has about five waiters on duty during busy periods. |
|
The excuse we have been given is that most fine defaulters have no fixed abode, keep moving addresses, and cannot be found. |
|
I plaited her hair so that it fell in one long rope of yellow to her narrow waist. |
|
The society added that abolishing the current system of debt recovery would discourage firms from advancing credit or lending money. |
|
He suggested that abolishing the current system would discourage firms from advancing credit. |
|
That gives a total of one hundred and six countries that have abolished the death penalty in practice. |
|
|
There's a bench here and you could spend time looking out for moorhens, coots, wagtails and warblers, and the fish that attract them. |
|
From this, Meilander concludes that emergency contraception is more like contraception than abortifacient procedures. |
|
When you add in council tax and other bills we know we wouldn't be able to afford that. |
|
They emphasized that trichosanthin only has an abortifacient effect when injected. |
|
The abolition of polling stations means that people cannot be guaranteed the right to vote in privacy and security. |
|
I have lost two inches in my waist through exercise and healthy eating, but that hasn't given me any curves. |
|
It is indeed possible that his story, and others like it, were instrumental in the foundation of the abolitionist movement. |
|
It was already established practice that black American abolitionists travel to England, Scotland and sometimes Ireland on speaking tours. |
|
Many of the abolitionists and privatisers seem unaware that the BBC broadcasts anything apart from news. |
|
This ensures that during suckling milk is channeled directly to the abomasum bypassing wasteful ruminal fermentation. |
|
Another criticism is that they sentimentalise the past or make it antiquarian by abnegating the context and concentrating on the artefacts. |
|
The clear implication is that the Party abjured all forms of violence and acts of terror. |
|
In the athletes' village, it is great to see that everyone treats the disabled athletes the same as an able-bodied person. |
|
But despite the uncertainty, the troops quickly dismissed suggestions that the waiting game may leave them unprepared if the call to arms comes. |
|
Housing chiefs say that waiting lists and homelessness are likely to grow during this period. |
|
Unfortunately, this fell on the very day that we learned that hospital waiting lists are longer than ever. |
|
I find that your name is still on the waiting list and that you have not yet been admitted to hospital for your operation. |
|
I appreciate that it is good for pupils to mix, both disabled and able-bodied, as this reflects the general public. |
|
In December she was finally put on the wait list, but then developed a lung infection that led to pneumonia. |
|
Because of our extensive wait list it is important that we start expansion now. |
|
|
Meaning that, you've got to fly business or be prepared to take a chance on the wait list. |
|
She finds now that disabled people working for her are as responsible as able-bodied people. |
|
This means that able-bodied citizens must support their claims and push forward disabled rights in Bulgaria. |
|
This bill targets the very same services that are working to reduce abortion and unplanned pregnancy rates. |
|
Leber congenital amaurosis is an inherited disease that is believed to cause up to 20 percent of all cases of childhood blindness. |
|
When I put that in some perspective, it amazes me that I took so long to return. |
|
They also warned that H-bombs could be built that were a thousand times more destructive than the A-bomb. |
|
But there are fears that up to 3,000 may be buried in the rubble of bombed buildings and homes. |
|
Well, it was obvious that they were completely bombed out of their mind, on who knows what. |
|
When it became obvious that the pilots could not control the bomber, the aircraft commander ordered a bale-out. |
|
The motion asks that rates of teenage pregnancies, abortions and sexually transmitted infections are also revealed. |
|
That meant that the bombers were RAF and we were being attacked by Japanese fighters. |
|
Squadron aircraft were the first bombers engaged in World War II and the last to fly missions in support of that war. |
|
These forces are a mixture of assets that includes fighters, bombers, and support aircraft. |
|
It is now being reported that the three bombs that went off earlier today were detonated by suicide bombers. |
|
More worryingly, there was some evidence that one of the bombs was detonated by a suicide bomber. |
|
The conditions that tend to produce terrorists, suicide bombers etc. should be addressed and fixed. |
|
There is speculation that there could be a series of simultaneous bombings across the country. |
|
There is another battle going on that is a long way from the bombings and fighting on the frontline. |
|
These will remember the victims and survivors of the bombings that brought an end to World War Two. |
|
|
Has that world really been rendered permanently obsolete by the terrorist bombings? |
|
Has that country gone back to the Stone Age to allow such abominable behaviour? |
|
At that time, women also commonly wore a loose black gown with a gold stripe around the waist and at the hem. |
|
Skewered chunks of wahoo, a firm, white fish, come in a garlicky scampi butter that turns them irresistible. |
|
I have read recent reports from people saying that Britney Spears wears trousers with the waistband too low. |
|
In an interview, a doctor in Medellin, Colombia, said that while he offered safe, if secret, abortions, many abortionists did not. |
|
But before that 14-year-old Brenda Clarkson, from Doncaster, fell in love with the place while waitressing in a nearby hotel. |
|
There is a paragraph in the appellant's submissions that refers to the unacceptability of simply allowing a person to languish in detention. |
|
But shrewd restaurateurs and bar owners know that the secret weapon lies in the hands of a highly trained waitstaff. |
|
Yet why not hope for a change in appetite, why not hope that vulnerability, doubt, languor, even feyness, might find a mass market once again? |
|
Wilfred could barely stand to see Jane's sparkling eyes and timid laughter wasted on that wretched English hag and her abominable beverages. |
|
Since they said some abominable things about me in the course of all this and I knew that they weren't true. |
|
Even non-medical people are aware that cholera is an abominable disease whose source is filth. |
|
And we may venture the guess that Gibbon was disliked perhaps for his liking for that abominable stuff called snuff instead of tea. |
|
Again and again he declared that he would vigorously enforce laws which he abominates, on civil rights, abortion rights, gay rights, etc. |
|
Sometimes, I abominate feminism, for it discloses to me that what surrounds me is wrong, and it increases my expectations for a better society. |
|
In fact, contact with many of them has taught me that it is possible to abominate the crime without always abominating the criminal. |
|
In my heart of hearts, I think unenforceable laws such as these are abominations that bring the entire legal system into disrepute. |
|
He has asked in our act of faith an abnegation analogous to that of his Son. |
|
Endometrial ablation is a procedure that offers an effective surgical treatment option for women with menorrhagia who want to avoid hysterectomy. |
|
|
The position of these plates on the non-rudiment side of the larva suggests that ossicles occurring on the aboral surface are extraxial. |
|
It is equally clear that the region aboral to the marginal frame is a part of the perforate extraxial body wall. |
|
The level was so high that a second reading was taken and although this was lower it was still so abnormal as to be fatal. |
|
In North America alone, there are many aboriginal cultures that no longer know a word of their original languages. |
|
However, I note that a leading Canadian authority on aboriginal title stated that one dimension of it is its inalienability. |
|
The shockwaves of that first gunfire are still being felt in aboriginal communities today throughout the country. |
|
The Committee is concerned that aboriginal rights of Native Americans may, in law, be extinguished by Congress. |
|
In his book A Place for Strangers, Tony Swain argued that Australian Aboriginal peoples did not fit this model. |
|
It's from there that we have the word kangaroo which reflects the local Aboriginal language of that place. |
|
No noise in the sky, but a wail of sirens constantly around the park, so steady that they sounded like air-raid alarms in the London blitz. |
|
But, in general, the wail of jazz trumpets and the melancholy echoes of domestic chaos remind you that Elysian Fields resounds with desperation. |
|
What makes all this more ironic is that these exhausted women were the original Amazons, the warrior caste Alexander supposedly would not fight. |
|
My lawyer friends unanimously tell me that nothing you sign can waive the rights of another person. |
|
By law, reservists receive 12 months downtime between overseas deployments unless they waive that right. |
|
Royal Mail managers are being asked to sign documents which waive that right. |
|
His attorney has said that he waived that right to confidentiality more than a year ago. |
|
When consumers waive subrogation rights, insurance companies may refuse to pay for that particular incident. |
|
But they must agree to waive future rights to compensation for policies that were missold to them. |
|
Secondly, I find the respondent was fully aware and fully understood that she was waiving any claim for property and support. |
|
Before that could go ahead, she had to sign legal documents waiving any right of recompense should the surgery go wrong. |
|
|
The question is, did this man voluntarily waive his rights and give that kind of a statement? |
|
Tracey, 32, who has waived her automatic right to anonymity, said it was only now that she felt strong enough to speak out about her ordeal. |
|
Show off your individual style in tailored jackets that trim inches off your waistline. |
|
Without those provisions, the referee cannot waive any rule or determine that compliance is not required. |
|
If you say that you will waive rule 6 and allow us to release that information, I will tell the court I have no objection. |
|
It may be that breaches of clear disciplinary rules are waived with such regularity that an employee is lulled into a false sense of security. |
|
Have you sought any instructions from Dosca Ltd as to the waiver of that privilege? |
|
It is also argued that the Agreement has the effect of constituting a waiver of litigation privilege. |
|
He prepared a separation agreement that included a waiver of spousal support. |
|
The fact that another franchisee has decided to participate in the litigation does not alter the waiver. |
|
The mere fact that he did as asked cannot in my judgment be properly treated as the waiver of an express statutory right. |
|
Pear shaped women tend to have bigger bottoms so choose garments that have easing at the waistline with soft pleats and gathers. |
|
You can sign the waiver that will be enclosed in the report, pay any tax you owe, and be happy its over. |
|
The middle tapered into a slim, V-shaped waistline, and the collar was the square-cut neckline that was currently the fashion. |
|
Among the animal tests Skinner reported upon were some that induced abulia. |
|
In some situations, the declines are so gentle that arguments abound as to whether a bear market really existed at all. |
|
Remember, too that women with disabilities also choose to have pre-natal screening and may also choose to abort a disabled fetus. |
|
Each room featured an amazingly slender neon tube that cut across the ceiling on the diagonal. |
|
Some have surgery for abnormalities that would never lead to invasive cancer. |
|
Some linguists predict that if nothing is done, almost all Aboriginal languages will be dead within the next decade. |
|
|
Some experts also say that cleft lip and palate may be a marker for a multitude of severe congenital abnormalities. |
|
Using the aboriginals ' own oral histories, the developer proved that the site had been designated sacred only within the past 10 years. |
|
These abnormalities are caused by defects in the genes that tell the cells how to make collagen. |
|
No one ever said that coming to terms with what white Australia did to Aboriginals would be easy. |
|
Antinori takes this as evidence that humans are less likely to suffer abnormalities than animals. |
|
After the pension scheme was revalued in the wake of the dotcom bubble, that surplus turned to a deficit. |
|
It was also possible that drugs used to stimulate ovaries could trigger chromosomal abnormalities. |
|
Chessington Library was set ablaze with the result that the main part of the library is unusable due to the roof being unsafe. |
|
One reason why this is so, might be that our definitions of abnormality are predicated on definitions of normality. |
|
Therefore, to be recorded in folklore implied that the Aborigines also must have been around at the same time. |
|
He said that by the time people woke up to what was being planned the time for consultation had passed. |
|
I also hope now more than I ever did during my life that people wake up to what a barbaric punishment this is. |
|
Dare we keep our fingers crossed that people are waking up to what a hollow man he is? |
|
The Celtic Tiger boom has levelled off and we have to wake up to that reality, he added. |
|
Still, one could say that all wakes are formulaic, rituals being a most popular and apparently effective means to deal with death. |
|
Because of that some companies who were about to sign deals decided to wait before making a final decision. |
|
The reason given for this crash was that the aircraft flew into the wake of another aircraft, and the pilot lost control of it. |
|
And I didn't want to be a woman that stayed at home to wait for my husband to come home every night. |
|
He pointed out that students, teachers and parents had waited a long time for this building to become a reality. |
|
Nature is remorselessly cruel and none more remorseless than the slugs and snails that are currently trying to eat my lettuces before I can. |
|