Leave your hair in pins or curlers if you wear them, and run a warmish bath. |
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I splashed along in the warmish Tasman Sea and just let the sea breeze blow through my soul for a while. Very healing. |
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A time of heavy coins and horse manure, warmish beer, a scandalous flash of ankle. |
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A warmish couple of rounds had placed him in contention, but ultimately his poor physical condition prevailed. |
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I chuckled lightly as one of the lower balloons disengaged itself from the pole and lazily drifted upward, zigging and zagging on the warmish breeze. |
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It's a bad time to visit unless you enjoy the pyrotechnics of lightning and floods of warmish soupy rain, plus the constant threat of demonic cyclones. |
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One of the delights of this area is the climate: hot summers, warmish winters. |
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Close up, however, the plumage is more attractive, with a warmish brown cast to the back and a chestnut brown tint on the upper tail feathers. |
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He was not a friend America wanted, yet he was useful: a source of dirt-cheap non-unionised labour for American businesses, which swarmed into Haiti in the 1970s, and a warmish anti-Communist in Cuba's back yard. |
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They are associated with Santa Claus and sleighs, with the idea of a Scandinavian icy white Christmas that is far more magical than the reality we normally experience in warmish, wettish Britain. |
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We touched the tree which felt warmish despite the ambient coolness. |
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The daffodils I planted in the autumn are marching their way along the path, strident trumpets fanfaring the first warmish day of the year. |
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Rumors are that there's a spring down there, and a trickle of warmish water could very well be the key to why trout gather here. |
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But Sir Stephen House is entitled to a warmish glow in the middle of all the controversy surrounding his imminent departure. |
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After I washed up in the thin trickle of warmish water from the shower, I called Red for supper. |
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The kind of warmish hatch fun which attracts all age groups, but particularly the younger drivers. |
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The theory is that they were caused by warmish, wet air rising from the exposed Arctic Ocean in autumn, creating areas of high pressure which destabilised the Arctic boundary layer. |
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You confidently suspected that if you turned up at one of the meat markets in town there would be a canny chance you'd pull a warmish body with a pulse. |
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