She smiled, pretending to be as confident as Tiffany, but inside she was shriveling. |
|
In fact now that he knew the truth about his mother she was the only one that he felt he could trust. |
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It got to the point where I actually managed to convince myself it was the truth. |
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The impression that he gave me was that he was a very honest and trustworthy young man. |
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The officer said the defendant had expressed himself as somebody who was trustworthy, very reliable and keen. |
|
It was also her evidence that these schools have a large percentage of Mohawk children and offer Mohawk language and a Mohawk curriculum. |
|
He was a fifth-generation Mohawk River settler, with one ancestor a Mohawk Indian. |
|
His hair was slightly longer and spiked up in the middle, like a little Mohawk. |
|
But because I was unable to leave my birth place, or even my mohalla, so I can't be successful in happiness. |
|
The first thing that he needed was a trustworthy driver, who could be relied on to stay sober. |
|
I was so chuffed that I gave my old, trusty typewriter to her daughter without even a second thought. |
|
Nothing more was needed than a steady hold on the reins of her trusty steed. |
|
The first photograph was a black-and-white wedding photo, slightly yellowed with age. |
|
The black-and-white film was the 1943 Academy Award winner for best picture. |
|
It was great for a really noisy pub singalong of the chorus after 9 pints of black and tan. |
|
He was promoting a range of products such as wax and hair-gel sprays which would have made the Brylcreem boys choke on their black and tans. |
|
BoJack was the spit of his daddy, who was a black and tan, and like his daddy, accepted the run of the place as his due. |
|
True, I had been black and blue from the beating he had given me, and he had nearly drowned me, but what I had done was no better. |
|
So anyway, he was black and blue too, but his injury was all covered by hair. |
|
One web site apparently blocked commentary and a broadcast on the assault was blacked out. |
|
|
Just by sheer luck the uniforms had been ironed minutes before the house was blacked out. |
|
It was so dark the whole of the city was blacked out, and the only light was from the fire. |
|
I don't know why but it was not blacked out so you could see in the compartment. |
|
The last thing she heard before she blacked out was a sudden increase in noise and panic. |
|
For a second, the world began to spin, and she was afraid she might black out, but that passed. |
|
He was about to take his first step into the desert when all of a sudden he blacked out. |
|
Then I saw that I was only looking on the black side and started thinking of the fact that escape is always possible. |
|
Needless to say his comments did not go well with the administrators and from then on he was in their black books. |
|
She told how when she said she was leaving, he put a pillow over her face and then punched her, blacking her eye. |
|
He said the one man had severely beaten the other, who was several inches shorter than him, blacking both his eyes and cutting his face. |
|
The cabinet was horrified when dockers blacked the jets destined for the military rulers. |
|
I was still pulling on my mohair sweater over my black t-shirt when I ran into Geri in the lobby. |
|
Since the decline of the Gupta dynasty to the age of the Mughals, there was no central political authority through most of India. |
|
There were many contenders for the place vacated by the Mughals, but it was the British who ultimately emerged successful. |
|
He was so sincere and so trustful and always trying his best to make me happy, always putting things off because of me. |
|
He told them to leave and once the door was shut, he picked up the phone and called one of his trustful men. |
|
The goal of those meetings was to create trustful relations among the leaders themselves, and then gradually build on these ties. |
|
Bold's door was open during lunch, as she is very trusting of her students. |
|
They kindly allowed me to pay at a later date though, which was very trusting of them. |
|
This was the first time that whites or blacks had taught black people not to work as a form of civil rights. |
|
|
Tha was a very precise move which forces Black to make a passive recapture with the bishop. |
|
A darkness was soon filling him and only black could be seen as he closed his eyes. |
|
My spot in the grass disappeared and I was left with just darkness and total black. |
|
All about her was either the black of night and shadows or the orange of flame. |
|
I was wearing black for the ceremony as was the custom at the time, and changed into a white satin dress for the reception. |
|
She was dressed entirely in loose, rippling black with a neckline so low it must have ended at the bottom of her ribs. |
|
He was dressed in all black with the exception of a blue topaz that hung around his neck on a silver chain. |
|
She was trusting in the Providence of God's sending for Charlie to help Adam. |
|
I no longer trusted in him and was convinced we would never win anything with him. |
|
I hope that this was just an oversight, and I trust that it will never happen again. |
|
She was in her light blue skirt and white jacket, he dressed in all black as usual. |
|
Ten minutes ago he would have trusted Jim with his life, but right now, right then, he was scared. |
|
The King trusted Neville with his life, for he was his most loyal of England's grand court and they knew each other from childhood. |
|
I spoke to one of his closest and most trusted advisers some 36 hours before the presidential vote, and he was a mass of nerves and frenzy. |
|
But magistrates heard he was now willing to accept what had happened as he trusts the victim and believes what she says is true. |
|
At the turn of the century, there was increased public concern regarding potential market abuses by large corporate trusts. |
|
He was about to shuck his clothes with disregard for personal safety and dive in to look for her when the pool began to bubble. |
|
Every single oyster bar one was badly shucked, causing me mouthful upon mouthful of shell. |
|
What was anticipated as a big fat Greek embrace turned instead into a casual shrug of the shoulders. |
|
She was startled and looked up to see that the man was dressed in all black with a hood on his face. |
|
|
The sponsor was printed in black on one side and the player in gold on the other. |
|
He said the two things they most wanted in our flag was the silver fern and the colour black. |
|
Splashed with brilliant golds, oranges, reds, and blacks, it was an amazing sight to behold. |
|
Her back was arched and her pale skin stood out starkly against the silky black of her gown. |
|
The finished article was painted in glossy black, the colour of the original vehicle, to make it look new. |
|
She was going to set him free from all of the evil and black hatred he had brought to the world. |
|
The film is both a moving coming of age story and a black comedy, said to be as relevant today as when it was written. |
|
It was only last month that his mood got black enough to merit drowning himself in spirits again. |
|
There had to be something someone could do to get him out of this black mood he was in! |
|
But they said it was completely unacceptable behaviour after being put in a position of trust. |
|
As well, the heart of his case was that much of the evidence needed to be accepted on trust. |
|
As an actor, you don't know how the film will look on completion so it was excellent for him to have a great deal of trust in our abilities. |
|
Client belief and trust in the therapist was considered to be about equal from both perspectives. |
|
It was a black mood at a black moment, a spasm that sentient Americans prefer to forget. |
|
Johnson was a banner figure for artists of the great 1960s revival in black culture. |
|
The language of democracy, black advancement, and human rights was more strongly emphasized. |
|
This was the African American artistic movement of the 1920s which celebrated black life and culture. |
|
He was with a black man aged 18-20 of a similar height, wearing dark clothing and glasses. |
|
The young man was reading a paperback novel and sipping a steaming mug of hot, black coffee. |
|
The crested black macque was called the Celebes or black ape by early scientists, because it appeared to have no tail. |
|
|
I took a bung out of one of the drums and looked inside, and it was all black, and not a golden colour like it should have been. |
|
The decoration on the bridge was spectacular but it was very dirty and black from pollution. |
|
Inside the garage door the concrete was stained black with oil and a car was hoisted on a ramp. |
|
I knew right now that it was around noon, even though the sky was black as midnight. |
|
There were no trees overhead, so he was exposed to the full power of the dark clouds, barely visible in the now black sky. |
|
Pulling out of the office car park, the sky was black, the rain was pouring and the sun was shining. |
|
Realization was finally beginning to dawn on him like a sunrise after an inky black night. |
|
Also, flying closely with it was a mottled vision of a bird, almost invisible against the black night sky. |
|
The sky was black as night and the waves of flames from the oceans licked at the sandy shores. |
|
When the rain came the sky was black, there was thunder and lightning and even a brief hail storm. |
|
The response of engineers to this disaster was to go back to building bridges with reinforced trussed decks. |
|
Van and Rina sat on either side of the girl, who was trussed up with rope and cloth. |
|
A teenager was kidnapped, trussed up with his hands and feet bound together behind his back, a court heard. |
|
Nobody could believe it when he was found dead, naked and trussed up in handcuffs, blindfold and gagged. |
|
He was trussed up with those chains like a sacrifice laid out for slaughter. |
|
Eventually he was taken away with his hands trussed behind his back and a hood draped over his head. |
|
Our first demonstration was in trussing and preparing a fowl for the dinner table. |
|
A weekly assessment of the number of flowers per truss and trusses per plant was also made. |
|
All this we could handle with a mere shrug of the shoulders and a wry grin if only the sun were out and the sky was blue. |
|
The fact that he wasn't shying away from the fact that I wasn't human, and was simply shrugging it off as unimportant gave me some strength. |
|
|
The men's change room was empty and I slipped out of my shorts and into my trunks, then I slipped off my T-shirt and flexed my muscles. |
|
Clothed in nothing more than my bathing trunks, I was seated on a stool in a natural enclosure in the jungle. |
|
The trip was 106 miles along one of the worst roads, never mind a supposed trunk road, I've ever had the displeasure to drive on. |
|
Later, a van was blown into the central reservation on the trunk road's eastbound carriageway. |
|
The team was stationed on the trunk road from 9am to 3pm and made checks on more than 200 vehicles. |
|
Mother was a very keen gardener and under her supervision we grew all our own vegetables and looked after the flower garden and shrubbery. |
|
The shrubbery replaced a hard area and was designed to prevent accidents at a blind corner where the city wall meets South Esplanade. |
|
It was a very very large garden, with seats, and water features and shrubberies littered around it. |
|
This Nettle kail was in some regions a traditional dish for Shrove Tuesday, or to celebrate the arrival of spring. |
|
Whenever I made that correction I felt like I was lightly skimming over the mogul field. |
|
And it was not just the industrialists, bankers and media moguls who benefited. |
|
The RSPCA officer cut the soggy moggy free from a bramble bush after she was found by workmen in the area. |
|
The little moggy, who is believed to be between two or three years old was found in the Parks area by a RSPCA collection officer. |
|
Then on New Year's Eve she picked up the Evening News and was stunned to see a moggy she is sure is Jazzy making the headlines. |
|
He absolutely loved his moggies and he was one of the only people in the UK to successfully breed piranhas. |
|
Robustness was meant to ensure that an assertable conditional is fit for modus ponens. |
|
It had gotten a lot darker and the sky was completely black except with the assortment of stars. |
|
Late winter snow storms had plastered the hills and the sky was black with threat. |
|
The first attacker was 6ft tall with short blond hair and was wearing black trousers and a white T-shirt. |
|
Her hair looked almost black in the dim light, but I later found out it was just a sort of dark brown. |
|
|
Long wavy black hair and light blue eyes created a contrast that was breathtaking. |
|
The door suddenly swung open and a tall man with short black hair and light brown eyes was staring at me. |
|
She was so quiet around others that it always surprised Robbin what a blabbermouth she could be when they were together. |
|
My own belief is that she wrote the book because she was a compulsive blabbermouth who was simply incapable of keeping her memories to herself. |
|
She was becoming tired of this girl and her nothingness blabber about how she would kill Maeve. |
|
The current news was droll and uninteresting, blabber about the economy and whatnot, things for which at this stage he had no care. |
|
One lane of the trunk road was still closed today while investigations into the accident continued. |
|
We got my luggage in the trunk, and when the driver got into his seat, I was left standing awkwardly with my mom, not knowing what to say. |
|
I yelled as I opened the door and saw Annette, who was throwing clothes into her trunk. |
|
Their modus operandi was to approach candidates ahead of the examination with the promise of showing them the paper in advance. |
|
In tune with the usual modus operandi of the industry, the audio was released on Wednesday and people struggled to find parking place. |
|
The modus operandi was to trap leopards near human settlements and release them deep inside a forest, away from people. |
|
He realized early on that the idea of achieving a modus vivendi with the National Socialist dictatorship was out of the question. |
|
The modus vivendi that was reached did not allay the popes' fears of the territorial expansion of the kingdom that might take over Rome itself. |
|
His first notebook was on hypergeometric series, continued fractions, singular moduli, and many branches of number theory. |
|
It was a mosaic of an elephant, his trunk raised to the sky, head tilted back, tusks raised. |
|
This was in her right face, trunk and limbs for the pins and needles, and just mild problems swallowing. |
|
The usual modus operandi was that robbers identified isolated residential localities and targeted lonely women. |
|
The finale, with its unexpected modulations, was played with panache and exciting vitality. |
|
The distance travelled by fruits after their dispersal was measured from the base of the trunk of respective trees. |
|
|
Archaeopteris was a true tree, with a woody trunk, xylem, secondary cambium, and leaves. |
|
In the latter sampling period, the stem was further divided into the main trunk and branches. |
|
It was a one room cabin. 4 beds, 3 trundle beds and one large baby crib were in a state of disrepair. |
|
Leila pulled out the trundle bed that was underneath her bed and grabbed 2 pillows and blankets from the hall closet. |
|
A guest bed at my home was an entire suite and if more beds were needed, each room had a pull out trundle bed. |
|
Taylor gave up hope, realising that Simone wasn't going to give up until she was done blabbering about her date from last night. |
|
I've never apologized to him for all the things I did, never thanked him for listening to me blab on about what was wrong. |
|
Hunter blabbed the whole way to his house, about this and that, about his classes and how he was upset that I wasn't in any of them. |
|
Apparently, he had blabbed out to the whole school that Sean was my boyfriend. |
|
The sun was already high in a cloudless blue sky, a heat haze shrouded the surrounding mountains. |
|
If a view of a vast cloud of mist shrouding everything around you is amazing, then he was right. |
|
His face was still shrouded in darkness, covered by the hood of a cloak, but from his back sprung a pair of wings. |
|
His origins are shrouded in mystery, though it seems quite possible that he was the result of a union between a man and a woman. |
|
It was a sickening sight, and I could imagine the frantic efforts he must have made pulling on his shroud lines before the earth crushed him. |
|
The bizzies took him away because they said he was illegal but they gave me him back after two days. |
|
I still think it was a plucky thing to do though, even if they were aided and abetted by the Bizzies. |
|
I busied myself with other things to keep my mind occupied and returned to it only when I was calm and focused. |
|
As the installation was underway, I retreated back to the computer and started busying myself with some work. |
|
I tried to call him but the phone line was busy, someone must have been on the internet. |
|
Unfortunately, there was one ring and the phone went to voice mail which meant the line was busy. |
|
|
But before that could happen, or even a single ring, it appeared that the other line was busy. |
|
I tried calling again but the operator lady person said that the line was busy. |
|
I then quickly turned on my mobile phone and called Sarah, but the line was busy. |
|
Thousands more thronged to the college where Mahendra's body was laid, shrouded in a red flag. |
|
The foulness of the air was a palpable thing, a reek that stunned and then settled upon the senses, a weapon and then a shroud. |
|
The burial shroud was lying where the body had been placed and the headpiece was folded neatly and put in a different part of the tomb. |
|
Her burial shroud was tattered and ripped, her feet were stripped to the bone and a disgusting, black tongue wriggled around in her mouth. |
|
I ran out of patience with the busy lines with the voice that told me I was appreciated. |
|
However, when her line was busy I tended to dash onto the internet hoping to find her there. |
|
Then Melvin told me that everyone thought we were dead, so I tried to call you, but the line was busy! |
|
We had trouble getting dial tones on the land lines, everyone's line was busy. |
|
We tried to call but the phone line was busy and we really need you in there today as a guide. |
|
Megan's house was the closest, but when she called, the phone line was busy. |
|
I tried phoning the house a couple of times, but the line was busy, Billy's sister was probably using it. |
|
I'd tried calling her the night before but the line was busy and I really wanted to clear the air. |
|
As it was, the explosion was centered in a very busy marketplace full of book sellers and street merchants. |
|
He was carefully maneuvering around to keep his weight off of me, but I was too busy enjoying the closeness to notice. |
|
My partner ordered something else, but to be honest I was too busy enjoying my meal to remember what it was. |
|
Then a biphasic pulse was sent through each cell simultaneously, which was then modulated to reflect the pixel value. |
|
His voice was well modulated, and his speech slow and strongly articulated. |
|
|
He was taken to a police station where he was beaten with truncheons, punched and kicked. |
|
The deal was signed while hundreds of police armed with truncheons and riot equipment remained on standby outside the hotel. |
|
What happened, though, was that the debate ran eight minutes long, so all of the ensuing commentary was truncated. |
|
It was truncated on its northern fringe by two prehistoric mining pits and on its eastern side by another. |
|
The modular accommodation offered was designed to meet urgent needs, not to alleviate all the problems. |
|
Part of the defence was that for five years the authority was too busy to deal with health and safety issues surrounding water rescues. |
|
I was in a school today briefly, delivering some plants, and all the classes sounded so busy in a very productive way. |
|
It probably didn't help that after leaving the movie, I was in a sort of bizarro world for about a half hour. |
|
Slowly she got behind him, glad that he was too busy pondering his conscience and enjoying the ocean to notice her. |
|
It was a bizarre build up to the goal as again the weather heavily influenced the play. |
|
One of the largest harvests here amongst our family of shroomers was gathered from the edge of a railroad bed. |
|
The line was busy so he hung up and handed the phone back to the woman. |
|
Clare's bed was a trundle bed so that Mae could sleep near her. |
|
She was there 12 months ago, pushing her shopping trundler around. |
|
Indeed I was greeted in Italian by a shrivelled old lady in a white habit. |
|
They helped make Mitt Romney unelectable, or more unelectable than he was anyway. |
|
Her field of deployment was not the courtrooms of Paris but the literary culture of the Valois court, with its love of classical myths and its taste for bizarrerie. |
|
Moscow officials suggested that the attack on the Russian embassy was a well-planned action. |
|
It was a lazy day and everyone was busy simply enjoying the peace. |
|
Gauss in 1801 was to take Euler's work much further and gives a considerable amount of work on modular arithmetic which amounts to a fair amount of theory of abelian groups. |
|
|
Where Sander was distant and unemotional, Simons brought a warmth and emotion to the brand. |
|
It was no accident that Charles often truncated his public speeches. |
|
There was a strained pause following that truncated attempt at a sentence. |
|
Spring netting was truncated shortly after peak passage of that species. |
|
One driver was even found with a police truncheon in his car. |
|
All he did was touch the clutch while going downhill, instead of keeping his feet well clear of the pedals and allowing the vehicle to trundle down in low-ratio first gear. |
|
The only sound he could hear was the quiet creaking of the wagon's wooden wheels as it trundled over the cobbled streets and the steady beat of his heart, loud in his ears. |
|
The course was presented well and happily is enjoying busy days. |
|
So instead she tried dialing Montgomery home but the line was busy. |
|
The recent cooperation between the Republic and the Confederacy after the Confederate Civil War was a start on lifting the shroud of hatred that separated Terrans and Gaians. |
|
John and I got busy just that afternoon when everyone was out. |
|
In the rural Ireland of my youth, the three days prior to Ash Wednesday were known as Shrovetide and it was a time of eating, drinking, music-making and card playing. |
|
It was a glorious day with an unencumbered view for dozens of miles in each direction. |
|
So, remember the other day when I was blabbering about how I made a CD to help me sort of zone out when trying to achieve an out-of-body experience? |
|
Last night, the news show blabber suggested that the powerfully moving hug between the government official and the mother of the fallen Marine, was staged. |
|
True, it took America until 1990 to qualify for another World Cup, and it was 64 years before we made it past the first round. |
|
The bed was a twin and I could tell it had a trundle bed underneath it. |
|
As this was going on, a clown dressed in a prisoner uniform was led out by two baby elephants, their tiny trunks holding him by his powder white gloves. |
|
By 2011, according to Pew, the Hispanic registration gap was up to 47 points. |
|
I felt it was a misrepresentation of who I was, what I wanted to say, what I could see in the world and wanted to share. |
|
|
Bruni told NPR last summer that she changed the name because it was easier to rhyme. |
|
I was allowed to follow her into the tiny rectangular storeroom where everyone's clothes and certificates were kept in many sized boxes, trunks, cartons and files. |
|
Truth be told, the Duke was, for lack of a better word, a blabbermouth, and it was not long before the whole group of aristocrats before the fire knew the true story. |
|
He had dark coloured hair and was wearing black jeans and white runners. |
|
Phyllis, who was a nurse, went down to Mississippi to provide medical care for people like Joan. |
|
Most of his speech was an attack on the second ideology and those who he saw as spreading it like UNESCO and Bill Gates. |
|
It was Shrove Tuesday yesterday, a day to eat pancakes, so they say. |
|
Britain, one of the provinces furthest from Rome, was provided with a road system which in total length is comparable with our modern trunk road and motorway network. |
|
The introduction of trunnions, the pivots in the middle of the barrel permitting it to move independently of the carriage, was a simple but important development. |
|
Dad was 45, almost six years removed from a heart attack, and his deep, uneven breathing worried me. |
|
The rest of the pregnancy was uneventful, and I gave birth to a beautiful, happy little boy. |
|
He was told about it and he kind of shrugged it off as we did. |
|
He soon came to the realisation that he was trussed up and hanging upside down from what looked like a fish hook, a bigger version of that at least. |
|
It was a drawing of the black night sky, dotted with tiny yellow stars. |
|
She suffered a badly cut leg and was black and blue with bruising. |
|
The other cultural influence was the post-war history of black America. |
|
It was explained that as a policeman I held a position of trust. |
|
Transport links were reopening and black humour was resurfacing as well. |
|
For those with a black sense of humour, it was a laughable suggestion. |
|
He said the tradition of black humour was unlikely to die out altogether. |
|
|
Julian Macdonald was master of a sophisticated show that had mink bomber jackets, leather seamed skirts and snakeskin pants worn with fox fur shrugs. |
|
I trusted John with my daughter and I was very angry when I found out. |
|
Her past was gone and over with, and even though she trusted Eden with her life, there was nothing he could do to change what had happened to her when she was younger. |
|
All he could do was get a heel on the ball and trust to luck. |
|
The condition of the pistes was exemplary, and once again there was the full range from motorway-like slopes for easy riding to treacherous mogul fields. |
|
Perhaps the greatest of the Mughals was Akbar, who reigned from 1556 to 1605 and was able, through tolerance and generosity, to win over his Hindu subjects. |
|
They are made of mohair and wearing costumes similar to those mill workers would have worn in the days when Trowbridge was a woollen industry town. |
|
The missive was passed to Washington through a Swiss diplomat and rejected without even a response by the Bush team. |
|
I was a little uncomfortable to say the least when I saw members of the cast were blacked up but I assumed they must have been given permission to do so. |
|
By 20 January the cabinet was so desperate to crush the miners it considered sending in troops to move the coal which had been blacked by other workers. |
|
That was the first of many misdemeanors which got me in his black books. |
|
Probably the real Bertran was not as black as he is painted by Dante. |
|
Shirley's breathing became so distorted that by the time he faded to just six breaths per minute and then lost consciousness, Shirley was also on the verge of blacking out. |
|
Although a well-attended press conference took place with reporters from both the American and international press corps, it was blacked out by the US news media. |
|
It's been a really long time since I snowboarded, and even at my best I was totally black and blue from crashing so often, but miraculously I am pretty good at it this time. |
|
In several villages and urban mohallas where the turnout was very low, as the day wore on the army frequently crossed the thin line between encouragement and coercion. |
|
Another one, written in English and Arabic, was dedicated to the Muhammadan soldiers in Her Majesty's army who died while serving, and a third marker had nothing on it. |
|
His hair was a spiked Mohawk and he was wearing the same choker as Ray. |
|
A girl with a pink Mohawk was standing languidly behind the tiny counter. |
|
This description was appropriate for a man who made his fortune trading with the native Indians in the Mohawk valley and the nations of the Iroquois confederacy. |
|
|
But because the amounts differ, it was either a lab error or an unexplainable anomaly. |
|
She was able to complete the scene and fly the unexposed film out of Lebanon in the nick of time. |
|
He was honest and trustworthy and drove for a fixed fare set by the hotel. |
|
A list of 444 Crus Bourgeois was published in 1932, but it remained outside the law and was open to abuse. |
|
Plasma samples were thawed, and each sample was centrifuged to remove cryoglobulins. |
|
I'd been in touch with Steve myself at the end of last year because I was interested in performing Visage orchestrally. |
|
He was scheduled to undergo an elective orchidopexy, but on the day of surgery he was noted to have stertorous breathing. |
|
Alan Mathison Turing was an English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst, and computer scientist. |
|
The first order of business was to elect two persons to serve as Class II directors of the Company for three years. |
|
Looking back, I can see that the friendly gesture was a misstep. |
|
Meryman was a renowned biomedical researcher, inventor, poet, and founder of the field of cryobiology. |
|
The car went out of control, hit a utility pole, and rolled over several times before Nairn was thrown from the car, deputies said. |
|
Therefore, if additional crusting did occur during simulated rainfall, it was not possible to detect it micromorphologically. |
|
I'd been in touch with Steve myself the end of last year because I was interested in performing Visage orchestrally. |
|
I didn't want to cry over spilt milk and I didn't even accept the psychological help and therapy that was offered to me. |
|
The chart on page 18 was intended to illustrate order of magnitude by presenting ranges that were rounded off. |
|
A TEESSIDE woman was airlifted to a Lincolnshire hospital suffering serious back injuries after a car crash in Orby, Skegness. |
|
As priests used to say when I was a young ordinand, the church will survive despite us. |
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A myometrium strip 5 x 1 x 1 cm was taken during primary section cesarean from the uterotomy after written consent of the pregnant women. |
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A minimally invasive procedure to cure uterine fibroids was less expensive, but also less effective, than surgery in a new study. |
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A 3-dimensional ultrasound system developed at our institution was used to guide and verify cryoprobe placement. |
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We did all our usuals but one store we found ourselves in, which hasn't really been our usual for a while, was Heatons. |
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The former Liverpool and Benfica utility player joined City after he was released by Sheffield Wednesday during the summer. |
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Arguably the best utility player of all time was Billy Goodman, who was as versatile as Holt and is the only utility man to win a batting title. |
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The telephone threat was made to Ian Hughes the day after his wife had returned home to find the utility room at their home ablaze. |
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He was 23 and manning a forward gun turret on the USS Oklahoma the morning 429 sailors on his battleship died 65 years ago. |
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The same extender was also used in freezing procedures in which glycerol and dimethylacetamide were compared as cryoprotectants. |
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The overall utility function that ranks all the strategies was thereby obtained. |
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The tumor was removed along with the ossicles and a section of the stapedial crura. |
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We knew this was coming,'' said Don Williams, the city's storm-water utility program coordinator. |
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Michael Perry was voted in for a six-year term as minister general of the Order of Friars Minor, a post he has held for the past two years. |
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Community Periodontal Index data were also ordered, thus, for both indices the ordinal nature of the data was taken into account in all analyses. |
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After this company was sold in 2005, Dr Altman became a partner of CryoProbe, a cryogenic probe technology company. |
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The town was listed as a UNESCO World Friendship and Peace Village. |
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The seminal profile of the cryptorchid and orchitic bulls was investigated. |
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Who knew that Anna Maria Alberghetti was the missing link in your life? |
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We discussed with the patient the option of intraoperative drainage and possible partial orchiectomy, but he was reluctant. |
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After dilation of a urethral stricture, a catheter was inserted and bilateral orchidopexy was performed. |
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The Order of Australia was conferred on Tendulkar by visiting Australian Prime Minister Julian Gillard during her October 16 to 18 visit to India. |
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When we got there the calf orca was dragging the shark through the water. |
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