I'm afraid that what he alludes to is only a possibility among others, and not in my view the most likely one. |
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This is one of the busiest times of the year, what with Whit weekend and the good weather. |
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In town for the big day, Roxanne Morrisey describes what sort of country Yalgoo is set in. |
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I doubted my own sanity at times, and was afraid for what it really meant about me and my future. |
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Where are the days of long, complex formulas, and what has happened to difficult perfumes that smell sharp and astringent, or dry and peppery? |
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The 100 or so residents are now expecting a rush of tourists, all eager to see what Britain's bleakest spot has to offer. |
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So, what could listening to rap and other music have to do with improving those scores? |
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When I had somewhat considered the excellency of the advocateship, I adventured to write what I have seen thereof. |
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Yet isn't this what is implied in the allusion which does not advert to the activities of the army? |
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It is unclear what percentage of the contributions came from African Americans. |
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It relied on what the French or Russians did and the actions of one would provoke a German response and not the other way round. |
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Had those with the means not rushed to fill the void, who knows what would have been left. |
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And call it what you like, but we need positive discrimination, or affirmative action. |
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You know, during the screening of the rushes, I don't speak German or Hungarian, but I could see and feel what could be the film. |
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With many DVD's, this feature cannot be fast-forwarded so we have to suffer in silence for what seems aeons. |
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Surely this is what every one of us would want for future generations who are going to live, work and play in the town. |
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Sources close to Brown say he was lowballed when negotiations began, setting the table for what proved to be sour negotiations at times. |
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I don't know what she was thinking about, her brilliant green eyes vacant, focused somewhere in the middle distance. |
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Several lawyers have offered free advice on the issue and he said he would ask one of them what he should do. |
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If somebody should ask you what true zen is, it´s not necessary to explain using words. |
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He covers his tracks well, and he is always very vague about what he does for a living. |
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The commentators aren't quite sure what to say, as they don't know which rule this falls under. |
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By looking at a climograph you can begin to guess what the typical or likely weather is going to be in that place during each month of the year. |
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This grand old man in his after years had the honor of enjoying what he had once seen. |
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The Afghan word for hope is Arman and that is exactly what the station is about. |
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She was rushed to Southampton General Hospital with what were first reported to be life threatening injuries. |
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It's my last column and, let's face it, I have no clue what interests you people. |
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I go to these chat rooms and these websites, because it interests me what people think. |
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If one focuses on what those interests are, in my submission, they are substantive legal interests. |
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It was clear that in the key marginals the Labour vote was falling short of what the national polls were saying. |
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There was a time in your life when you didn't even realize what you were doing was called aerobic or cardio exercise. |
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I don't know everything about Oscar Wilde but from what I remember his rapier wit was not much honed by a four-hour stopover in Kuala Lumpur. |
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She bent down to pick it up and instantly caught a whiff of what was in it. |
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And the Sufi sheik talks about when you are chanting, I becomes we, and it's no longer the I, and that that's what it's about. |
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He is not a ranter or raver which is great, because that is not what you want when things are going against you. |
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I rant and rave at the screen, decrying the dumbing down of what used to be a medium for entertaining and educating. |
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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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Your Honours, at common law there is absolute privilege for what is said in court by an advocate. |
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While you bask in the glow of victory, I know what you're secretly thinking. |
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Not all shih-tzu mothers do what they are suppose to do, and in these cases, a breeder must act quickly to save the newly whelped shih-tzu puppy. |
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Can you offer any advice on how to plan what to grow, how to set out and maintain the patch, what tools to get, etc? |
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Is that what you said to the daughter of Merewala when you killed her father and ravished her? |
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That is what the parties agreed to, albeit because they did not advert to that consequence. |
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And, perhaps most saliently, what exactly was the content of the Russianness whose acquisition seemed so necessary? |
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The subject matter falls out as irrelevant, the different views on the same thing are what it's about. |
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If nothing else, the album instils a feeling that the band enjoys playing what they play, regardless of what genre it falls under. |
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An independent variable is the variable you have control over, what you can choose and manipulate. |
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A close-up on the 56-year old Magande reveals much more than what some armchair critics and sceptics may be raving about. |
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All this Taylor achieves with subtle elisions and slides and what are often the most fleeting of flatted notes. |
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Do the people holding low-grade office and factory jobs have what it takes for the information age? |
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On the Flat at Lingfield, Lady Bear has what could be her final career start, in the Littlewoods Bet Direct Fleur De Lys Stakes. |
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Therefore, what is usually done has a tendency to cater to the lowest common denominator in the audience. |
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As my bus slowly rattled and groaned its way out of La Paz for the long journey south, I shuddered at what I'd let myself in for. |
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Looks like what he was saying was that she was no longer a clandestine operative once her cover was blown. |
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I mean, really, what would you love to do in this situation if you aren't left numb from the toxic encounter? |
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By practicing some simple Zen philosophies, you'll be able to let go of little things that don't matter so you can focus on what really does. |
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Tutors either speak using headphones or use a whiteboard and digital pencil so that one side can see what the other is writing. |
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We want to know what you think about the upcoming case and affirmative action in general. |
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I understand that what we do affects many interests, of organised groups, politicians and shady businesses. |
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Rods with line-class ratings of 30 lb class or below are what may be described as light-line fishing. |
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Until I met these fine folks, I couldn't have told you what a crampon or carabiner was if you paid me a million dollars! |
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The rushes and what might have been are, however, the main reason to get thee to a theater to see Lost in La Mancha. |
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He stood there wondering what cruel fate destined that his best friend would fall for the woman he loved. |
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It's surprising that people investing in some firms that have had huge run-ups don't know what they do, just that they're gone up 100 percent. |
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They relate to what people can say or do while participating in a procession or other form of demonstration. |
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I did what any normal person who wakes in the middle of the night would do. |
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We can picture exactly what he meant because we have now seen film of astronauts orbiting the Earth in spacecraft. |
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This is what the record sounds like and it has earned the above rating on pure execution within its sub-genre, structural delicacy, and elegance. |
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He reckons it's a bit much to criticise what he has done when, after all, he did get most of it right. |
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The user never knows what was wrong, or whether the fix being applied is effective. |
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I toy around with the idea of attention or stardom, but never know what to do with it when the spotlight shines on me for a brief moment. |
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First of all what was the crisis in Gujrat that an assembly wherein the ruling party enjoyed comfortable majority by itself had to be dissolved? |
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I was in a black town car, heading down the streets of San Francisco for what I assumed was their headquarters. |
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So, what would happen in a free market where anyone could ply their trade in a cab? |
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I toyed around with the idea of waiting for awhile, until I could take a break from what I was working on. |
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He then went on to use this view as propaganda to control people and make them feel what he was doing was right. |
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Naturally I sat up to see what has been happening in the rarefied atmosphere of academia. |
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There is a vision of urban life today that doesn't square with what we think it should be, or what we think it used to be. |
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The candles glow, what light there is bounces around on the luminescent green walls, and the sound bounces way up to the high ceiling. |
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There is also some ado about puppy-walking and what a whipper-in does, and a number of references to hip flasks. |
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That's what my Scottish grandmother told me I needed to do when I was five years old. |
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This was just one of a number of excellent saves by the new Newry stopper in what was an assured performance. |
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He stated that the raw feeling of the emotions that brought him to tears is what startled him the most. |
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Our eyes never left one another's and soon it clicked in my head what he was going to do. |
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I don't think anyone could entirely grasp who I am from watching the show, but what was shown was very raw and honest. |
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He clearly has a low opinion of what the state system has done for Britain's pensioners and will look for a wholesale reform. |
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Often what seems like adequate grass cover does not support satisfactory levels of gain. |
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Elaine cries herself to sleep at night because of what this scum, these lowlifes, have done to us. |
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Some of them work enormously hard and, to be honest, how some can cope with full-time jobs and doing what they do astounds me. |
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I tried to whisper something under my breath but the teacher heard me and asked what I said. |
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Nobody knows what it will look like ten years from now, and anyone who claims to is just whistling in the dark. |
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He covered his tracks with such wonderful skill that we still don't know for sure what he did and where he was at any one time. |
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That same enthusiasm and respect is what prompted two of his current students to seek his advisement. |
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Trying to spot what on earth adverts are selling helps fill the gaps between television programmes. |
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And if what we think is true is based on wrong ideas or impressions, the results can be devastating. |
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I would like to know what this episode cost the ratepayers of Buffalo City Municipality? |
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But all is not what it seems I'm afraid and she now feels she may have made the move in haste. |
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Day after day I have people coming up to me telling me what to publish and what not to publish. |
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So certainly the government is watching this very closely to see what influence this would have on the delicate politics here. |
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Another way to tell if you are sapiosexual is that you want someone who will really listen to you instead of just hearing what you are saying. |
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I didn't care what happened to anyone and rather hoped at least someone would die a horrible death. |
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He likes to visit on a Wednesday, as there always seems to be a rush on Thursdays, what with it being pension day and everything. |
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He is said to be acutely focused and astute in assessing what he should and should not buy. |
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And what is more, it is all to the good, because of course you can now make pots of money out your lack of success. |
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The images show the differences between what was presented at trial and what a full fingerprint impression would have shown. |
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The main consequence for London of the Norman invasion was the construction by William I of the White Tower in what is now the Tower of London. |
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I returned on a February morning to see what sort of training was being carried out. |
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There was the bitterness over the recruiters' deception, but they tried their best to rationalize what was happening. |
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So what can we hear now, the morning after the rush has worn off, now that we've feeling ratty and irritable? |
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So they flood their publications or channels with what would appeal to the lowest common denominator among their target consumers. |
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The Mayflower Compact was the first written document providing for self-government in what would later become the United States of America. |
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She told me about how she was rushed to the OR, wondering what her future would hold. |
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The Examiner should transmit the form with a note specifying what documents will be forwarded later under separate cover. |
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It would have been so easy, after all, simply to leak his name if that's what they wanted. |
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If anyone finds what I am about to say insightful or applicably useful in their own practice, it will serve the Dharma all the more. |
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Anyone who has driven through the rush hour traffic on the back of Bangkok motorbike taxi will know what I mean. |
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I saw a man up the street as he chased frantically after what looked like some kind of small, ugly animal. |
|
But what about the suggestion that event causation is instead reducible to, or analysable in terms of, agent causation? |
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We must ask ourselves what binds us together as Americans, what makes us e pluribus unum, “out of many, one.” |
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Before Ian knew what was happening, the boy had pulled the bike from beneath him and was sitting astride it. |
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We know exactly what was issued and left on the keelboat with the expedition. |
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We circled aft of the ship for what seemed to be another eternity, waiting for them to steady up. |
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The people who taught me the most about what it means to be American are African Americans. |
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Many people could not understand what I saw in him and were actually afraid for my safety with him, especially my mother. |
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His role as lecturer in what was a bastion of Afrikanerdom is of fairly recent origin. |
|
Our motion explains what the movement is about and calls on the union to affiliate to the organisation, provide support and invite speakers. |
|
Yet she hasn't the wherewithal to hire lawyers to fight for what she is due. |
|
Want to know what is happening behind the scenes in the glitzy world of Bollywood and Hollywood? |
|
As a result, the book reads like the first draft of what could have been a useful addition to the discussion of British town planning. |
|
And if you never thought that rustic, preppy and retro chic couldn't be combined, then you may not be ready for what the season has to offer. |
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It is easy to ask a very general question when in fact what is wanted is a response to a specific issue. |
|
The very delicacy of their situation is what provokes the attention-seeking behaviour. |
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He opened his eyes and, having watched her for a while, he asked her what she was doing. |
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This is nothing more than an updated version of what was called the Whig interpretation of history. |
|
And whenever or wherever I go, there is this curiosity about what will happen next. |
|
So if you're looking for snarling rants about politics and war, come back in the New Year and we'll see what happens. |
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The closest thing to a national tongue is Lowland Scots, which is what Burns wrote his poetry in. |
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On paper you knew what they liked to drink or where they'd heard about the show, but there was no intimacy. |
|
Any French foreign minister knows what he is talking about where French Africa is concerned. |
|
Have you ever wondered what songs by an artist have been covered, or what songs an artist has covered? |
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The Norwegian midfielder squared the ball to Viduka, who simply side-footed home what proved to be the winner. |
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But on what basis does a government excuse its meddling into the private financial affairs of its citizens? |
|
As we took the top out of it I found a huge nest which is what I assume was the magpie house. |
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We tested all of our aftercare products thoroughly in our tattoo shops and have achieved what we think is the optimal recipe for healing. |
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If this is so in what way do 72 three-storey town houses and a large block of flats help to resolve it? |
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When I would hear my students reciting rap lyrics, I used to ask them what the words actually meant. |
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Nevertheless, Canada continues to try to occupy what little middle ground exists. |
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He listened with rapt, amused attention to what I told him about the role of LSD in his Nobel Prize-winning discovery. |
|
He was toying absently with a leaf that he had picked up, which made me wonder about what he was thinking. |
|
Changes in the game might have rarified some of old-time hockey's staple techniques, but what of the future? |
|
After what seemed like a very long time, the whine of the engine changed pitch and they seemed to descend. |
|
The three mirrors in the kaleidoscope are what provides the dance of ministry pieces and programs. |
|
Yes, they were petulant crybabies who whined until they got what they wanted. |
|
Two and one-half months on, I still don't quite know for sure what the new normal is. |
|
The band might wear their influences on their sleeve, but what a kaleidoscopic variety it is! |
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It's got nothing to do with the efficient flow of air, which is what good aerodynamics is all about. |
|
No one saw what happened to the company director, or exactly where he was when the wall of water struck. |
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Thank you, Mr Cochrane, for publishing what many of us have ranted about within our own circles for the last few months. |
|
We don't really know exactly what the fatigue or forage cap may have looked like, but we have some educated guesses. |
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Not only did they listen while they mixed cakes or whipped seams, but they often repeated in concert and memorized much of what was read to them. |
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One part of what we have to do is contest reformism's ideas and practices, in direct argument and propaganda. |
|
And what is Anne McGuire thinking of in acting as a whipper-in for these malcontents? |
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I will raze the whole building to the ground, if that's what it takes to prove myself. |
|
And what is there to life if a man cannot hear the lonely cry of the whippoorwill or the arguments of the frogs around a pond at night? |
|
They're whip-smart, funny, and kind, and that's what I'm looking for in a friendship. |
|
Ridge's statement may have whipsawed citizens, but what was the alternative? |
|
Her mind was whirling with what a sight that would be when his coughing brought her back to reality and out of dream land. |
|
The Rastafarian religion inspired by Emperor Haile Selassie is what brought American Gladstone Robinson to Ethiopia 40 years ago. |
|
You may think that you can cover your tracks and hide what you've been doing. |
|
I switched off the telly and settled down to what I thought would be half an hour of savage nature in the raw! |
|
What she saw, and what others in the art and quilt communities began to see, was a singular aesthetic. |
|
We do not know entirely what is astir, but we can feel that the world is ready to throw itself into turmoil. |
|
As I read the article, I was astonished by what a misfit of a school it seemed to be. |
|
Some aestheticians argue that a work of art has value only because of what it can mean to creatures capable of aesthetic appreciation. |
|
From the very beginning I was almost in tears, overwhelmed by a sense of triumph, proud to be human, astonished at what we can do. |
|
He is not even sure of what distinguishes a large wallaby from a small kangaroo. |
|
In any case, townsmen were loathe to serve in parliament, no matter what the pay. |
|
Whatever the etiology of this success for Harvard University Press, Hardt and Negri have evidently hit upon what people want to hear. |
|
Post boxes have been placed in shops throughout the town for townsfolk to let everyone know what they were up to when peace was declared. |
|
He looks at me strangely, half with astonishment, and half with what seems to be fear. |
|
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It was being used as a chapel dedicated to St Mary when in 1920 local townsfolk decided to dynamite what was left to reuse the stone. |
|
His eyes dart around and he whispers as he speaks as if what he's telling me is top secret. |
|
So i arrive at the call and get to work, and what do you know there's a 40 gig hard drive, clean as a whistle. |
|
Tonight I return to French class, and am all afeared at the thought I have started forgetting what I know. |
|
And I am afeared about what sort of photos of me are going to pop up on other people's sites. |
|
And what I'm betting is that we're going to see here in the last couple of weeks a whispering campaign against her. |
|
Turnbull is the only one of the 50 subjects so far to blow the whistle on what he now believes is a scandal. |
|
Most of what I found were unidentifiable broken sections of long bones, but I did find a bird femur and a nice rodent astragalus. |
|
But she blew the whistle on what she believed was misconduct in the military, and in 2000, she was dismissed on medical grounds. |
|
And we all know what happens to people who blow the whistle on conspiracy theories, don't we? |
|
You have to open your mouth so as to be able to breath, what with the air rushing past, which invariably causes my eyes to stream. |
|
The meeting was very informal and the girls were able to bombard Claudie with questions on what life is like as an astronaut. |
|
The second act has him lowering his own moral standards to do what proves necessary to survive. |
|
But at any rate, what taboos will cinema breach after the next twenty-five years, the next fifty? |
|
Despite what many of your comrades believe, showering is not just a middle class affectation. |
|
Is there a danger we could expect too much of what is, after all, only a five-day event? |
|
And so what if the media have lowered themselves to airing snuff films in an effort to boost ratings? |
|
Everyone immediately went back to what they were doing in a rather false and affected way. |
|
But at that exact moment I did not care a whit what they or any one else thought. |
|
So children and youth must learn the techniques of soft falls or turnovers what is developed during continuous training. |
|
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She felt a rush of emotions with the anticipation of finding out what was in store for her. |
|
See what you miss when you don't actually listen closely to the words of songs, folks? |
|
It's therefore in their interest to publicly explain what happened to Mr. Johnson as soon as possible. |
|
We have never got to the bottom of what happened on the Dirt issue and nobody seems to care a whit about it. |
|
Thus what they say mutates into the normative truths of a culture. |
|
It is also an important look at what the post-American counterinsurgency looks like. |
|
The advantage I have as an outsider coming in is that you see things afresh, and you don't have the baggage of who you played for and what you did. |
|
In the slaughterhouse, what they would do is to lower each cage of chickens into one of these chambers before dumping them on the belt for the hangers to put in the shackles. |
|
He lived by a gentlemen's agreement to ignore what was base or rude. |
|
When it comes to keeping the family farm afloat in what have been very difficult times in the agricultural industry, many assume it is the farmer who is earning all the money. |
|
They call it flannel backed lining but that is what kasha is anyway. |
|
Lying flat out on the sidewalk with a sizeable bruise on my forehead and Miles by my side, I instantly thought what immediately blurted from his mouth. |
|
To take my mind off what was in store for me, I chatted to the owner of the racing bike next to mine while she efficiently changed a flat tyre tube. |
|
Players and coaches raved about what a wonderful place it was to work. |
|
That was what tragedy's multivocal form did in Athens. |
|
Jack, at nineteen, twenty, had an unambiguous understanding of what it meant to win, there was none of that theoretical, wifty new-age stuff for him. |
|
According to the memo, Miller then asked what the statute of limitations in Illinois was and to define what the allegations meant. |
|
The fence itself took less than three minutes to come down as people attacked what was widely perceived to be an affront to freedom of assembly and speech. |
|
On reaching the bottom, what was our surprise and disgust to find ourselves landed on the high muddy bank of a wide, rapidly flowing affluent of the Great River. |
|
When we pay attention to what we are experiencing now, through awareness, we are able to determine our future karma by making it take a different course. |
|
|
And that is what interests me, the disjunction between these books. |
|
But what really interests us is the marketing of these films. |
|
But what interests me most about Dean isn't whether he's electable or not. |
|
But what she grasped better than so many Ph.D.s was the role that emotion and human frailties played in the sweep of history. |
|
We want you to know what a rich resource Freedmen's Bureau records are for your research. We've chosen a wide variety of example records for you to view. |
|
People don't expect such opinionated commentary in what is supposed to a news article. |
|
But what interests me is the number of people who still are interested. |
|
Hernandez was charged with explaining what it means to have an idea knocked off and loosed into the marketplace. |
|
When Granville Mayor Caruhel was originally told what had happened, he assumed it was a prank. |
|
It depends on what you are looking for and what interests you. |
|
He didn't bother trying to rationalize what the sound could have been. |
|
As for the wife, she is a loose cannon, willing to sacrifice the people close to her to get what she wants. |
|
When you are dealing with a band you have to often state your case and represent yourself affirmatively, but without telling everyone else what to do. |
|
That's what passes for government in the lower chamber these days. |
|
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. |
|
Mr. Luxenberg explains these copies are written without vowels and diacritical dots that modern Arabic uses to make it clear what letter is intended. |
|
So what about the lowlights and most disappointing performances? |
|
Her affection for these people shines through the quaint freakishness, and I rather believe she understands precisely what she's trying to accomplish. |
|
East of the School of Forestry is what Peter terms a West Coast garden with rimu, kanuka, mountain beech, coprosma, nikau, wineberry, native fuchsia, pohutukawa, and ferns. |
|
In 1941, what is now Warner Robins was a sleepy little whistle-stop known as Wellston, located just south of Macon in the central part of the state. |
|
|
I know I'm rushing the season a bit, but what gardener can help it? |
|
They have no legal liability for what happens in Chinese factories that covet its manufacturing business. |
|
From September through November 2005, I corresponded with him via email to find out what had happened to me that night. |
|
That measure is known as thermal inertia, and it provides information far beyond what we can get from visible light alone. |
|
Time is what measures the rate at which everything else changes. |
|
Still, in the final shakedown, it's all but impossible to predict before the event just who and what will catch a particular person's ear and eye. |
|
But, as is often the case, what may be equally as damning as the crime will be the cover-up. |
|
This is an extreme example of what can happen when a company grows too quickly. |
|
After my digestive tract was clean as a whistle, and I looked like an extra from Schindler's List, it was time to get a look inside of me and see what was wrong. |
|
One way to lose friends but perhaps gain wider influence is to blow the whistle on what your conscience tells you is sharp practice, by government or employer. |
|
Referee Declan Corcoran had a busy match, whistling for 45 frees and flashing no less than eight yellow cards in what was a very stop-start game throughout. |
|
How did you map out what Eric and Jen would say and discover and where, with relation to the text of Ship of Theseus? |
|
None of us knew what an astounding difference a year would make. |
|
If you were invited to a barbie in the arvo by a guy who had kangaroos in his top paddock, in what country would you be enjoying your afternoon barbecue with your crazy host? |
|
The presence of a hammer dulcimer, along with the more typical guitar, bass, and drums, is what sets Tulsa Drone's sound apart from other arty ruralists. |
|
Your grandpa was living in another state, and found out what I was doing when he saw me on the Howard Stern TV show. |
|
We can't tell you what to do, but we can give you the low-down on lying. |
|
Yet one never knows what to expect from a Grand Master of long range strategy. |
|
So do give the new album a whirl if you haven't yet, and try listening to it as a descendent of the 60's rather than the 70's and see what you think. |
|
Far murkier is what did they believe they would accomplish, these modern-day kamikazes with their box-cutters, their commandeered jets and their insane visions of vengeance? |
|
|
We had to split the journey up into little segments, so what should have taken an hour and twenty minutes must have taken best part of three hours. |
|
She whirls into the room, waving what looks like an old dishcloth. |
|
Plus, great thinkers from cornel West to Robert Reich tell us what they're angry about. |
|
We corked what was left of the wines, and headed back out into the heat, a little wiser about the whole what-goes-with-what thing. |
|
It's astonishing what gets through under the current broken safety net. |
|
So what may finally shake the UK stock market out of its rut? |
|
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. |
|
They were quickly able to make sense of how to use aikido for handling rough shoving tactics like what is seen in wrestling, sumo and at the beginning of many street fights. |
|
And there certainly are nice people in sales professions, even those rare birds who will sacrifice their commissions to make sure you get what you truly need or want. |
|
Many times, comparing what you have written with your notes can help you specify more clearly what exactly you have learned, or not learned as the case may be. |
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It was he who spotted the potential of the Pickering doctor's collection of bygones, and pushed for the creation of what became York Castle Museum. |
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Hang gliders are aerodynamic in shape, which is what makes them glide. |
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Between the deafening whine of the jet engines and the music, the two men looked at each other and wondered what in God's name was transpiring up there. |
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I couldn't shake the feeling of wondering what made this clown so angry. |
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He could, theoretically, present himself as a model citizen who made a mistake while obscuring what the mistakes been. |
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When you approached T.I., London grammar, and Fall Out Boy to do this, what was their initial response to it? |
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In order to find out what this mysterious energy really is, astronomers need to compare astrophysical observations that are at first sight completely unrelated. |
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I had just started a low-level job at the Village Voice, imagining it would be, even in this beleaguered climate, a bastion of what was left of the Left. |
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Summery acoustic guitars jostle with squirts of digital noise, arcing horns and what sounds like a solo played on a giant kazoo shoved through a fuzz pedal. |
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A great part of the student misgivings may stem from a difference between people's preconceptions of what co-op is like and what they actually experience. |
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If they were to initiate a genuine dialogue on what constitutes Canadian foreign policy, we believe that non-traditional departments should be brought into the discussion. |
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There's a brief accordion intro, leading to what sounds like a kazoo lament accompanied by someone scraping a few pieces of metal and wood together. |
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All of these women's raps illustrate that they can do what they are doing. |
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In fact, much of what is cooked here is sourced directly from the McLane family farm. |
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They told the public not to believe that the coo meant what he said even though, yes, he said it. |
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Well, basically, what they do is, they lowball you on the bid. |
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I don't see how this can be squared with what Hillman is now telling us. |
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So what if money-making teens in Malaysia say a gleeful ker-ching! |
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The flip-phone seemed plenty smart enough for what he needed, that being to converse with somebody. |
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Letterman once described Sedaris in, what became abundantly clear after conversing with her, perfect fashion. |
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Xander just looked at her and then it clicked what she had said. |
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The guitar and what sounds like a wheezy harmonium played backwards contribute to an impression of technologised folk that makes surprisingly engaging sense. |
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The outfielder made a grandstand play out of what should have been a routine catch. |
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He also should convene his Cabinet heads and ask them what else they can do to boost participation. |
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The product of the Soviets' laudable campaign for universal public housing, Petrzalka's rank ugliness serves only to emphasize what a jewel the old part of the city is. |
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That's when it clicked to me what I could possibly do today. |
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So what is a computer boffin doing teaching a physical education class? |
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At first Mark didn't know what he meant, but then it clicked. |
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Admitting that he was not satisfied with the water supply in the capital, he assured us that his corporation was willing to do what was needed to correct the problems. |
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You are simply repeating, in slightly different words, what has been said already. |
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