Shi Jialei, who is talkative and always wears a smile, said he was a wordless and silent child before he came to the school. |
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The precocious talkativeness is a major attribute of the boy, who is known by the name of his class rather than a real proper name. |
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Rogers and all of the others who talked big back at the beach began to change when we got to the replacement area in Belgium. |
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My dad was the type who talked big about getting a new car, but rarely acted. |
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If, however, he doesn't stand firm, he will be ridiculed as someone who talked big and couldn't stand the heat in the kitchen. |
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The survey was carried out by an organisation called Duck Density with the help of volunteers who kept a tally of wildfowl. |
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When people who are supposed to be reporting the news have an agenda, something gets lost in the shuffle. |
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His following is made up of satyrs and sileni and maenads, who seem possessed or intoxicated. |
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Behind the green baize bravado was quite evidently a character who talked big when the chips were up, but folded when it came to real life. |
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The author is obsessed with words, creating characters who are themselves compulsive talkers. |
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Talebearers have a habit of telling evil things only to those who will spread evil, not stop it. |
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I work for a small automotive supplier who has seen the same price cutting demands for years. |
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Look for an auto parts wholesaler who is a known expert in the field of automotive technology. |
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As I read the book, I kept a tally of exactly who was quoted or discussed in detail. |
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The American, who has already won more world titles than any other female athlete, is aiming to extend her record tally to six golds. |
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But they all share the Chancellor's belief in the sanctity of work and importance of rewarding those who toil. |
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Both bars have also developed a set of sanctions for patrons who disobey the rules. |
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A former Westhoughton man who had a talent for recording his life and times has left an interesting legacy. |
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They are not like the inhabitants of the realm of the gods, who are still within samsara, the cycle of death and rebirth. |
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There were also some Social-climbing merchants who had money and paid to become adopted by a samurai family. |
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The young Goethe was himself madly in love with a woman named Charlotte Buff, who was to be married to his friend, Georg Kestner. |
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He is recognised in Victorian state cricket as a player who possesses a substantial degree of natural talent. |
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The news is sure to please the Gigg Lane faithful, who relish watching home-grown talent. |
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This year the team will run two young and talented drivers who are both aiming for the title. |
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He took council with advisers who, at best, were talentless and, at worst, dishonest. |
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The studios have pianists and sometimes drummers or other musicians who improvise as the dancers dance. |
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The academics claim pupils who had been spoon-fed at independent schools were less able to cope with autonomous learning. |
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They dance in imitation of maenads who associated with the god in the old days. |
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She is madly in love with Oscar, who regards her as his best pal and nothing more. |
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This historic church has been sanctified by the prayers and praises of countless thousands who have worshipped within its walls. |
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The Madres were in fact called locas by many, who considered that their public grieving was inappropriate. |
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He has patterned his life on the ideal of the artist who must speak autonomously of social, economic, or cultural systems of dominance. |
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He engaged the autopilot and glanced at Carly, who sat quietly in the copilot seat. |
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They were about to collect her husband, Michael, who worked as a sandblaster and handyman locally, when tragedy struck. |
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Chart topper Juliette Turner talked shop with Dawn Kenny who is the supporting act for her performance on Monday 5th August. |
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Yet I was madly in love with a boy who collected the fees for deckchairs on the beach. |
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Furthermore, she seemed to have it all, intelligence, friends, and a cute boyfriend who seemed to be madly in love with her. |
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The person who came up with this programme is a madman from a madhouse, a madman but a genius. |
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Unlike the rest of us, who looked very overly made-up in our stage makeup, she looked natural. |
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We initially produced made-to-order items for our buyers, who came directly to our workshop here. |
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An expert at balloon sculpture was a big hit with the kids who wanted made-to-order balloons that resembled animals and birds. |
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There is also a solo musician who sits by the chanter and plays the shamisen. |
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The temple is said to be of Mephitis, a female deity worshipped by the Samnites, a mysterious ancient people who preceded the Romans in Pompeii. |
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The decision proved fortuitous when his show at the Red Lion was caught by a talent scout from Reprise, who signed him to the label. |
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He was handpicked by a talent scout who saw he had what it takes to appear in the show. |
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Kusum is peremptorily divorced by her husband who gives her talaq with no qualms. |
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The girl who acted in the very same ways I did, driven by the same madness and the same motives. |
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The same is true for all of the other British civil servants who are now running Montserrat. |
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At the hearing, it was the academics who talked turkey, and took on the real world. |
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The clinical diagnosis of this syndrome is challenging, and the diagnosis is limited to patients who have been autopsied. |
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The researchers autopsied 302 people who had died suddenly of heart attacks, auto accidents, or other misfortunes. |
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Medical Examiners are pathologists who have special training in death investigation and legal autopsies. |
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The title sounds like a tall order, particularly coming from someone who has never made a country album. |
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It wasn't everyday you met someone who didn't want your autograph when they realized you were a celebrity. |
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The author, who seemed a wee bit surprised by their presence in the shop, autographed the copies. |
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He was stared at a bit rudely, but not spoken to by the sedate patricians of blue-blooded society who were present. |
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It has threatened financial sanctions against nations who do not comply with international money laundering rules. |
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The statement implies a living organism feeding on not only the public who gives it money, but on the employees who feed energy into the beast. |
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A trained anthropologist, Small was inspired by indigenous people who imbued their jewellery with talismanic significance. |
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The deep channel often had a strong current but we still persevered and swam out to the sandbanks to join the seals who basked there. |
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It's a step that can be used to root out sandbaggers who inflate scores posted in casual play. |
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The number of people who finish the evening off with an amaretto, sambuca, cognac, or brandy is on the decline, he says. |
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For those who do not want to shift gear manually, an automatic gearbox is available, instead of the manual six-speed gearbox. |
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The other side of the coin is that he has had to leave out players who were once automatic choices, and it's not a task he enjoys. |
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Gaining membership should not be automatic for anyone who completes an application form. |
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There were two other girls who were taking turns trying to get his attention. |
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Working with the Samoan language centre next door, he hired two language resource staff, one who teaches in Samoan and the other in te reo. |
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True, the Lakes' shores lacked the sand fleas that infested ocean beaches and scared off those who couldn't tell them apart from lice. |
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Fortunately one of our contacts speaks Taki Taki who is also the sister of our main lead at the HOPE Centre. |
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Many European countries impose automatic relegation on clubs who cannot provide financial guarantees. |
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But they sandbagged her, so the last thing she was going to do was take insults from the man who almost ruined her career. |
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Samuel had an only daughter, who was learned in the Scriptures and the Talmud. |
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In the meantime, tallymen and women who thought they had become extinct, should start sharpening their pencils for next month's outing. |
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Mr Poolman, who was widowed in 1988, started work as a tallyman selling clothes door-to-door, but he decided to start his own business. |
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One of these gentlemen just happens to be the madwoman's father, a charming chap who seems unfazed by most things in this day and age. |
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Macumba originated with African slaves shipped to Brazil in the 1550's, who continued to worship their African Gods. |
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Charlie was an orphan and had been raised by an old widower man, Mr Smith, who many respected, but everyone thought was slightly mad. |
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Their country was like a man who was losing a great battle, and in his mad and insane mind he was forced to do rash things. |
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And a new tunnel is now being built by a fraternity of miners who call themselves the Sandhogs. |
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A few years ago I bumped into some old people at a party who actually went to the show, and they raved about it. |
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Still, one in the eye for all the music traditionalists who go on about how unnatural electronic manipulation such as Autotune is. |
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There were old people coming to her premises by car who were not able to park outside her shop because of the taxi ranks. |
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Do the donors who feed money and old possessions in at one end of the pipeline have any ideas where it leads? |
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A candidate who can talk English in an Americanised accent will be the most favoured choice of these companies. |
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He is the brilliant madrigalist who is the secular counterpoint to Palestrina's career in the churches of Rome. |
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He dismissed talk of a feud with Brown, who is reported to covet the premiership. |
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The early talk was that they'd address only people who purchased locks in the last two years. |
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Then the restrained growl of a mad dog found its way past her curled lips, rasping at the stranger before her who hadn't flinched. |
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Jack, who is mad about trains, Thomas The Tank Engine and Bob The Builder, is due to start school in September. |
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Peter was extremely proud of his children and very happy with Kayce, who took care of him, who protected him, who was just mad about him. |
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And don't talk to me about numbers, because just about everyone who is good enough to make the NBA is good enough to compile numbers. |
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The monthly mag will start its life in electronic form, but who knows what the future may bring? |
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There are many Liverpool fans who will have spent the last week laughing uproariously at the madness of it all. |
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Those who boo him expose themselves as the biggest morons in sport and the dark side of the tall poppy Aussie psyche. |
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Three days later, Gawain and I answered the door to a newly lip-pierced individual who was grinning like a madman. |
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He is the sort who talks back, but I think it is fine to have a bit of character. |
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According to those who know about these things, the very professional maestros from Meadowlands are firm favourites to retain their crown. |
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She received demented letters from a mental asylum escapee, and yet it was she who ended up mad as a hatter. |
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I absolutely loved the film, and was talking it up to people who were really skeptical about it. |
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I mean, who wouldn't choose a talking cereal box over the sedentary and mute Rice Krispies? |
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I belong to the old imperial class who want to put up roads and hospitals and make life easier for people. |
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Yap had talked about his encounter with a magical talking fish who took him beneath the ocean and made him Lord of the Seas. |
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The game was there for the taking at half-time, but it was Leeds who took the lead when Ross kicked for the corner to set up a line-out drive. |
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Reading it is like trying to keep up with a fast walker who is also talking a blue streak. |
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Those who yearn for the good old warehouse days are going to appreciate the jazzy, ambient vibe. |
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We crept into an antechamber lined with red velvet and faced a woman who appeared the archetypical brothel madam. |
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The 45-year-old mother of four is a millionaire entrepreneur who made her fortune as a brothel madam on the Kalgoorlie goldfields. |
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Its decision follows investigators taking handwriting samples from youngsters who took the test in June and interviews with staff and parents. |
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The two are among the eight same-sex couples who went to court seeking the right to get married. |
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The colossal irony is that a madman who rescued her from her folly was the same madman who later killed her. |
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Hundreds of protesters who took sanctuary in the mosque during the fighting left peacefully following lengthy negotiations with police. |
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If the numbers of those who voted at that particular spot don't tally with the registers in the hands of agents, it would clearly be known. |
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We report here a 62-year-old seemingly healthy patient who presented with disseminated erythematous maculae. |
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Nor was he madcap, zany, and over-the-top like Robin Williams who in his public persona seems instinctively funny. |
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I was thinking of Hoddle the legend, the midfield maestro who could unlock defences within a moment. |
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If there is one artist who put Hindustani classical music on the world map it is sitar maestro Pundit Ravi Shankar. |
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We dig for sand crabs, boogie-board, have a sandcastle-building contest and always seem to find cute guys who want to play Frisbee with us. |
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Instead of attacking neighbors, why not shunt the wrath onto one poor soul who stands in for all would-be enemies? |
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Most of those who write to the stars, ask for an autograph, a photograph, or an autographed photograph, so it is quite easy to fulfil the requests. |
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Michelle met with arts luminaries in the gallery in the Egyptian wing named for Hatshepsut, the woman who ruled as pharaoh. |
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There are 45 million people who have still got to choose and I am not going to short-circuit that. |
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He adds that some people who have taught him the most have shortcomings of their own. |
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The murders took place to collect insurance on slaves who were sick and dying and therefore would not, on reaching land, become marketable commodities. |
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But perennial favorite Nicole Chaison, who self-publishes hausfrau Muthahzine, is hell-bent on changing all that. |
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I turned to see the same old lady who had glared at me in the store. |
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Set in Edwardian London, the movie starts off with Wendy who narrates harrowing tales of swordplay and Captain Hook, who fears nothing but a ticking clock. |
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Those of us who take our cynicism neat had a good old chuckle about that. |
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It's a talent show that starts by searching for six inexperienced dancers from among hundreds of young people who took part in regional auditions. |
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She would not even have run, had it not been for an experienced talent spotter who persuaded the event's organisers to let her compete at the last minute. |
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Maybe, just maybe, White really is just an exceptional talent spotter, someone who knows what a gem looks like and knows how to uncover that gem and maximise its shine. |
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The Danish talent spotter, who established his reputation in Holland with PSV Eindhoven, had been made a double-your-money offer to head Chelsea's youth system. |
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Taurus draws on the myth of io, the nymph who was turned into a snow-white cow. |
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The door was shut and sealed with charms and talismans to keep away evil spirits or in this case, those who might want to steal the elemental gem inside. |
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The Englishman, who has just completed the best of his four seasons at the club, admits that he wouldn't be the player he is now had it not been for the talismanic Swede. |
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The one problem with Braley's remark is that it happened to reflect on a fellow Iowan who is a mainstay of Hawkeye State politics. |
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Ulijaszek said migrant Samoans in American Samoa were more overweight than those in western Samoa, while those who had emigrated to Hawaii were even more likely to be obese. |
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Visitors who made purchases were entitled to enter the drawing to win bicycles, shoes, coats, musical instruments, gramophones, cosmetics, samovars, and other prizes. |
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Conservatives who favor a hawkish foreign policy will claim otherwise, of course. |
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Bringing women leaders who are changing the world to our state to showcase them. |
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The film was praised for showcasing the many unsung heroes of the movement who were ignored by previous film makers. |
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I have an assistant who is a man, and people, new acquaintances, will automatically defer to him in meetings when I should be their primary contact. |
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After that, who knows how many innocent straws of hay will start to look like needles under the gaze of unseen algorithms. |
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The lady who owns the shop talks me into buying an ice cream. |
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I am a person who can talk the hind leg off a donkey but I can see that this well earned title may go to someone else if I don't buck my ideas up. |
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Neither could his Son who tried to talk him out of the trip. |
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As a showman who loves the theatrics, addressing the UN general assembly is the ultimate stage. |
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Thus he asks Rick-the-coward, who talks a blue streak about the dancing contest, the confrontation with the jocks, the pictures, and the confrontation with Hattie. |
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Her chance came in this 15 th-century tragicomedy by Fernando de Rojas about a madam at a brothel who agrees to help a nobleman seduce a young virgin. |
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A woman who had been standing next to me called out, Madame! |
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Sharon McKendrick and Susan Evers are identical twins who meet for the first time at summer camp. |
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So is this end of such madcap actions by parents who should know better? |
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This is a woman who stars in and produces Web Therapy, a show that started as a web series and moved to showtime. |
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His son, who was usually quiet and shy, was very talkative that morning. |
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Hayworth is attacking McCain for being a border-enforcement wimp who is partly to blame for the Krentz killing. |
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Hayworth, who considers himself the more conservative choice to McCain, is hoping to lure Tea Party enthusiasts to his campaign. |
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Eight hundred delegates, predominately practising and aspiring independent documentary makers and those who study the craft, attended the four-day talkfest and marketplace. |
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It was a bit of payback by Ben Jones, who played Cooter in The Dukes of Hazzard and lost a House race to Gingrich. |
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Rather than directly answering her questions, however, he almost maddens his listener by insisting upon telling Jane her own story, the story of the governess who left. |
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So I will thank in advance anybody who is sticking with me through this story, I know how maddening it can be when an author takes forever to update. |
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According to a quick Google search, a Shriner clown appears to be a clown who is also a member of the Shriners. |
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Once a devotee of printed fiction, Betty Clayson, 82, who has been using the library for about 20 years, soon switched her allegiance to talking books. |
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Dunphy may be equally unimpressed by the majority of celebrities and talking heads who sustain the talk show circuit but he might have a little more fun with them. |
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It was not until Shriver, who had previously taken a back seat in the campaign, jumped front and center that the day was saved. |
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The bully we mentioned in number 2, who has grown up a lot and become mates with my brother, notices this, and gives the lad a talking-to, and let's be honest, a thump. |
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Whatever the truth, Miller hardly seems to have shrugged it off when the partner married a paralegal who worked in their office. |
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Critics who are less bullish on The Crazy Ones bemoan all of this, protesting that the Robin Williams shtick is worn out. |
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A kid who avoids all TV may have spent more time with headier forms of entertainment. |
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The last six years have often been heady for someone who cares about progressive political movements. |
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Ultra-rich people who launch a headlong retreat from political affairs will not be immune. |
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In 1939, membership was broadened to include physicians with an interest in tuberculosis who did not work in sanatoria, and the name was changed to American Trudeau Society. |
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I shuddered at the thought of a President McCain, who wanted to acquire wars like new suits. |
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She was personally against abortion, but she did not shun those who were pro-choice. |
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So, who has kept to the letter and spirit of the accord more and who has been more egregious in shunning it? |
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I just received some hate mail from someone who said they were going to protest my store. |
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Only a specific statute that punishes all physical and emotional elder abuse will provide effective sanctions and deterrents for those who commit elder abuse. |
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In 1310 the king granted life exemption from tallages, prises, juries, assizes, and royal ministries to Nicholas de Fakenham of Lynn, who is not known to have held any office. |
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Like all his colleagues, he autopsied every patient who died on his ward. |
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We can ask the children in Ohio and Pennsylvania who will no longer receive the early education that head start provides. |
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Abdul Qayum Zakir was the only senior shura member who was absent for unknown reasons. |
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The head teacher, Mahmouda, who has been a teacher for 20 years, says many of the girls are poor, some coming to school barefoot. |
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Moreover, the actions of individuals who repeat rather than question, watch out for, punish, and sanction transgressions, lend these norms their strength. |
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He speaks of the history and sanctity of the order, and tells the crowd that it is the actions of a vile temptress, a witch, who brought them here. |
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A bringer of healing water, she soon found herself pursued by believers in her sanctity and tormented by officials who hounded her with police interrogations. |
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So who exactly was responsible for the disaster that led to the shuttering of the newspaper? |
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It was also used by the ancient Romans, as is evidenced by the writings of Pliny, who described a method for making soap by boiling goat tallow with alkali wood ashes. |
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The couple, who are retired florists and market gardeners, use the greenhouse to grow plants for an annual garden party to raise money for a donkey sanctuary in Devon. |
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Michael Sam has one big advantage over the aging NFL execs who whined to si. |
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Second only to psychological drama and angst, geography is important to Walker, who falls madly in love with places and stores them up for future plots. |
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Whether it changed an otherwise sensible man into a madman, or whether it just brought out the real madman that was hidden there all along, who knows? |
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But those who heaped abuse were the rarities, the people my friends and I laughed at. |
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Some were as old as Dostoevsky, who wrote his House of the Dead in 1861 after four years in a siberian prison camp. |
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The dot-com collapse was dramatic enough, but even the skeptical few who saw that one coming were sandbagged by the sharpness of the overall market decline. |
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Ali Mumin, a Madurese who has been living in Bali for 10 years, said Idul Fitri celebrations on the island were still less joyous than in his hometown. |
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Tan had been trying to ascertain the names of the more than 5,000 schoolchildren who died in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. |
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Once in Sicily, the refugees are processed and released by the Italian authorities, who have streamlined the experience. |
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As Kaci Hickox treated patients in Sierra Leone, she faced the heartbreaking task of caring for children who died in front of her. |
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Cue damaged teenagers, heartbroken parents, and crusading lawyers who blow the whole story open. |
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Kevin, who just two days before was hoisted upon the shoulders of his adoring fellow-competitors, is now, in true Pattaya fashion, being vilified as a sandbagger. |
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As someone who supports this basic agenda, I am heartened to see this maturation, and the shift in power that has come with it. |
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But she said she was heartened by those who came to her defense, including some members of Congress, friends, and the university. |
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Katerina sat in the middle of her room, on the bed to be exact, shuffling through old photographs of Mitzy and Renee, who had taken the day off to go shopping. |
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She gave a crazed cry, the cry of a Harpy, the cry of a madwoman who had long lost all sanity, the cries of one who faced death and would never forget. |
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A simple shuffle has no way of knowing who is dancing to what. |
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McManus also raised eyebrows with a number of administrative shuffles that promoted some cops and transferred others who had been high up in his predecessor's administration. |
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As a side note, anyone who tells you all Muslims think a certain way on any issue understands nothing about Muslims. |
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But the shutdown is something of a sideshow, provoked by impatient conservatives who wanted confrontation. |
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The journey brings you, too, in close contact with the Gurung and Tamang clans, who have practiced sustenance agriculture in the region for centuries. |
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This milestone measure is a living tribute to the thousands of men and women who have lost their lives in pursuit of a world free of mafias, drug cartels and criminal gangs. |
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They roll back the sidewalks precisely at ten, And the people who live there are not seen again. |
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On the Syria vote he sided with Sen. Paul, who opposed intervention. |
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From page to page, they should alternate who is the calligrapher and who is the illuminator. |
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Ah yesTinder fails and the superhero trio who are here to save you from eternal singledom. |
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Syed, who is author of several books, was the person behind establishment of Sindhi Adabi Board. |
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This interface allows users who have placed catalog orders to also purchase monogramming, gift wrapping, or even a singing telegram. |
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Titled Sinn Feiners, it shows a woman side by side with her husband who is holding a rifle. |
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However, sin-bins had been introduced for the knock-out phases, so the referee, who awarded 49 penalties in the game, was proved correct. |
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A SWAN converted from a milk float was the Co-op's Christmas attraction before Santa's Sleigh ever arrived, remembers the man who ran it. |
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Thirty-one-year-old Bharali is one of the few dairy farmers in Assam who has a modern farm with the latest milking machines. |
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And yet here we have a policewoman who was convicted of being a callgirl and she receives a 15-month prison sentence. |
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Dan Tasset is an entrepreneur who believes in giving back in a big way that goes beyond just simply writing a check. |
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We are the sick ones who torment trans people every day of their lives. |
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It's hard to know with the Taoiseach, who has been making up stories about events that did not happen. |
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The police question her and Gracie Venable who is just about to open a millenary story near the Indigo Tea Shop. |
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There is no denying the smooth qualities of the impossibly good-looking Alexi Kaye Campbell, who plays the veteran call boy. |
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But he has more stamina than any host who has ever hawked Turtle Wax. |
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A COMPUTER expert who fled to the Highlands to escape the Millennium Bug has split from his wife. |
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Other players also threw some of their official clobber to the supporters who milled around the hotel all day long. |
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But Pollack says suicidal tendencies are not among the irrationalities of the Iranian leadership, who are not ''insane millenarians. |
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There was a guy at our shul who transgressed the bounds of the acceptable. |
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People who have a severe sensitivity to milk run the risk of a serious or life threatening reaction if they consume this product. |
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Thursday began with Tarras, a young band who fused rock with disparate traditional elements. |
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The second is the 16-17-year-old girl who is turned off by rank tastelessness. |
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He's Jake's driver, a superficially upstanding example of militarized Midwestern values who turns out to be a freak beyond all bounds. |
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Hall, who still tap dances and performs at local senior shows, says he learned to dance as a kid at a roller rink. |
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Analysts say Mr Sirisena appears to have capitalised on this perception, making gains among Sinhalese who usually vote for Mr Rajapaksa. |
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TheWelsh international, who has been out of action since December, needs surgery to repair a fractured tarsal bone in his right foot. |
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Certainly no one who knows me would accuse me of being a shrinking violet. |
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For his part, 67-year-old Rasmi says that he often heard his late mother talk about midwives and particularly the one who delivered him. |
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The Taoiseach was surprised by two angry demonstrators who stormed a Fine Gael fundraiser and dropped the smalls between his knife and fork. |
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Single parent charity Gingerbread are encouraging parents who think they may now be eligible to apply under the new system. |
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And single mother households tended to be headed by women who were younger, less educated and more likely to be a member of a racial minority. |
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Tasker is also an accomplished and prolific artist who had several solo and two-person exhibitions in Durban, Johannesburg and Bloemfontein. |
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Coleman, who was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for single-handedly halting an enemy column. |
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There's the case of the midwife toad that tracks the story of a scientist who was accused of fakery. |
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As the youngest in his class he's the only one who retains every one of his milk teeth. |
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In it, Zidane is depicted as a singing telegram man who head-butts the old dear that answers her door, copying his infamous rush of blood against Marco Materazzi. |
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Meanwhile, Pseudolus has to outsmart Hero's parents, the slave-master, Lycus, and the egocentric Captain who has already paid for Philia, Miles Gloriosus. |
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Denis Donaldson, 55, who was arrested in 2002 over the Sinn Fein spy ring claims which brought down power-sharing in Ulster, spoke out after he was expelled from the party. |
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The idea for this piece came from the Bidayuh musician Gerald Oscar Sindon who made most of the instruments, helped by the Iban instructor, Ubang Kendawang. |
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Now it's Sinn Feiners and DUPers who have taken over the role. |
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There'll probably be an inquiry into just who was responsible, the culprit will get a pounds 500,000 golden handshake and the whole crazy tarradiddle will start again. |
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Recent research by Williams and several colleagues found no physical or psychological advantages for the majority of teenagers born to a single mother who later married. |
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We were given two bars of this strange delicacy by a relative who thinks we are adventurous with food and therefore prepared to sully our tastebuds with weird concoctions. |
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Not too long ago, Bob Ginn, who is in charge of landscaping at the Hollywood Bowl, replaced a fallen pine tree with California sycamore and western redbud trees. |
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He led a small team of analysts and collectors who developed targetable information on some of the most dangerous insurgents in Eastern Afghanistan. |
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He was a talented chain-saw artist, who could take a rough piece of wood from a freshly cut tree, and craft it in to something amazingly, and simplistically, beautiful. |
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Their target groups are consumers who want to save money by shopping with Lyoness and loyalty merchants who want to use an international multi-sector loyalty program. |
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Colbie Callet who launched a hit song and CD from her MySpace page. |
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The call center industry is extracting a sliver of Indians who are actively de-Indianizing themselves and adopting Western names and identities, accents and culture. |
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His stage manager, Ramsbottom, was played by Cecil Frederick, and the third of the trio was gormless callboy Enoch, who was Robbie Vincent in real life. |
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As anyone who has owned a successful small business here in North Wales knows, running any enterprise requires a degree of single-mindedness and a high level of commitment. |
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For people in Tassie who don't know me let me give you a brief outline. |
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First published in 1932, then appearing in revised editions up to 1956, Sarkar's history was reprinted again in 1988 by Raghubir Sinh, who supplied a foreword. |
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According to sources, Crime Branch officials recently got permission to interrogate Matang Sinh, who is currently in a jail in Kolkata, in connection with the Saradha scam. |
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Taller Sindon, who had terrific support which created an excellent atmosphere, won 40-37 but he had to work hard for his success in an all-action encounter. |
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The reserve is to be named Tasker's Meadow, as a tribute to the Trust's former Chief Executive, Andy Tasker, who sadly died after 30 years with the wildlife charity. |
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Trained by his owner John Wade, who is based a few miles from the course, Call The Shots last won in 1997 when scoring over three and a half miles at Kelso. |
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The movie changed without changing a frame,'' says Ben Affleck, who replaces Harrison Ford as a younger, callower version of Ryan in the new entry. |
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Lee Kuan Yew, the Singaporean official who transformed the island outpost into one of the wealthiest and least corrupt countries in Asia, died in hospital on Monday morning. |
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Retired Mr Edwards, 77, who had been visiting a friend, stopped in a lay-by to answer a call of nature but stumbled down the steep embankment shortly before 6pm yesterday. |
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It remained unclear whether the scrapping of the commissioner system would satisfy the Sindhi nationalist parties and others who had supported it. |
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This will create opportunities for European milk powder producers, who are not only market leaders but also have the best knowledge and reputation in this sector. |
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Norman Harrison, managing director of Morton's Dairies, which runs the milk round, denied that Monty, who regularly travelled on the float, had caused the accident. |
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Funds necessary to ensure the enrollment of all PWDs who are not currently covered under any existing health program shall be sourced from the proceeds of sin tax law. |
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And good job too, given that I've always firmly believed that there's only one man who can bring the requisite amount of sinisterness to the role. |
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Her penchant for making the hardest rap songs literally singable is something she attributes to the same people who so frequently reach out for her services. |
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But what about those who toil in their basements and garages all year perfecting double-and single-reed calls for us to wrench on and show off to our buddies each season? |
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