If anyone can shine a light on these mysterious snippets of nonsense I would be very happy to hear about it. |
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Although she would not look at him, she was always near at hand, so close that he felt he could feel the quickened beating of her heart. |
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Striking firefighters warned that it would be dangerous for untrained army firefighters to use breathing apparatus. |
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The unsuspecting victim would give the directions and continue to his destination. |
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The one albatross it would be deeply unfair to hang around his neck is the one people seem to have already slain and roped for him. |
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The university employers' body also arrogantly dismissed the action, believing the boycott would fizzle out. |
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After he moved in he didn't know if he would be able to sleep with her so near and not hold her in his arms. |
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We would have an army of untrained teenagers with not much in the way of skills. |
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Detectives would also like to hear from anyone who may have noticed anything untoward around the train station at any time. |
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The freezing over of rivers and seas along with snows and ice would interfere with transportation more than higher temperatures would. |
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One might imagine that an experimental determination of Snell's law would be a simple matter. |
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To divert Turkish attention, the Royal Naval Division would make a feint attack at Bulair, at the narrow neck of the peninsula. |
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There would have been much to astonish a young Ligurian at that time, many opportunities for outrage, defensive bigotry or unthinking prejudice. |
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They do this job tirelessly, for what many would consider inferior pay, sometimes unthankfully, and often anonymously. |
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She would make treacle cakes, currant cakes and, of course, she'd make white soda cakes, potato cakes and boxty. |
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A decade ago, the Fashion Police would have issued me a citation for being the only guy on the street with an untucked tee or polo shirt. |
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How would it be if certain states did not require male boxers to wear protective cups? |
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I would include the sizzle of meat on a braaivleis fire, the sharp hiss of a can of Castle being opened. |
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Whoa, wait a sec, I do all my own pedicures and snitch the polish from the store, so what money would that save me, anyway? |
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Far better that he languishes forgotten, which would punish him, rather than give him attention by sneering at him. |
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A flagship Glasgow store would be a snub to Edinburgh which had harboured dreams of attracting the company. |
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The weather wasn't really improving it was starting to snow pretty heavily and I feared that the traffic would be a disaster. |
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Or would it create another level of snottiness and exclude people with innate talent who shunned school in favor of experimentation? |
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The party would be accused of spinning if it released unvalidated data for March. |
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I had secretly and sneakily created her gift weeks before she would open it. |
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Other signs would be general unthriftiness, rough hair coat, labored breathing, and elevated heart rate. |
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To the expedition a fresh wind from the right direction would have been an event of tremendous significance. |
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It would have been easy for me to give up and say I can't be bothered to be sniped at any more about wrinkly rockers and all of that. |
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Inserting amendments as and when necessity arises would have been a better strategy. |
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He says the ghoulish graveyard thefts would have been unthinkable in an earlier age. |
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Anway, if the smoking snogger had called me, he probably would have been in for a disappointment. |
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Win, lose or draw, the tension would have ensured the pressing need for bracing sea air to clear this morning's hangovers. |
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What would all the writers I admired think if they knew one of their own was being untrue to himself? |
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Lee's mom would not let her out of the house without it tucked in, but Lee untucked it as soon as she got out of the driveway. |
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Maxie had no punch but he was a great boxer who would win most of his fights on points. |
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I would sort through the animals and grab an untagged lamb and wrestle it to the ground. |
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Surely you need to fix the target language to decide what the most untranslatable word would be. |
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He might be a snitch, but he prided himself on providing good information to those who needed and would pay for it. |
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He had a snowblower and would clear snow for other people on our block, but not for us. |
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I had shoes and dresses and they were beautiful, now all I needed was underwear, bras and socks and I would be happy. |
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He might be able to pass the ball through the eye of a needle, but would you like to be beside him in the trenches? |
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The industry has realised that a film would not become a box-office success only on account of the quality factor. |
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Visiting blogs and writing them has facilitated the exploration of topics which would have otherwise been left untouched. |
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That would allow snowbirds and Southeastern race fans to spend three weeks in Florida, migrating from one track to the other. |
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The result of that was a snit by me for a week, and a response by the managing editor to the head office that he would personally edit my work. |
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The ambitious vision then was that this coalition would snowball into one single consolidated unit which would grow into greater strength. |
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These are the unsung heroes of the Trust and I would like to thank them for their unstinting work in the care of others. |
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Or a rearing leg-spinner would be met with a snick that first slip would put down. |
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Hanging bras on a hook in your closet prevents the underwire from getting twisted and pulled, as it would in a dresser drawer. |
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He suggested that in the event of his untimely demise, he would simply prop him up, put some sunglasses on him and keep him in office. |
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The Minerals and Petroleum Resources Department claims an aluminium smelter in WA would be unviable due to high energy costs. |
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When scouting look first in untilled areas where grasshoppers would have laid their eggs last fall. |
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The values represented here are estimates of how the child would have scored on the Snellen scale. |
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My feeling was I would most likely be paralyzed from the shot and not be able to unstrap myself from the seat. |
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Among the many things that drivers would hate about the winter are snowfalls and snowstorms. |
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Its flight and habits resemble a small snipe which a lot of people would be familiar with. |
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Feisty and suitably boyish, Toyah's exuberance would have shamed performers half her age. |
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From there the bullocks would later snig them to Tallow Beach or Byron Bay for loading through the surf onto ships. |
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But nearby residents claim that extra traffic generated would pose a threat to safety. |
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I would now like to share with you friends, another crucial requirement and necessity for our country. |
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A whole winter brooding on the events of August would be unthinkable for such a meticulous mind. |
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Such draconian measures would be almost unthinkable in a democratic system. |
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When she saw the wound she realised she would not be able to take the bradawl out so she called an ambulance. |
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An eighteen inch snood dropped off from the swivel so that the two baits would fish almost in line with one another. |
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I would watch the dark, tanned bodies of fishermen, untangling their seine, getting ready for the toils of the day. |
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With Morecambe Bay just down the road, you would have expected a bracing blast of sea air on a January foray to Flookburgh. |
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It was thought and said by many, not untruly, that the King would not continue a year in government. |
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If you build a cat with an unstayed mast it would be very impractical to put it in the middle. |
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So, you know, to sneak someone onto a cruise ship, that would be almost an impossibility. |
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We would agree to a number of cabs to take up any untaken demand but they have turned it into a free-for-all. |
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Depending on the chemical added to the bacterial broth, the proteins of one gene would effectively be deactivated, disabling that gene. |
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How many food snobs would still be raving about white truffles if they were ubiquitous? |
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A native untravelled Scot would rather be right then rich, whereas many of the best leaders can be both. |
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An easier life-lesson would be greatly appreciated, she thought while sounding a sniff. |
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If there is a sniff of politics in deciding this issue I believe the electoral punishment for that side would be ruthless. |
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Few predicted weeks ago that so many people would turn out to stop the unstoppable, and I was certainly not among them. |
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She wanted to wipe the sweat from her forehead, but would have to let go of her box cutter to do it. |
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After two unsuccessful attempts a doctor would not be able to apply again for restoration. |
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This is undoubtedly the case but without the second world war he would now surely be a tangential figure, a nearly man. |
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However, that would be nearly as impossible as finding a needle in a haystack. |
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She can't stand the heat and would prefer to be somewhere nearer the cool British Isles. |
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However it was found to be geologically unstable and would likely blow itself to ashes in about six cycles. |
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The number of nerve fibres that would need to grow from the eye to the brain in a human is roughly the same, somewhere near a million. |
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Of course she didn't expect to be snuck up on by the one guy she thought she would never see again. |
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I would like to see a box score from the last game of the 1957 season when the Phillies and Brooklyn Dodgers met at Connie Mack Stadium. |
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German renaissance drawings are often enchantingly unstuffy, and frequently treat subjects that would never have been painted. |
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It would be a disaster for the BBC if the government handed the post of chairman to someone who was great, good, but essentially unversed. |
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Later, she would voice her thoughts on other matters, topics best left untouched. |
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By then, I'll assume we would have already had necktie parties for all such scapegoats. |
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In America, her reputation remains no more unsullied than she herself would wish. |
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As a number of facilities are unstaffed self-service units, it's not clear who would stamp the card. |
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I popped a few Vitamin C tablets during the day and hoped the sniffles and sneezing would just go away. |
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People I never would have met were it not for this little old weblog have become my nearest and dearest friends. |
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The risk of entering EMU at an unsustainable exchange rate would increase where a currency had been unstable. |
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In whose interests would it be to have an incomplete or unviable development in Scarborough North Bay? |
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You being you would probably not see what an asinine and unsupportably stupid comment you have made. |
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Two other bidders were sniping, too, but my bid would have been the last one. |
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Hopefully, the Chief Minister would do the needful at the right time, he said, throwing a sideways glance at a smiling Mr. Antony. |
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Yet this one is so poorly made that the mast at sea would have twisted, making the ship unstable and difficult to control. |
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With that experience so fresh in our minds, it would be a shame if the whole sorry episode were to be repeated for broadband. |
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It would be irresponsible to do otherwise or act on unverified reports regarding viral illness in the community. |
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Before the advent of the snowmobile, Ms. McLeod would run in front of the dog sled team in snowshoes to break the snow and clear a path. |
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The pilot unstrapped himself and opened the door for his Taisho, like any good Samurai would. |
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He has been testing a 31-m trapezoidal steel box girder, 2 m deep, that would accommodate seismic displacement. |
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In other words, a sneaky, crafty, deceitful person would take on the form of a snake. |
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Somehow I just knew some gleefully ignorant neckbeard would post that exact comment. |
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People bragged about their impeccable references and newly renovated websites that would maximize their client base. |
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It would be hard to design a more counterproductive, nearsighted foreign policy. |
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Logically, the first tyre to strike the kerb would have been the front nearside tyre of the land Rover. |
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He would have been up to his neck in discussions with the CIA about the bombing, and would have massive inside knowledge about the case. |
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Toby thought maybe he would snowmobile into town today, he wanted to go to Carter and thank him face to face for the last night's movie. |
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Rare bird species, including wading birds such as the curlew, lapwing and snipe, would also be reintroduced to the site under the plans. |
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If you had to check your camera, you likely would have been fresh out of luck on that trip. |
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Her voice was thick with a Scottish brogue, which normally I would find fascinating, if she hadn't seemed like such a haughty snot. |
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Whenever she had the opportunity, she would go down to the water, unstrap her canoe, and paddle out to a likely spot to do some fishing. |
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If it was good enough they would release it as a single in its own right, even if it needed attention from fresh musicians in north London. |
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He was nineteen when his mother died in 1821 and his boyhood experiences would colour his whole prodigious output of novels, poetry and plays. |
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And he had the neck to tell me that if it wasn't for the passengers the railways would be very efficient. |
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His concern was that the website was anonymous and there was the danger that people would queue up to make snide and nasty remarks. |
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A couple of decades ago, such an event happening in England would have been unthinkable. |
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On that basis, any party would have our firm and unswerving support for any measure that fits those two criteria. |
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Open one of her cupboards and you would find tins of food all neatly stacked. |
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Less than a decade ago such adjoining public events would have been unthinkable. |
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I would recommend that all archers, of whatever discipline, should learn to make and serve bowstrings, and set up and fletch arrows. |
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He has never talked to Benjamin about his accomplishments, however, because it would be breaking the rules against bragging. |
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The global delivery options would include both nearshore and offshore activities and by 2005, India would be in the driver's seat. |
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Anna sneaks us onto the tube with her pass, something I would never do when sober. |
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The university would become even more of a sterile, unstimulating environment than it already is. |
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The person you told would snitch, of course, and that's how lessons were learned. |
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Some 800,000 years ago, a compass needle would have pointed south, having previously pointed north. |
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It would take a while to feel comfortable behaving in such a reckless manner as those crazy Neapolitans. |
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Some people felt there would be a need for security cameras if the shop were re-opened. |
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Sometimes the tears would freeze on my eyelids from crying all day in the cold, snowy weather. |
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There are a number of features which are untypical of the way Danielle would express herself. |
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It was an unusual name, and Cornwell had known for years that it would be no hard task to look it up. |
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This would end the current frequent practice of simply allowing a reduced award in cases of exaggeration or partial untruths by claimants. |
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If we'd done that, it would have been untrue to the character and wouldn't have been right for the story. |
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The fact that the story was untrue would not have prevented him from relying on this defence and succeeding in it. |
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The store would be one of only a handful across the country selling shelves, brackets and other DIY items throughout the night. |
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Any, or perhaps many of you ladies would surely be the envy of your friends if you showed up at their next box social with me at your side. |
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The use of real materials is important for a faithful representation of what would be visible through near-infrared night vision goggles. |
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It would be a breach of duty, actionable if followed by damage, to tell her untruly that her child had been burnt. |
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Well, okay, but would the waiter have felt better if I'd snarled at him instead? |
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Part of the banks' original principal would be written off and the remainder would be paid by the issue of new 30-year bonds called Brady bonds. |
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In her naivety, she thought he would always be that untamable boy with no desire to settle down and make a commitment. |
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This was rice, sausage, fresh herbs and broth cooked in the oven as you would prepare paella at home. |
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I mean, it would be great if I could bring everyone with me but I was trying to figure out a way to sniff it out on my own. |
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After doing roles that even junior actors would hesitate to accept, Kamal has chosen the untravelled path in real life too. |
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Our trans-Tasman neighbour New Zealand would seem to be a logical and possibly almost untapped market. |
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We presumed only that they would want students to understand their fields in depth and develop an ability to use ideas in new, untaught contexts. |
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I left it in the middle of his bed knowing that he would know I snooped to find it, but I didn't care. |
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The taco shop would pass to heirs untaxed, just as the vast majority of small businesses do. |
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It also remained unclear what sanctions would be applied to those who ignored the government's call to declare untaxed income. |
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It would have been a great opportunity just to get a sniff, a chance, that you could try and turn in to something much more. |
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However, animal trainers defended the role of the sniffer dog and said a machine would never be able to take over completely. |
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If Christ had been incarnated as a woman, these lessons would have been untaught. |
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Rather than snooping around and trying to retrieve it I thought it would be best to just own up and ask if you've seen it. |
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Walk in with a pretension in your heart or a lift to your snoot and he would expertly deflate you. |
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I imagine that the Minister and her officials would take whatever steps they deemed necessary to deal with the demand. |
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The sixth is that if a man were not a necessary agent he would be ignorant of morality and have no motive to practice it. |
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I thought that I would tell you about some of the more stupid accidents and near misses I've had on motorcycles. |
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He lived near to the University I attended so we planned that I would stop by one afternoon when I had a break at school. |
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If this was making inroads into the problem then many Americans would reluctantly accept this as a necessary evil. |
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I can think of 1,000 things I would rather do with my time, but it's a necessary evil. |
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She made it waterproof so it would float, and then placed her dear baby boy into it. |
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Father and son, the boy would be 8 or 9, he may be 10, we don't know, who cares anyway? |
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Processed to see what his ideal job position would be, Fry is classified as an ideal delivery boy. |
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Now, my son's a Texas boy, and had he found the car, someone would have been boot kicked. |
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Elvis would never have been able get his mouth around all that college boy wordplay. |
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Events, dear boy, events, prevented me posting as much as I would have liked. |
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He said it was unlikely the decision would be reversed in the near future but could take place in the event of agreement on the talks. |
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He further noted that such behaviour would continue to disadvantage other needy families in rural communities. |
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I don't think my views would necessarily be compatible with some of those of my readers. |
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A man would be lewd with, or proposition, or tell an untoward joke toward a female. |
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There are more than a few who would like to be accepted as one of the boys. |
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It was not like if I snuck up on him I could capture him and suddenly he would want to be my dad again. |
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A call to boycott US goods from drink to meals, from cars to sports wear, would hit corporate America where it hurts. |
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His head was leaning back, and every time he breathed a snore would erupt from his nostrils. |
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His academic reputation remains unsullied by deeds that would have seen him fired in any other establishment. |
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The university would like an untenured professor to assume certain responsibilities. |
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We don't have time to teach them every idea, so why would we take the time to teach them untested ideas? |
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Why would it commit so much to an untested product by a penny stock with no track record? |
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You might say that there would be massive epidemics if we let people run around using products that were untested. |
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If you went to a grocery store in suburban Boston, you would think that reaching it required crossing flooded rivers and climbing untracked canyons. |
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And then I would return home to my box room and nagging, broken family. |
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Although she had never threaded a needle in her life, she discovered that she knew exactly how to alter the too-large gowns so that they would fit her tiny frame. |
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Her sell-out concerts are deliberately unstuffy affairs, often played before audiences that would view a night at the opera as a dangerous leap into the cultural unknown. |
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In parting, I asked, if she had to pick one thing about the clubs that had made a lasting impression on her, what it would be. |
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Since Monday the 8th was a holiday, golfers from the Three Sisters gathered at Siam on Tuesday the 9th to see who would be the braggart for the week. |
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If it pans out, this would mark one of the rare occurrences that Galliano participates in a long interview. |
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Destin, located in the panhandle region, has become a prime landing strip for snowbirds who would rather gaze at blue water and white sand than gray buildings and freeways. |
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The Twilight zone would see another incarnation at the dawn of the 21st century, with Forest Whitaker as host. |
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Personally, I must confess to a sneaking admiration for his acumen, if not for his artistic integrity, but I would not attempt to justify his methods. |
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On Sunday evening, news broke that John Galliano would teach a 3-day master-class series at Parsons, The New School for Design. |
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Users of search engines who searched for these terms would find dummy pages listed prominently in their search results that directed them, unsuspectingly, to etoy.com. |
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He would ask after them from a mutual friend, sure, but would he drive across state lines to deliver their wife's baby when the snows had brought down telegraph lines? |
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For a skirt or unstructured jacket, I would soak the fabric in the tub in cool water, and then hang it up to dry over the shower rail, without squeezing it out. |
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Carriages would be forced onto the road, snarling up traffic flows and putting lives at risk, suggested BDS member Sue Hamley, of Ty Rhos, Llanycefn. |
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As it stood only about half a metre proud of the sea's surface, all I could make out was the huge bow wave where common dolphins flanked the whale as they would a ship. |
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He remarked that the Ring Road bus service, which looked worryingly unviable at first, was fast picking up, and would take a lot of pressure off the City's roads. |
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A court has determined, based on the testimony of several witnesses, that her wish would have been to remain unviolated by a feeding tube if she had no hope of recovering. |
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We were warned going in last night that we would face being sniped at, shot at, and sure enough the Marines went along that route and we were hit last night. |
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It was a brief revolt, but it led her to marry the untitled captain and a remarkable insistence that their children Peter and Zara would not receive titles. |
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People would know me from when I was a snotty-nosed young fella. |
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Graham has used his clout to weaken such rules as a 2002 EPA proposal that would have toughened emission standards for snowmobiles and other off-road vehicles. |
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I wish I had, because my dread about being trapped with cruise-ship bozos would have been replaced by a more accurate dread of being trapped with ocean-liner snobs. |
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They would then snick the hammer down and hand it back with a nod. |
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The police spokesman said the vehicle would have been damaged on its nearside front corner at the headlight area and would be missing a wing mirror. |
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Well, that's when the Neanderthals were around in Europe and I'm not sure whether the Aborigines would have got to Australia by then but it was a long time back. |
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He bragged that the course which he claimed to be one of the best in the country, was in good shape and no excuse would be given by any golfer for failing to perform well. |
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When she first started people still dressed for dinner and anyone who presented themselves at reception unshaven or untidily dressed would have been turned away. |
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The RIAA had a click-through license on their Web page, stating that any researchers breaking the technology would have to sign an NDA to claim the prize. |
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That would have been an unsurpassable violin-piano French programme. |
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He could not assume that a reader or critic would grasp the unusualness and special, idiosyncratic effect of his verse merely by observing the words on the page. |
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When she said that, about the girl in my room, I wondered if she was going to tell me the girl was a snot, and would be put in her own room immediately. |
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It was cool and refreshing, just the way she had always dreamed snowmelt would taste in stories of her childhood and the way it assuredly did not taste. |
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Why would he wanna crawl after such an insecure, uptight little snot? |
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Did anyone think that rather than snort coke she would sip cocoa? |
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Since zimmer owns just 3.5 percent of outstanding shares, he would need significant funding for such a move. |
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The world was long ago promised that zimbabwean thug Robert Mugabe would be a great reformer. |
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It was there, in the 1940s, that the young Robert Smithson would first have seen them, on one of his many boyhood visits to what was his favorite museum. |
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Indeed if the sneerers looked hard enough they would see that we are not the only ones that do not define our interests exclusively in regional terms. |
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Runaround's rough-and-ready approach would probably be considered too much for modern audiences, who seem to like their presenters as unthreatening and child-like as possible. |
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It's filled with unsupported assertions, deceptive qualifiers, logical fallacies and rhetorical tricks so cheap they would make a trial lawyer blush. |
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The government was subsequently informed by the ship's captain that the Tampa would not enter Australian waters if medical assistance for necessitous cases were provided. |
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For the assumed boundary, material, and support conditions, the floor system at level two would have been able to support itself over the assumed unsupported area. |
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To involve them in a new set of dangers would have been unthinkable. |
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This approach often finds us pitted between those opposed to regulation in any form and those arguing for what we would consider to be unsupportably onerous restrictions. |
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We all need our confidence building every now and again and it is a sure bet that your nearest and dearest would appreciate a little confidence boost right now. |
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I think this would do untold psychological damage to our children. |
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The few that may have fled from the provinces would have been leaderless since all the provincial officers were bowstrung by the Sultan's prearranged orders. |
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Because they knew that his teachings from the Zohar would be accompanied by music and hand clapping. |
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Yet think of other Scots for whom such a remedy would be unthinkable. |
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It looked ethereal, almost untouchable, and I fingered the silk, let it run between my fingers like water, then folded it up with the rest of my stuff that I would need. |
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Yesterday, my solicitor entered my bed-chamber unsummoned, a presumptuous act for which I once would have had him flayed three times about the court-yard. |
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The Senate Foreign Relations Committee cannot meet without at least one Democrat present, so a unanimous boycott would delay if not torpedo the nomination. |
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Romantic involvement with a news source would create the appearance and probably the reality of partiality. |
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A play area featuring igloos and snow castles is planned where toddlers would be able to build snowmen and throw snowballs and there would also be room for tobogganing. |
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Consequently, untenured assistant professors would follow the lead of their heads of departments and would show low interest in historical research. |
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For Roger Barker it was a near miss he said he would never forget. |
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However, he insisted the EGM would be going ahead in the near future. |
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He would be sleeping on the ground and we would be snoozing in our vehicles next to him and he would get up so quietly that we were not aware that he was moving away. |
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It sounds like something only a sneak would do, but I can't not do it. |
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In summer of 2004, Ari Turner asked me what would happen if I knit them outside in, i.e. by starting with a needleful of stitches and uniformly decreasing. |
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Biology, it seems, is why boys will be boys, and why women would do well to get over it and stop demanding that they learn to talk about their inner landscapes. |
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The pap would be a perfect partner, the administration argued, better than India, Indonesia, or Vietnam. |
|
Then she qualified for the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games, where women hand-cyclists would compete for the first time. |
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In less capable hands these songs would be untenably portentous, but he allows them to breathe with humanity and loads them with some ringer lines to make them likable. |
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Then he held it lightly against the membrane of a yeast cell, so that like a record needle, it would record any movement and translate it into sound. |
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The yeshiva would later threaten to end her education if she refused appointments with Weberman. |
|
The administration would also have to figure out what do with the more than 80 yemeni nationals at Guantanamo. |
|
He said no-one would be forced to approve development on unsuitable areas. |
|
However, my CD drive is broken, and I specifically checked when I ordered that it would be possible to download the necessaries from the internet. |
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But think of corruption today and we would all accept nothing but a zero-tolerance policy. |
|
Maybe I could sneak them the key, but how would I obtain it? |
|
He said the tax, which the Treasurer claims will see two-thirds of clubs pay either no tax or less tax, would also hurt smaller clubs, making them unviable. |
|
I would have to have untaught myself to have learned what I have learned. |
|
But surely it would be easier to switch to a team nearer to home? |
|
It also said it would put more traffic police on patrol, emphasizing the policing of unsafe, untaxed or uninsured vehicles and of unlicensed drivers. |
|
Mom would sneak me into all sorts of contests for kids like me. |
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Even had he the benefit of the scaffolding erected behind Firhill's western end, it is doubtful whether he would have been able to do the needful. |
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If the nation resolved to do all these needful things, by the end of 2005 we would not only be ringing in the New Year but ringing out for joy for the whole nation. |
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The farmhouse was 1600 feet above sea level, so was above the snow line which was at about 1200 feet, and we would have two to three weeks snowed in each winter. |
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That no one under the age of, say, 30 would have any clue what Rudd and Poehler were parodying. |
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We understood some players would not make it, but not nearly all of them. |
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I would like to thank all of them for their unstinting generosity. |
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I would just pay someone to sneak me across the Mexican border. |
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Over half of the remaining prisoners are yemeni, and would presumably be shipped back there. |
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Even into my early teens we'd get the occasional storm that would give us several days of snow and plenty of material for snowball fights and snowmen. |
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If this had been a high-powered business lunch and there was an important meeting to get to, then maybe snideness and rudeness would be called for. |
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Nostalgic pangs aside, it would also be a semi-admittance by LeBron that he made a mistake way back when. |
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The representation was in fact untrue, but its untruth would only be brought home to them if the outgoings not included were reflected in increased levies on them. |
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The original NBC batch of episodes would make a great boxed set. |
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Since the hints and allegations presented thus far are unsupported and in fact untrue, it would be hard indeed to determine their impacts on operations. |
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So one of the biggest errors we saw were when they would interview patients, and the patient would tell them some medical fact that was untrue, and they wouldn't check on it. |
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The figure signed the paper that would be used as evidence against Rimolo and parkin after their arrest. |
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There was no way he wanted to miss the game, his friend managed to get them box seats for the basketball game, and Taylor was the last person who would want to miss that game. |
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Sometimes she would bracket a passage at the beginning and the end. |
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And I would argue unethical, to use those existing rules to force an untried, uninsured experimental technology on the public and the environment of the world. |
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He still has a Quaker-like faith that if only people could hear the truth, untainted by spin, untrivialised by the media, they would begin to see the light. |
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Five years ago we just would not even have sniffed at those awards. |
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The public expectation was that a new Scottish Parliament would be untainted by this freeloading culture and would result in a new era of respect for the public purse. |
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By his code of honor, it would been unsportsmanlike to drop out. |
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My mother would immediately take out a pencil and bracket familiar names. |
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If passed, the draft legislation would essentially make Moscow a pariah economy. |
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And I would see people subtly sniff the air and then their own clothing, not sure whether it was themselves that were smelling slightly off or not. |
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If my mother had just had Huntington's disease diagnosed my request for a prognostic test would be unlikely to be turned down on the basis that the disease is untreatable. |
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He suffered neither fools nor snobs gladly and lost millions creating prototypes of aeroplanes that other companies would benefit from afterwards. |
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We who depend on them for getting to know the literature of other parts of India would rather there weren't untranslated lumps of opacity in the text. |
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My vote for the most untranslatable word would go to nyakaa, a Bengali word that could mean coy, or teasing, or bashful, or suggests fake niceness or phoney innocence. |
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Those who are familiar with the New Testament record of his teachings would admit that the material we possess is unsystematic and sporadic in nature. |
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That would suggest that having to play both roles as a parent influences the brain areas that are engaged in parenting. |
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Her book about parenting, It Takes a Village, would be seen as advocating the end of parental rights. |
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So begins a wholly untraditional murder mystery in which her neighbours on Wisteria Lane try to discover why a seemingly contented woman would do such a ghastly thing. |
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Sometimes the other dorks would let me stand with them, just so that the teachers wouldn't snitch on me to the school psychologist for not having any friends. |
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I sent a message to the list explaining that I'd unsubscribed, and that I would still try to turn up at the odd events, and maybe reappear on the list at some point later. |
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According to the report, findings of the consultant's report Shannon would be unviable as a single entity while Cork would suffer substantial losses. |
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I decided that once I was going phony, I would take the phoniest letter of all. |
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Cartoonists would have a major problem should snobbery and bigotry and phoniness ever die. |
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I'm just mirroring myself on them, of course, and I would say that was it maybe a sense of phoniness. |
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