She'd never been anything but rude and ignorant to Josie, knowing Josie was but an orphan. |
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Mrs. Bennet is in such an ill humor that she is rude to the Lucases and Mr. Collins when he returns. |
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Many are nursing painful losses and are likely to give a fairly rude response when asked to support the next foreign Aim float. |
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They can ask us the most impertinent or rude questions but, obviously, we cannot ask, hint at or even think about anything approaching the same. |
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The waiter was brusque to the point of being rude and impertinent, messed up the orders and was not particularly responsive. |
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I suppose you think I'm rude and impertinent, barging in here and insisting I knew you. |
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I knew it was rude and impolite but I was too distressed to be thinking of manners. |
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He was rude and arrogant and completely impolite and I hope I never have to see him ever again. |
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Anyhow, after being just as rude to him, as he to me, he seems to be completely incapable of speech. |
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David muttered something incoherent and rude and scrambled to his feet, fumbling for the sword. |
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By the time Delilah weaseled the secret of his strength out of him, Samson seemed ripe for a rude comeuppance. |
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It was very rude and inconsiderate to assume such a thing about a person's parent. |
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There are signs of improvement, but only an incurable optimist would conclude that the game is in rude health. |
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But when someone is rude or obnoxious or singles Brenda out in company then she can find it a little harder to take. |
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This shows how Kate has a mistaken identity because she appears rude and insolent. |
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Why does she treat me like I am a spoilt child who is rude and insolent even when I am quite clearly not? |
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The very stylish decor and layout could unfortunately not make up for the very expensive bar prices and the rude and insolent staff. |
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Despite your best attempts to put the pity party to rest, that lousy feeling sticks around like a rude guest. |
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It was a rude reminder of all the reasons I cycle instead of taking public transport. |
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But it does demonstrate that the vast media conglomerates looking to take over the online music market are in rude health. |
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Both Andrea and I have been in filthy moods, and spent the whole day reading rude remarks into everything people say. |
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Not only was he rude for declining the invitation, but his reason for declining was insulting to the host. |
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However intemperate, rude and fatuous Ken's outburst might have been, it was not racist. |
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It was a rude awakening for me when you mentioned the threat of of the Internet becoming a one way medium. |
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But if I'm not invisible then all those people who completely ignore me must just be very rude indeed. |
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It has asked for phone records to prove that Beckham sent rude text messages, as well as contracts and travel itineraries. |
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I was too busy tugging my forelock to pull her up on it, I really hate being rude to nice people. |
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And if some heartless creep makes rude remarks that hurt your friend, you are not responsible for his actions. |
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How do we know he didn't say something crude or rude or vaguely threatening to the woman before she swung at him? |
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It's pretty much considered rude to drive on the wrong side, and that kind of translates to sidewalks, malls, and cube farms. |
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To show that they were not rude curanderos, their events were organized in fancy downtown hotels. |
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By midway through the half United were in rude enough health, the only dampener on their day being that miss by Crawford. |
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The soldiers would mumble rude things at us under their breath, so we learned to be deaf to them, or pretend to be. |
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She acts sweet, kind and nice on the outside, but inside she's as rude and presumptuous as I am. |
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Glaring after the departing man, Cael flicked a rude gesture in his direction. |
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It gives rise to verbal provocations such as yelling and cursing, excessive honking of the horn, rude or obscene gestures and threats. |
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I devoured this book guiltily one weekend when I was a rather rude houseguest. |
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I have often met your older sister and found her to be rude obnoxious and generally disagreeable. |
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Blowing smoke across a room is not much different and the grossly discourteous and rude habit in which smokers engaged was awful. |
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He said the serious disagreement between the two countries should not permit discourteous or rude behavior. |
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The menu was the usual long list of things that sound rude and which you can't remember whether you just dislike or really loathe. |
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This handy guide to Modern Courtesy says your behaviour is excessively rude if you sneeze at someone or at a valuable object. |
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Most people are either aloof or rude and fiercely supsicious of and competitive towards other exhibitors. |
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When did our leaders become so gauche, impolite, rude and downright insensitive? |
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He also had dripped cold water into our ears as we slept causing a rude awakening. |
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It is now routine for London Underground stations, railway stations and hospital waiting rooms to have signs warning us not to be rude to staff. |
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I suppose we have both been abominably rude to each other by eavesdropping. |
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Most patients were content with their care, the determining feature of discontent being a doctor seen as rude, abrupt, or unsympathetic. |
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He was never rude or abrupt, but he was one of those guys who tended to his business and left everyone else to theirs. |
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It can make us rude, abrupt and impatient, but it can also inspire us to tremendous courage, bravery and leadership. |
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This is what people have thought about Martha Stewart, that she is rude, abrupt, and abrasive. |
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She was often mean and rude and abrupt, but, then again, most people were at some point. |
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But they're rude, they're abrupt, and they act like little tin Hitlers, lording it over their domain. |
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Many of the e-mails that I receive are written in an extremely rude and abrupt tone. |
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Even with a woman who clearly loves him, he is rude and brusque, abruptly rejecting any sort of overture that may lead to self-disclosure. |
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And each one was rude or stubborn or had some irritating habit that drove him up the wall. |
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It should be borne in mind that words or behaviour may be annoying or rude without being necessarily abusive or insulting. |
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When we were boys Mum told my brothers and I not to use rude words or she'd wash our mouths out with soap. |
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The feature was also loaded with racy photos and a variety of rude quotations. |
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It would have been rude if I had turned round and said something, well, rude. |
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Others may well be shocked or slightly sickened by the film's determination to be as filthy rude as possible on the way to raising a laugh. |
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It was rude of me and you were just being a good friend and I had no right to just jump down your throat like that. |
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You don't have to read this, you rapscallions, and you can always try writing rude words in the comments section if you want to. |
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At that moment Abby sat on the whoopee cushion and let out an enormous, rude noise. |
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Just when you think you ken everything there is to ken about living in Scotland, you get a rude awakening. |
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I suppose there are the blogs that are very rude and offensive with no redress for the aggrieved party. |
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He handled some predictably hostile and downright rude remarks with very solid rebuttals and a refusal to take insults. |
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Pretty rude, I think, so to clarify my intent I give a cheeky wink and nodding-back-a-pint gesture. |
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The trio presented witty, rude, clever songs, mostly delivered at a ferocious pace. |
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I think such kiss-and-tell books are mighty rude, but I'd be pretty troubled by their being suppressed by the legal system. |
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Kayla quickly recovered herself and realized she was being rude to someone who had just saved her life. |
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We started off on the wrong foot, and now she has a lot of attitude and is rude and mean. |
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I was wondering whether it is considered polite or rude to speak in a different language with someone in front of others. |
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He's a bit stuck up and rude to everyone, but to the working girls he is very charming. |
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Who was the girl who, after being rude to all and sundry, got very drunk at a recent press event? |
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All of a sudden the kind of behaviour that would have been typical in old New York seemed rude and inappropriate. |
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He extravagantly wined and dined us and constantly pestered us with her submissions despite our rude photocopied rejection slips. |
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Mobile phones are a wonder of modern technology, yet it is amazing how rude they can make people. |
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The word also means that rude gesture with the fist clenched and lower arm raised mimicking another part of the anatomy. |
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Jake was about to retort with a very rude comment when pain flared up through his body, causing him to cry out. |
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But anyone who hasn't looked at Lego toys since his or her own childhood is in for a rude shock. |
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It is a place where people are rude and in a hurry and don't know how to be civil to one another. |
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I have repeatedly had cars flashing their lights at me or hooting their horns and giving very rude gestures. |
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I find it rude when someone lights up during a meal, they could simply walk outside or wait till the meal is finished. |
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How rude and unprofessional! I was so mad, I called them out and roared them up. |
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It is such short notice and it is awfully rude of me to inform you of this just now. |
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I suppose it would be rude of me to let them part without words passing between us. |
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If Cate believed in something strongly enough to confront me about it, it would be rude of me not to consider it fairly. |
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I have also learned from other patients that it was not the first time the receptionist had been rude to patients. |
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It would have been rude to refuse the offer, even though the bar's whiskey would undoubtedly fall short of his usual standards. |
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When I was in his class two years ago he was always very rude to me and he has also been rude to me over the Internet. |
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Noise, drunkenness, bad manners, rude and discourteous conduct and reckless driving will all raise their ugly heads, whatever we do. |
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How rude of me, rambling on about my brother when you don't even know my name! |
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It may have been rude of me to ask, but because of reasons of my own, I had to know. |
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Advertisers of pornographic content are prohibited from using rude words in the subject line of sexually explicit images. |
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But then I glanced behind me and saw her making rude hand gestures at my back. |
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As the owner banged on the window, one of the thieves hot-wired the car, whilst the other made a rude gesture. |
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I was once on a crowded Muni bus, wherein someone made a loud, rude, and embarrassing sound. |
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Expect lots of rude jokes, political provocation, and more than a few references that would offend if they weren't so funny. |
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Unfortunately, rude gestures also create the impression that other anti-social behaviours are somehow acceptable. |
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A couple, as well as a family of six, were subjected to these rude actions and many onlookers were shocked and disgusted at what they witnessed. |
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He made a number of rude gestures in their direction and shouted obscenities at them. |
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West pulled faces and made rude gestures at the press as he stood in the dock. |
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David drove insanely fast, flying by honking cars, rude gestures and angry cries from various drivers on the road. |
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But when the woman, who was in in her 20s, returned she verbally abused Ms Young, made rude gestures at her and then drove off. |
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Senior staff, classroom teachers, governors and parents have all had a rude awakening since James' arrival, me included. |
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A three-year courtship enabled them to paint realistic portraits of one another, lessening the chances of a rude awakening after marriage. |
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The sharp downturn in the US economy has brought a rude awakening to many in the IT sector. |
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But the dream, like all others, became harsh reality with a rude awakening. |
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For the intellectuals and the urban lower middle class, the new situation was a rude awakening of disillusionment and broken promises. |
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Delude ourselves into that kind of thinking however and a rude awakening will await us. |
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But after their stay in that sun-kissed paradise they got a rude awakening on heading out into the Atlantic, which was to prove stormy and rough. |
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After a summer of doing just about anything on your own time, the alarm bell announcing the first day of school can be a rude awakening. |
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But we were in for a rude awakening when a savage thunder and lightning storm struck right over the stadium during the match. |
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This rude awakening came from underestimating the non-designer's understanding of design principals. |
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The horse has bounced back to rude health lately, winning at Ayr and Pontefract in the style of a rejuvenated character. |
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Contrary to the doleful prophecies of superannuated Jeremiahs, pop is in rude health. |
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Despite what major label accountants would have you believe, rock 'n' roll is in a state of rude health at the moment. |
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The five-year-old is in rude health at present, as she showed when scoring handsomely at Ayr on her latest start. |
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This year has found the pop group in rude health, building on the momentum of their self-titled debut album selling 270,000 copies. |
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The vast media conglomerates looking to take over the online music market are in rude health. |
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For the moment, however, Wood is in rude health and enjoying a tour he sees as a precursor to greater things ahead. |
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He is in such rude health at present that it is difficult to ignore his claims. |
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Mehmet steals a truck and sets out on the road with Berzan's rude coffin in the back. |
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He seemed rude and rough like a devil on the outside, but I guess he was a real angel in the inside. |
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Pick up a newspaper and it's all rappers and rude boys toting guns and tooting coke. |
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The ska lads had emerged from Coventry the year before, rude boys all, and had yet to be eclipsed by their labelmates. |
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Our pagan ancestors had a wild and boozy time presided over by the Lord of Misrule, who got up to rude and mischievous pranks. |
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To some, the music is rude, low-class, and blatantly sexual and so could not possibly play any part in improving anyone's life. |
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I mean it doesn't mean that I want to be rude, it's not that, it's just that you go to certain spaces that are taboo. |
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Unlike the scenes in the movie Pretty Woman I have never run in to rude or snooty sales clerks. |
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She didn't realize how rude the statement sounded until it was too late to take it back. |
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Maybe old Etonian James will bring his father round to seeing the value of theatre that is radical, critical, foul-mouthed and rude. |
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He talks people down, stretches the truth, ignores or denies uncomfortable facts, is blatantly rude to anyone to questions him. |
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He adds that primary one, with its desks and pencils, can come as a rude awakening to children used to playing with sand, water and paint. |
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This is a sample of what I have received, it is in a way a rude awakening to me of the attitudes that some people in the West hold. |
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Should my credit card ever be compromised, though, the thief would be in for a rude awakening as my credit limit is pretty low. |
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It's a jolt, a rude awakening, trying to exist without light or water in the home when they are taken away suddenly. |
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I am getting a rude awakening to the Conference League and some of the frightening decisions that are made in it. |
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This was a rude awakening to many, because that was certainly not the traditional function of a journalist. |
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But sometimes it can be a rude awakening for students who think of spirituality as a palliative, a pill, or a magic healer of emotional ills. |
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But anyone expecting softcore liberal humanism is bound to get a rude awakening. |
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When people are sarcastic or rude, it just says that that's how they feel about themselves. |
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The waitress didn't know a difference between Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay and the manager was cocky and rude. |
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I'm sorry people are being rude about all this but these people need to man up and realize that they are going to take some heat. |
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To be rude, I hate the nurse more then any teacher in the whole entire school. |
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It makes me really sad to see how irresponsible, rude and bad-mannered many seem to be. |
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Despite my rude disappointment as a child, I turned out a balanced person with realistic expectations. |
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Small things amuse small minds, she says, scornful of the rude slapstick humor they practice. |
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Several campers are surprisingly rude and testy when you attempt to engage them in conversation. |
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The teenager sitting in front of us on the way out was so rude, I was ready to give him a thick ear myself. |
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Someone will twist an ankle, fall to the heat, double fault at match point, be rude to an opponent, hit a shot we promise ourselves cannot exist. |
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Were these attendees fostered by their educators to be intolerant, hateful, and rude? |
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I explained I had tried to buy a ticket but the inspector was very rude and told me to get off. |
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Then there's the bad, bad kind, where one is blatantly rude, pompous and self-righteous about what they do not know. |
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Also I think it is so rude to be in a shop and being served whilst having a chat on the phone. |
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It seems rude not to turn up, especially if only a few people are attending and your absence will be noted. |
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This year has found The Coral in rude health, building on the momentum of their self-titled debut album selling 270,000 copies. |
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At the large tables, the servers plunked down, with rude haste, one bowl of rice in the middle of each table. |
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Seldom have we witnessed a more shameless display of rude and vulgar behavior towards an invited guest. |
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Anne gasped at such a rude phrase, but before she could chase after him in a fury, a soberly clad, bewigged gentleman approached her friend. |
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It had never occurred to Gwyn that one person could be so rude and disagreeable. |
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Verbal aggression, insulting and rude behaviour, disregard for the rights of others, petty thieving and shoddy work were the norms. |
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You don't like to ignore her because that would be rude and, after all, it's not exactly a trick question. |
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It was just a touch on the rude side but it made me laugh until my toes curled. |
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I had a blast at the party, meeting with and flirting outrageously with all the lovely men there, but not in a rude way. |
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The clerks, as usual, were full of rude health, chatting with blithe disregard. |
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To top it all off the staff members were unaccommodating to the point of being rude and unnecessarily shifted passengers around mid-journey. |
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I turn to my honourable friend behind me, whom I was quite rude to, and I am not normally rude. |
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It would have been rude not to have eaten one, and I've ended up bringing my unbuttered bagel home with me this evening. |
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He has been uncooperative, unhelpful, and particularly rude to teaching staff. |
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People in many other cultures view this insistence on getting to the point as rude and uncultured. |
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Nobody in an institution such as the EIB is so rude as to speak undiplomatically about one of its Board of Governors. |
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Some people say rude guests eat you out of house and home, but they never mention the hijacking of candles. |
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I've never met such a snobbish, selfish, unfriendly, rude lot in all my life. |
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What he didn't expect was ungratefulness from a rude little sixteen year old. |
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But it would be rude of you and you'd deserve those dirty looks if you blew your nose loudly and sloppily right next to someone. |
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If this was just a joke on his part then I apologize, but it came off rude and boorish. |
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She never tried to hide her feelings, but isn't so rude or so brutally honest you feel like bopping her on her head. |
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But then, of course, we all know that Miss Robinson is a very unpleasant rude woman. |
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It was used to greatest effect when it makes the actors say rude or naughty things. |
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There's an awful lot of rude words in it, a lot of swearing, a lot of naughtiness. |
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They're snails when it comes to service. They don't greet you at all and it's just a rude place. |
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She'd been rude and snappish, but Seth had a couple of times glimpsed a softer side, he'd thought. |
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For 23 years, she had tolerated the raised eyebrows, the rude snickers, the outright guffaws. |
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She's cute, she's rude and she's a brainbox and a manic obsessive, that makes her an interesting and real babe. |
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Former staff describe a rude breadhead who siphons off the profits rather than paying his team their worth. |
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People who were supposed to be providing services could be breathtakingly rude to the customers they were meant to be serving. |
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The place had a uniformed commissionaire, a dress circle and rude behaviour was ruthlessly stamped out by frightening torch-wielding usherettes. |
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She was aware that she was on the brink, dangerously close to being rude to this respected Elder. |
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So even when she was rude or brusque with me I tried to be as polite as I could, knowing that there were reasons behind her attitude. |
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I think it's probably true that a lot of non-believers are rude about religion. |
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Picnics cry out for rude plenty, the cheap and cheerful bottles that are able, above all, to withstand a hot or bumpy journey. |
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There is no question that personal attacks should be removed, but what about rude or vulgar comments? |
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Our engineers were fooling about in the studio singing vulgar songs and making rude remarks in front of the microphone. |
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At its mildest, the consequence is vulgar language and rude behavior that diminish the quality of our day-to-day public interactions. |
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My mind kept flashing certain rude vulgarities I'd have loved to shout in his face, so I couldn't sleep again. |
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This manuscript is written in a bold hand, with black ink, and is illuminated with rude portraits of the Evangelists. |
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As well as showing him the card, the Argentinian ref makes a rude hand gesture. |
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Would you like to be caught reading a trashy novel that falls open at the rude bits? |
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People believe that directness is rude and use a variety of euphemisms and hedges to avoid it. |
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We walked across the street together with Kendall, who kept giving the cheerleaders extremely rude looks. |
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Personally, I agree that it's rude to leave cell phones and pagers on during meetings or seminars. |
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As he swaggers into the Citizens' Theatre, the 24-year-old is in personal and professional rude health. |
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It is not rude to stare or for persons to crowd one another at counters or stand very close. |
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So often in that wild weekend the questions were rude and ignorant, focusing as they did on the Fab Four's coiffure. |
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Would it be too rude to suggest perhaps some of these poor grades were all they deserved? |
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This is a well sequenced selection of top quality grooves that takes the pulse of 21st century African roots music and finds it to be in surprisingly rude health. |
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It was quite rude and ill-mannered of you to make them wait on you. |
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If the cost of repairing the damage could be laid squarely at the door of those people, it would be a rude awakening and remind them of their parental responsibilities. |
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He exudes rude health while all around are testimony to the effects of a parlous lifestyle and an indiscriminate diet of deep fries and alcoholic immoderation. |
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The court was utterly speechless, they were aghast at her rude behavior. |
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But then I looked at him there with the wifey and kiddies, looking all happy and ordinary eating their lunch and I thought how rude it would be for me to take their picture. |
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In the early spring of 1762 Hazen joined the pioneers with a party of settlers who built a primitive sawmill and gristmill and constructed rude shelters. |
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Well let's just say the happy couple is about to get a rude awakening. |
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If my service is rude or inattentive, I start subtracting from the tip. |
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When Winston Foster first hit the scene in the '80s, he seemed adamant on overshadowing his albino features with rude boasts about his sexual prowess. |
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She's rude, insensitive, and quite possibly mad as a hatter. |
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The presence of the rude mechanicals who put on a play for their duke gives the audience a comical but telling image of theatre as a vital form of social exchange. |
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At the touch of a button on a special panel, visitors can activate the speaking exhibit and decide how rude they want the award-winning TV presenter to be. |
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Simon Cowell has got a lot of mileage out of being rude to bad singers. |
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It has been a singularly rude awakening for France and the country has embarked on a deep, soul-searching, introspection on how things could have gone so horribly wrong. |
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It's not so much that they are lairy or rude or stare at people, they just tend to be a bit loud when hammered and some people tend to take exception to that. |
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This was the moment two suspected car thieves received a rude awakening. |
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The wife got herself a rude awakening to the fact that the times have changed, and that some good food and a good heart don't get you anywhere any longer. |
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A big jump in new database license sales shows a company in rude health. |
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It is tempting to refuse to answer those who have nothing to contribute but rude remarks, insults, and attempts to accuse others of things never said. |
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There are a few idle sketches, including a rude caricature of a Roman legionnaire, but as you advance you begin to see signs of pre-historic painting along the walls. |
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There is of course much outrage over this intemperate and rude question. |
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He was rude and antagonistic to my friends, kept picking arguments and was often deliberately provocative, manipulating people into tense arguments. |
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But in one part of Yorkshire, it seems the role of Mayor has become a poisoned chalice, which leaves the incumbent at the mercy of rude and disrespectful councillors. |
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I find the only way to challenge the chauvinism, sexism, sexual innuendo and macho posturing there, is to be more rude and more graphic than the guys. |
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They'd forgotten what it was like to run industrial campaigns, and the new, more deregulated system of enterprise bargaining would prove a rude awakening. |
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But if I could live in an economy where everyone had the privilege to be rude rather than the obligation to fake it, I would. |
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Riders riding big bikes are presumed to be rough, rude and bullies. |
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Sue Smith is another trainer who has her horses in rude health. |
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The cultivated reader is shouted down by his big rude pictures. |
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She was also notorious for her rude comments and rigid opinions on style. |
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In fact, we see plenty of evidence to support the idea that the TV and radio broadcast model is in rude health, and is becoming more highly valued than ever. |
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She's lippy and rude, and she's obsessed with breaking all my rules. |
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Having been brought up hearing nothing about wharfies save how they loafed around in the intervals between striking and stealing cargo, I got a rude shock when the task began. |
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Nor were the escorts there to admonish me for asking a rude question of the partying faithful, or to protect the paying customers from the prying media. |
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She smiled at him gently and he made a very rude gesture to her. |
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It was rather rude of me to try and force your emotions out of you. |
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If this can be done, the rampart which the constitution has built up to secure the hearthstone from rude intrusion, is an effectual defense no longer. |
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She instantly felt guilty for the times she had been rude to him. |
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But investor confidence is not in rude health, and companies that are not whiter than white in their accountancy practices are being downgraded by the market. |
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I know it was rude of me to interrupt you while you were speaking. |
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They quickly stopped their quiet conversation, oblivious to how outrageously rude and discourteous it was, and turned to him, taking in what he had just said. |
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Anyone who assumed the history of blacks in Canada was infinitely less repressive than the American equivalent is in for a rude awakening after seeing Journey to Justice. |
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Ten years on, and the footballer's in rude health and definitely on form. |
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He was rude to her and she replied with an equally vigorous riposte. |
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I was in for a rude awakening to this fact not too long ago. |
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It was rude of them to talk and leave him just standing there. |
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They frighten a few people, are rude to bystanders and astonish a cleaning lady. |
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They're not actually rude or deliberately slack, just dubiously competent. |
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As she hurried over the long crossing of Canal street, and threaded her way between the hacks that had already taken their station, she felt the rude eyes, and ruder sneers were upon her. |
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Here are some tips for handling rude or abusive types. |
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He lived by a gentlemen's agreement to ignore what was base or rude. |
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What if she was a monster, rude and abrasive like some other girls I knew? |
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But for anyone who dreamed that Benedict had mellowed with age, the decision to hang the LCWR out to dry is a rude awakening. |
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You were rude to him, and I do think you mistook his motives. |
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I think it is totally unappreciative and rude to do the above. |
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While we were waiting another extremely mouthy, rude buxom woman in her late 30s to 40s, who also knew the driver of the car, came along and gave us disgusting verbal abuse. |
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He shared her unconventional love of rude words and dirty jokes. |
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That thought of being so scared and undeceived, strangely shuddering with doubt gave her a rude awakening to something she never had experienced before. |
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He stayed away from the gym for a while and came back transformed, abrasive and rude when he had once been polite and respectful. |
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The Turfers are freakish, passionate, half-baked, dignified, defiant, rude, anarchistic, but they are not Republicans. |
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If you are nasty, rude or don't follow the rules you can also get flamed. |
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In the past I would have cringed at calling someone something so inhuman, but I hadn't met anyone as nasty and rude as Christine before, so the name was justified. |
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The attendant could have informed me that, sorry, store policy didn't allow men in the dressing rooms, without the rude look or the nasty comments. |
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The pantheon of Sediuk pranks ranges from sneakily clever to blatantly rude. |
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Or else there are those, like me, who refuse to be so rude as to inconvenience the passengers behind us. |
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He knew that he had been rude to her, but it wasn't really on purpose. |
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America's Blink 182 are rude and foulmouthed and loutish, but still entirely unthreatening and immaculately tailored to appeal to a teen audience. |
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Bob Woodhouse, who trains at Welburn near Malton, has his horses in rude health at present and a double could come his way from two of his recent winners. |
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Communist-era clerks were famously rude and indifferent, because they had no motive to make people happy. |
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Whilst Charlton's finances are in rude health, matters on the field took a turn for the worse as they were beaten by a Crystal Palace reserve side. |
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Because the question was so kindly expressed, it took her several moments to realize that this was the rude question that he had asked at her bidding. |
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A long, drawn out, boring evening with terribly rude and abrupt service. |
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If he cuts off a woman repeatedly, he comes across as rude or, worse, piggish. |
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You know, news summaries scrawled with demands to have the Revenue set on reporters who said rude things about his nibs, enemies under the beds and loading up on lawyers. |
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I think she got a rude shock when I did nothing of the sort. |
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Both knew their civilization was headed for a rude awakening soon. |
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On inquiry, the establishment explained that they are indeed sorry for being rude but that there are a lot of problems with under-age drinkers demanding alcohol. |
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Apparently, Minaj received a slew of offensive tweets and rude Instagram comments in response to the racy image. |
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Whether you are talking to a bank teller or visiting a friend, it is considered rude not to engage in a proper greeting before getting down to business. |
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They believe that a crackdown by the Metropolitan Police and British Transport Police has displaced London gangs of so-called grungers and rude boys to Chelmsford. |
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Suits modeled on those of the Jamaican rude boys were often worn in the evening, but day or night, the skinhead look was hard, masculine, and working-class. |
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His apparent absorption in his own thoughts borders on the rude. |
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In the Campo Raffaele, this visitor to Venice watched from her apartment a procession of children singing and blowing tin trumpets and squeakers like rude tongues. |
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They are rude and they squeal things, especially when Hay is speaking. |
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Yeah, that might sound totally rude of me to say, but hello! |
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We learnt the hard way that being rude to colleagues is no way to behave. |
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There was more adverse publicity when the actor was accused of being insufferably rude to a television reporter as she waylaid him with her camera team. |
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The rude coat-check lady gives you a mask to wear over your face, and then you are sent down some stairs. |
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Though it would be nice if they could do it without being peppered by a bunch of rude questions from Larry King. |
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But when Francis visits the Holy Land this weekend, he may be in for a rude awakening. |
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But the many earnest fiscal conservatives are in for a rude awakening if Romney and Ryan win. |
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Pupils at Bwacha High school in Kabwe yesterday demonstrated, demanding the removal of their head teacher whom they accused of being rude and insensitive to their needs. |
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