He lives just down the road from here, so it's easy enough for him to come here and paint. |
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How is it that you come here with clothes and hair still wet at an unseasonable hour? |
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I have come here straight from the dojo with that experience still fresh in my mind. |
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How often I come here depends whether or not I'm in England, but I tend to pitch up like an auditor to see what they're up to. |
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But most of all, people come here to eat. springing up on every corner are sophisticated restaurants serving exquisite food. |
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He told me about how he used to come here every year with his dad to watch fireworks and to light sparklers. |
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And the question is, should we set up a system which encourages people to cut in line in front of millions of others to come here? |
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It's crucial we provide our bullfinches with the wintering feeding resources that will encourage them to come here. |
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On the first and 12 th day of every month in the lunar calendar, many people come here to burn incense. |
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A good few nurses who come here to work have some nursing experience, having nursed in hospitals abroad. |
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And all the time I thought you'd come here to make sure I wasn't going to embarrass the old boy network. |
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Folk come here because they've heard of this exciting experimentation and openness to new ideas and forms. |
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Only these are far larger than any I heard tell of as a boy, and all others who come here from outside say the same. |
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To make that a big show he has asked journalists from all of Britain's newspapers to come here to be stormbound in the Harris Hotel. |
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You don't have to be a millionaire to come here, but if you want to hang out with stroppy supermodels, it probably helps. |
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For somebody with a name and a reputation, it was a gamble to come here and give it everything he's got. |
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It was the first and last glimpse of the subcontinent for millions of colonial servants, and it changes utterly every time I come here. |
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I'm her surrogate mother when her own one's not here and my daughters come here as well now. |
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That's ideal if you come here to switch off, since you enjoy attentive service without any hassle. |
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India was desperately hungry for international cricket in those days, but foreign teams were not keen to come here. |
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Instead of that, you come here now, some three years and more after the decision, seeking to have this Court pass upon it. |
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In the circumstances it is not as though the respondents come here with a slate which is exactly clean. |
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In TV a lot of people who make editorial decisions have never had any cause to come here. |
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There is a real sense of community at this school and there are many families who have had several generations of children come here. |
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That spirit of optimism and courage still beckons people across the world who want to come here. |
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Wembley has a lure all of its own, and many come here on a footballing pilgrimage. |
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That's what I am cumbered with but I have come here to do a job that the people have committed me to do. |
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We have a lot of nice, decent people who come here to drink, and will have nowhere else to go if it is shut. |
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It was full of people who, for two reasons, were desperately ill-equipped to come here. |
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I've seen people come here and be utterly destroyed because they didn't know what they wanted to do. |
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When we were packing up the things to come here, our friends expressed their astonishment at our taking so many of the little elegancies of life. |
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Even those who come here in search of a deserted Elysium might find the town an adequate base, and one from which it is always easy to escape. |
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Rumour has it that eminent politicians come here seeking discretion and peace. |
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There's no need to wait until you are at the end of your tether before you come here. |
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By continuing to assert dishonestly your innocence in the removal of money you have compelled the family to come here and give evidence. |
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Did you come here to see if I was alright or to finish the job of doing me in? |
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I remember that my French dream was to come here, live in a village and go down to the market in my espadrilles to buy lovely produce. |
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Janine, I didn't come here to weigh you down, I never wanted to be a burden. |
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In fact, when people understand why refugees come here the welcome is generally warm and friendly. |
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Romans didn't so much come here to bathe in the natural spring waters as to wash their hands and face. |
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So it is a bit odd that the nations choose to come here for a jolly festival of running, jumping and splashing about. |
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No one knows the total number, but upwards of 2000 Afghans fleeing the bombs and missiles raining down inside their country have come here. |
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But we hadn't come here in quest of glitter and razzmatazz and we had looked forward to seeing an older Bastar. |
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But once unlicenced ones know they can come here and operate without any hassle word gets around. |
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Queen Victoria's ladies-in-waiting used to come here, in fact the Mayfair club has been entertaining London society since. |
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They don't see the truth because they come here to impose their religion's power. |
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In the last three weeks, up to 25 drug users have come here every night to shoot heroin and cocaine into their veins. |
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Patients come here for pain control and symptom control, for respite care and for terminal care. |
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To the learned elders and the people who have come here today, I thank them very much. |
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They come here every year and spend two weeks at Inverey enjoying the hills and the birds and feeding hostellers with rock cakes. |
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Even so, what marks the dive is the feeling that every fish for miles around has come here to enjoy the current. |
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Besides the regulars, there are some who come here to relax especially after a hard day. |
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Seeking an oasis from daily cares and worries, they come here for camaraderie, a common cause and simply to find a treasure for a bargain. |
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Now its good we can come here for an afternoon rather than be stuck indoors or in the garden. |
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It seems strange that she might come here and stare at the blank space where she is later to be memorialized. |
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These foreigners come here, drop notes of assignation into sentries' top-boots, pin fivers on to guardsmen's bearskins. |
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I mean, obviously, Flak is a magazine that publishes a lot of criticism, and I didn't come here to micturate upon their rug. |
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I think that's because the good teams often come here and shut up shop so we have to cope with that. |
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Thirty thousand shoppers come here weekly in search of everything from green tea and tsukemono to paper lanterns. |
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These developers might think they can just come here and throw their money around and walk all over us. |
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If I didn't come here in the night, I'd be sitting around at home, twiddling my thumbs and thinking about going to a real bar. |
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Still to come here, a sheriff's deputy shot and killed an unarmed man in Georgia more than two months ago. |
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If you're looking for a place to drink ale and not sissy drinks, come here. |
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I have irrefutable proof that they don't come here to work, they come here to bludge. |
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If you have come here merely to boast, to be uncivil, and to play on my pride, you insufferable boy, then you had better leave. |
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Thank you, thank you for letting us come here and skivvy for you 12 hours a day for less than a fiver an hour. |
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They made tables and seats for the ladies, and they often come here and play bingo while the men are playing bocce. |
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I cannot believe you would come here uninvited and act like this around the baby! |
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The birds come here because food, shelter and protection are assured here. |
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She swore up and down that she never would come here, that it was too much of a mess for her to drive all the way from Queens and back in midday traffic. |
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They have come here in unprecedented numbers, which we believe has happened while they were travelling through strong north-westerly winds between Orkney and Iceland. |
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You shouldn't come here merely to revel in birthdays and anniversaries but to focus on and swoon over dishes like sweetbreads en cocotte with ginger and licorice. |
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I had come here more than a few decades ago to participate in the Goa Liberation Struggle, which saw the sun set on this last enclave of colonial rule in India. |
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All we want is a bath seat, so my sister and I can bath her, and, instead of Mum having to go to the hospital, I want the district nurse to come here. |
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I usually have the calves' liver when I come here, it's very good. |
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I think people from India feel rootless when they come here. |
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Libraries are not silent, stuffy places where the staff are ogres, they are places for the whole community and we want as many people as possible to come here. |
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From what I understand she was born in India and didn't come here until she was 14, so even at a stretch we cannot claim she was Scottish born and bred. |
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In fact, he actually preferred to come here when he needed inspiration for his poetry or to work out the kinks in the courtships he was helping along. |
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That is a discourtesy to the Tribunal and it is also a great inconvenience to the Respondents who have come here today prepared to deal with the case at length. |
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They come here to hear calypso and eat pelau, callaloo, roti and dasheen. |
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Its also become a little touristy, and I think only more and more tourist will want to come here as the rest of Cape Town's tourist industry commercializes. |
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Although they have studied English for four years, one of the biggest problems they face when they come here is just getting used to our accents and our colloquialisms. |
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Students come here to eat, drink and take a break from school work. |
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It serves small plates like cheese, charcuterie, and sandwiches, but most come here for the impressive wine selection. |
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Many may of course just dismiss Mike as yet another farang who has come here to retire, and reinvent himself, like a Walter Mitty, as the character of his fanciful dreams. |
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Today is Tripitaka ceremony and everybody all around the world, I believe, has come here to celebrate. |
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If Ireland is to have domestic legislation for Irish affairs they cannot come here for English or Scottish affairs. |
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A materteral lady told me that people come here from the city in search of peace. |
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Around the city are many small shantytowns that cling to the mountainsides, populated by migrants who have come here looking for work. |
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Many of the best, the professionals, come here to go fish Paulina Lake or Wickiup Reservoir, both are located just south of Bend. |
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They come here to seek the red berries of hawthorns, cotoneasters and pyracanthas. |
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They've invested millions in the country and they havent come here just to leave the next day. |
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You've got to prove that I'm a dumbass punk, and you've got to come here and do it now. |
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Please come here for a minute. I want to show you something. |
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We don't want Barclays to fly the coop like other firms given good money to come here. |
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But the real speciality and the reason Trish has come here is to see them making their famous fougasse. |
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Certain people have come here in the past and they were showboaters, it didn't click and didn't work. |
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The Fat Cat closing has seen more people come here but it is a shame because it was part of the circuit up here. |
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I suppose you think I come here to beg from you, like this damaged lot here. Not me. I don't want your bread and scrape and catlap. |
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I've come here for a bit of a kick up the jacksy and hoping that, with someone's beady eye scrutinizing my frame, I'll resemble Kate Moss within a week. |
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My job was to wash and dry the empty bottles, but this was not for me so I went to see the labour officer and told him I did not come here to wash bottles. |
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I believe that people from the mainland come here to take them as slaves. |
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When they come here, I try to make them feel at home away from home. |
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