The comedown was horrible because I wanted to sleep and instead I had to be running around doing errands. |
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That is a comedown for Bangalore's development portal which was headed by a core team of professionals and eminent citizens. |
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It was quite a comedown for a former super star with 446 career major league home runs. |
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On Dig Your Own Hole, Beth Orton's looping lament to wasted comedown mornings gradually elided into one of that record's most assertive beats. |
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Subtlety has never been a trademark of the Internet, so don't expect its comedown to be any less tasteful or underscored than its ascension. |
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This is a sad comedown for the man who was once the most important figure in the comic book industry. |
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Part-time football may seem a comedown, but he insists he has never enjoyed his football as much. |
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There was a real comedown as a result of our chances being over-hyped, though. |
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In an attempt to postpone the comedown indefinitely, some people become addicts, taking the drug continuously to maintain a permanent high. |
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For someone who was one of the nation's top TV presenters, the chance to appear in the reality show represents a significant comedown. |
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They like the hit it gives them, but the comedown is really heavy so then they take some smack to get through it. |
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The opening triumvirate is as strong as any string of songs he's written, and the wistful finality of the sweetly cathartic title track foreshadows a disappointing comedown. |
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The long-run prospects for most emerging economies are not awful. I worry, however, about the comedown from the highs of the past 15 years. |
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What a comedown from the great philosophical tradition, from Aristotle to Kant! |
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After the hectic year in hospital it was a great comedown to be treating minor ailments of fit young men, half of them anxious to avoid guard duties. |
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It's a big comedown in one sense, a remarkable comeback in another. |
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Is it a comedown to take a trip that doesn't set any records? |
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For some of the non-American workers who were supposed to be the foot soldiers of a new technological era, the comedown has been devastating, and incredibly sudden. |
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Typically, when offered good roles on TV, she didn't consider the small screen a comedown, but welcomed the opportunity to do some of her best work. |
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He feels that the commissioner job would be a comedown for the minister. |
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When Himes was known at all, he was thought of as a writer of noirish detective thrillers, which were seen as a comedown from promising literary beginnings. |
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It might seem somewhat a comedown for the nation's telecom commentariat, but the big issue in telecommunications for 2005 is municipal broadband provision. |
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Japan is urging academics to patent their breakthroughs in order to profit from them and to co-operate more closely with private industry, which used to be considered as a comedown. |
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The reshuffle means a comedown for Gopinath Munde, who was heading the PAC after the party expelled Jaswant, the first choice for the job. |
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But going from playing to 55,000 a night to having lots of time off is a bit of a comedown. |
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It has been a massive comedown since getting back after the high of the Olympics. |
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This is all quite a comedown for what was long the most sophisticated comic cinema on Earth. |
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And McManus admits the comedown of playing in the secondary contest is tough when you're used to competing with the best. |
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The music, the movies, the post-sixties comedown. |
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He's been studying, reading the paperwork and going through all the legal challenges put before him for so long, he's going to have a massive comedown. |
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Ecstasy directly affects the central nervous system by releasing chemicals such as serotonin and oxytocin. These create a sense of euphoria and restlessness, followed by a rapid comedown period. |
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I actually suggested to Leeds they comedown here and play on Friday evening in an all-or-nothing game that would double as a National Trophy double-header. |
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