Jane was the best person to confide in but I knew once she got wind of what happened on New Year's Eve she'd be scheming again. |
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We confide in strangers because we believe we'll be able to forget or deny to ourselves that we have done so. |
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She would be too ashamed to confide in the abbess about how she was ravished by a stranger. |
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Margot writes Anne that she does not hold a grudge, and that she would not confide in someone unless they were on intimate terms. |
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She was the only teacher that Katie had ever felt comfortable enough to confide in. |
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Explain to your so-called bud that you confide in her because you trust her. |
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All are bright, beautiful and eager to connect with someone they can confide in and trust. |
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I kinda wish she'd just confide in me, since I ended up trusting her enough to confide in her. |
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The story line is about a gay fashion designer inviting his friends over for lunch to confide a secret. |
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He hints darkly at the impending murder of Banquo and Fleance but does not confide that he has already commissioned it. |
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In fact, she had very strong urge to confide in a friend about her unfortunate situation regarding the duke. |
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They gaze ardently into each other's eyes, confide dark secrets, embrace by rubbing cheek to cheek. |
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I nodded, surprised, and wondering why I'd confide in a teacher, then grabbled my backpack and left the classroom. |
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It took a while to get to know each other well enough to actually confide in one another. |
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Ian stopped, completely unaware of where this was coming from and knowing this was rather a private thing to confide so casually. |
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A relaxed manner allows you to cultivate people, and people who are comfortable confide things. |
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She laughed triumphantly and leaned closer to her daughter-in-law as if to confide a secret. |
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Definitely don't confide your deepest, darkest secrets to an untruthful bud. |
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While still unconfirmed, some close to the action confide that they think the album and tour will happen. |
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She found it very difficult to assert herself, and tended to confide ill usage to Pope rather than directly confronting those responsible. |
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Have at least one person you can confide in who can give you support and to whom you can provide support as well in a mutual relationship. |
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Daughters and sons feel equally at ease confiding in their mothers, but daughters confide less in their fathers than sons. |
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In Dude Lit, men confide in animals that are not deliberate pets, but wild animals and strays. |
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The face may only be a symbol of our confidence in openness, but our symbols are the things to which we confide our values. |
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They just wanted someone to confide in who wouldn't just go straight to the police. |
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Cocooned from the outside world, she began to feel safe enough to confide in some of the staff about what had happened to her. |
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We don't trust the tight-lipped, nor do we confide in blabbermouths. |
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I wish I were a discreet sort of person in whom others could confide. |
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Evidently this would not be possible without a great number of clients who daily confide in our product and in our manner of working. |
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He doesn't confide to anyone outside his family, and everyone else is just guessing. |
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If he's dying, he mutters, there is something he must confide to his son, Gregory. |
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Mr. Battelle dismissed the popular belief that women confide to their hairdressers all the intimate details of their lives. |
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When they confide to the video camera, they speak of feeling trapped by their surroundings, especially the other humans. |
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He seemed eager for her good opinion, seemed to want her to confide in him. |
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Some of those making the retreat would have never dared go to see a priest to confide in him. |
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In the latter, an individual felt the need to go to Ghandi to confide in him. |
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They need to talk, to confide in somebody, to free themselves from their anxieties. |
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If you receive text messages, calls or pictures that hurt you, do not hesitate to confide in an older person that you feel close to. |
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Both boys and girls indicated they were more likely to confide in their mothers than in their fathers. |
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I mainly counsel women, I listen to them, accompany them, they confide in me. |
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This way, our son was able to confide in an independent lawyer who would help him at the trial. |
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Children in care should be offered access to a person of trust in whom they may confide in total confidentiality. |
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This also affected their decision whether or not to confide in professionals. |
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It is wise to be selective when choosing who to confide in, and what advice to follow. |
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For example, the interviewee may want to confide in the reviewer on a sensitive issue. |
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Whether children live with their father or mother, living with a lone parent reduces children's ability to confide in the other parent. |
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Children confide in adults, but adults need to confide in other adults, not in children. |
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Among friends again, we may be happy to confide our innermost secrets, but when it comes to revealing how much we earn or save, most of us are less forthcoming. |
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I would urge her to seek help and confide in somebody she trusts. |
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People close to me trust me and confide in me, I am a good listener. |
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Bureaucrats confide that the reason ticket counters at train stations are so chaotic is to encourage bribes. |
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If Anthony Weiner had used confide instead of Twitter to send photos of his package, he might still have a political career. |
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They gaze ardently into each other's eyes and confide dark secrets. |
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If she keeps skipping meals, confide in your mom or a school counselor. |
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They began to open up to me and confide all sorts of personal stories. |
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The first of three pivotal scenes in this film is a moment of intimacy between Jack and Tyler when they confide that their fathers are distant and disengaged. |
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Patients are less likely to trust health care providers and confide in them if they think that the health care providers will not keep the information confidential. |
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Female victims who talked to others about the violence were more than twice as likely to notify the police as those who did not confide in an informal support. |
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But young people tend not confide in anyone or only in their friends. |
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On some issues, children will more readily confide in other children. |
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In other words, although both boys and girls are more likely to confide in their mother than in their father, the difference between the two is much smaller for boys than girls, at all ages. |
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He must consult with them, take advice from them and confide in them. |
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I confide to a friend who has had a chin lift. |
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If people around the bereaved person become impatient or if the person is hesitant to confide in those people, she suggests joining a mutual support group or getting in touch with an organization like Maison Monbourquette. |
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His only company to confide in was the vermin in the street. |
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Who will confide in any Canadian diplomat now, knowing that the information will be passed on according to the partisan political agenda of the Prime Minister and his chief of staff? |
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Here we can visit, talk to each other, confide in just about everyone. |
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Penitents and patients readily confide in them. |
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I've studied further about the vaccinations, I've altercated with the virus-diseases and I've found now an animal clinic where I can confide in the veterinaries. |
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Along the way, these peasants from poor inland regions, most of whom are leaving the village of their birth for the first time, confide their concerns and their despair to the camera. |
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We confide all of the verifications specific to Gandi Business SSL Certificates to Our partner, Comodo, whose size and global presence allow it to perform these checks for Us throughout the entire world. |
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Tell Me in silence your sorrows, confide to Me your yearnings. |
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If the police are seen as a trust worthy and professional force, then the people will confide their personal security to the government and will be less likely to turn to insurgents. |
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I confide in it things I keep from my own family. |
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Whatever the explanation, in all family environments that involve a parental separation, children are similarly less predisposed to confide in both parents. |
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Spectators recognize themselves in the various tics and habits of the protagonists, in the stories that they tell themselves out loud, which are a sort of soliloquy where they confide in us and invite our confidence. |
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And they confide in each other constantly. |
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She thus conformed to the practice observed by widows in appointing female relatives as executrices or life had taught her to confide more in women than in men. |
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