In The Abdication, they bill and coo once again-this time with spiritual fervor. |
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We know too that before children use mature speech, they coo and babble, and then use holophrases and telegraphic sentences. |
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Even the layman can coo over the magnificent ribbed vaulting, an 11 th-century innovation that had European architects squirming with envy. |
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Felix loves his new baby brother and just wants to cuddle him and coo over him, as we do. |
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As they gurgle and coo and laugh like crazy we realise they still possess something we have lost. |
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On Stargazing, singers gently coo over leisurely breakbeats, spacey samples and woozy strings. |
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I watched one snuggle close, cup her palms around the tiki torch, then coo as Garrett got it to light. |
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Here the pairs rub bills and coo to each other before mating and going ashore to lay the eggs. |
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My own personal wife and I hardly ever bill and coo early in the morning any more. |
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It was a mellow sneeze from a nose at peace with itself, contented as the coo of a pigeon. |
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Most days she goes to the writer's room, a calm neutral space where doves coo outside. |
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He cradled the pigeon in his hands, listening to it coo gently before releasing it into the air. |
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Vocally, Tunstall can coo with the best of them, but she also does a lovely whisky mezzo, rasping smokily through Another Place to Fall and Suddenly I See. |
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Modern feminists are finally having their Arab Spring, thanks to Facebook coo Sheryl Sandberg. |
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In the park the pigeons flap and coo, and a couple of girls wearing pink headscarves rock idly backwards and forwards on the red swings beside the climbing frame. |
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White winged doves coo, and a whiptail lizard scurries across the gravel. |
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When I hear a soft coo, I look back and see him step out the window. |
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At approximately two months, infants begin to coo and a few months later begin to babble. |
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We coo over how cute our cat is and minimize the drudgery of cleaning the litter box. |
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They told the public not to believe that the coo meant what he said even though, yes, he said it. |
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I coo over gadgets, take delight in each new miracle app. |
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Your child does not babble or coo by 12 months of age. |
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In its flight, behaviour, and voice, which is more of a dovecot coo than the phrase of the wood pigeon, it is a typical pigeon. |
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Freer first joined Fox in 1997 and has served as president and before that COO of FOX Sports Networks. |
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He is a government affairs consultant, and a past president and COO of a banking software consulting firm. |
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She became COO of the organization three years later and inherited the responsibility of managing several branches throughout the region. |
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The last track on each of the three sections is a professional course, where you can customise your bike by changing the tyres and the size of chainwheel. Coo! |
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The COO of BullionVault was referred to Redfish Technology, as the technology recruiter of choice for this critical hire. |
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On 12 March 2013 Patrick Waddick was named President, adding this to his COO position. |
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