But I think they are fooling themselves as much as they are trying to fool you. |
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Let us not fool ourselves into thinking we are merely one referendum away from the promised land. |
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The fool had hoped that the world was not as cruel a place as he had suspected. |
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Use it trickled over ice-cream sundaes, on pancakes, or with the banana fool above. |
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Age old tricks like supergluing coins or other treats to the ground will easily fool the Uni minions. |
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I openly defied the principal and made him look a fool in front of the entire senior class and he found a way to make me pay for it. |
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Don't let the small size of these blades fool you, they are serious cutting tools. |
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But here's where we pull the switcheroo, here's where we totally fool everyone. |
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Speaking of Thanksgiving, some fool in a car almost cleaned my clock on my way in to work this morning! |
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It was something smart, smart enough to fool even Amelia, who was the most clever of the three of them. |
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They make false promises, fool themselves and people around them, and more often than not, pay dearly later. |
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So I figured he deserved some payback, just enough to make a fool of himself. |
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You're just an old-fashioned, close-minded fool who is stuck back in the dark ages! |
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At heart, he loved to play the clown, and it was such a release to sit on a street corner and make a fool out of himself from time to time. |
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He has set himself up as the worst type of unprofessional clown playing the fool in public. |
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It takes every ounce of self-control that I have to not retort back with a scathing remark about what a fool she is. |
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It wouldn't fool another faery, but a human would see them as regular, rounded ears. |
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But while it has plenty of gentle slopes, do not let this fool you into imagining that it is purely for softies. |
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The fair fool Noel has taken a week-long fancy to me, and I am making an age-long fool of him. |
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Only a fool would back him to win a tournament on a course with tight fairways, but on a wide open track he can beat anybody on his day. |
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Mostly though he breaks up the sentences so any fool would know to read them. |
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Their immunity from getting tricked of course was simply to put on a costume that would fool the ghosts away. |
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Satrapi illustrates her comics in a simple style, but don't let that fool you. |
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Faux bronze on the ceiling, faux marble walls and faux mosaics on the floor may not fool you, but the effect is pleasing. |
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They fool the simple folk by concocting exciting stories about their receiving messages from the Jinn. |
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But let's not fool ourselves into thinking we went to the Moon because we're pioneers or explorers or selfless discoverers. |
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He said that any fool could bet on a busted flush in poker, or swear that black is white, but that isn't a classic lie. |
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It is more difficult to fool the eye with carpet but if you have to go this route, choose a random pattern or plain carpet. |
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Towers of individually plated food may impress in a restaurant, but only a fool would try that at home. |
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After a few years, I could no longer fool myself that the drugs were working any more. |
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But the fact that she lost the argument simply by being such an intolerable fool shows just how hated she is in the house. |
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In William Shakespeare's comedy, Twelfth Night, Feste the clown is not the only fool who is subject to foolery. |
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Andi, being no fool at boxing, blocked the counter, and then went in for another blow, pulling back with her left arm. |
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Moussaoui may not have a fool for a client, but that decision may prove to be a foolish one. |
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And because most people tend to judge by outward appearances, it's relatively easy to fool them. |
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Have things changed this much, or am I just once again playing the fool by believing him? |
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Approaching exam time children get apprehensive and nervous about learning and become worried about making a fool of themselves. |
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The biggest moment in life, I guess, is when I worked that out for myself, when I was about 14, which any fool can do. |
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Yes, I am a drooling, venal dishonest fool who is just lying because she's mean. |
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This black-robed fool can spout things like this in public, and nobody cares. |
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That's a bad solution when taking out one fool will accomplish the same thing. |
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Only a fool would put a player of his quality in the reserves for two seasons and his manager is no fool. |
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Hey, any fool can open his mouth and espouse a set of ideals, but few ever put them into practice. |
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In Twelfth Night, Feste plays the role of a humble clown employed by Olivia's father playing the licensed fool of their household. |
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And no, this isn't just a clever rhetorical trick to fool you down some byzantine path at the end of which is a political surprise. |
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We find safety in our technology, even though these shields are cheap tricks, designed to fool us into thinking we are emotionally armored. |
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Throw the ball down the middle and let the action on his pitches fool the hitter. |
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Do you mean to suggest that Chinese people are fooled or fool themselves into living in a false world? |
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If they fool you, they are really just fooling themselves and will end up with a room that will not make them happy. |
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Lotus had been repulsed when the poor fool approached her to grab her colorful robe. |
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But the film belongs to Clooney, who plays the fool and the charmer with polished, devil-may-care ease. |
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After all, it's better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. |
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Some bars served alcohol in a number of enterprising ways to try and fool the authorities. |
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The very notion of trying to sell Spanish cars labelled this man a fool and a loser. |
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As she ran her bath, she thought about what a fool she must've made of herself. |
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I acted like a fool in allowing myself to be led astray and placed in such a horrible situation. |
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Smugglers commonly fool would-be asylees, taking their money and disappearing or simply failing to help them cross Turkey's borders. |
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What if I don't bother to paint them but just extract them from a DVD and fool around cropping and redoing the image in the computer? |
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If the employer doesn't like it, he can either lump it, find a fool for an employee, or pay more. |
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You sometimes have to answer a woman according to her womanishness, just as you have to answer a fool according to his folly. |
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In an effort to justify their existence they create documents that only a fool would sign without modifying it. |
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Hang yourself for aught you're worth, You were a scoundrel from your birth, And if you cannot buy a rope, Some fool will trust you one, I hope. |
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He was a fool to kid himself into thinking he'd made it because he was good. |
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Brought up in a household of Mafiosi, living on the tough streets of Los Angeles, I was no fool about the violence other people do to each other. |
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I was in my GB skiing outfit and I think he just wanted to make a fool of me. |
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Add in his gift for mimicry and he can make a fool of anyone, from fox hunters to Kilroy, Joss Stone to the Botox brigade. |
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Stefani might give the impression of being a dizzy airhead, but she's no fool. |
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Television can make a fool of us all, but it was difficult to see what the boss was griping about. |
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Some officials, if not the government, are making a fool of themselves by targeting the NGOs and maligning them. |
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Durkee had never appeared on camera before and feared making a fool of herself. |
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Liam smiled and appeared to be refusing to look at me while I made a fool of myself. |
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Other pitfalls of course include making a fool of yourself in front of colleagues at the office party. |
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Most of this just goes to show that you can fool some of the people, some of the time. |
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One rather gathers, reading between the lines, that he dismissed Piggy as a fool. |
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I think women are a lot more ballsy, less worried about making a fool of themselves. |
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The fool was a very humble person, haunting kitchen and scullery, messing almost with the dogs, and liable, when malapert, to a whipping. |
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You only have to watch an exciting or scary movie to see how easily we can fool ourselves. |
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In order to raise funds for his dream school, he went about begging, singing, playing the fool and enduring humiliation for decades. |
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They say there's no fool like an old fool, and a fool and his money are soon parted. |
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There's much foolery among them, but it's very difficult to fool the Vatican. |
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But he was judged a fool guilty of schoolboy errors when estimating 100,000 civilian deaths since the March 2003 US-UK invasion of Iraq. |
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And some fool saw fit to give me a credit card, so I can now do the PayPal thang. |
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They were acting the fool and I just caught them in the act of acting the fool. |
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Just goes to show, there's no fool like an old fool, especially an old fool that trusts the piskies. |
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There's no fool like an old fool, these old goats don't know how foolish they look. |
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Absent government-imposed distortions, a fool and his money are soon parted. |
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Just before my injection, I became an emotional basket case and made a fool of myself. |
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They think of me as an idiot, a fool, some disheveled thing rather than one of them. |
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Our failures begin to resemble self-fulfilling prophecies, born of the knowledge that most of us can happily fool ourselves most of the time. |
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Why not introduce them and get him out of my way before he makes a fool out of me at b-ball practice? |
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As I argued in my last column, we must not fool ourselves into believing that we can become totally self-sufficient in food. |
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If he was a fool, what were those his folly whipped into orgies of vicious mockery? |
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If people are silly enough not to shop around on the net for a good price then more fool them! |
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I recommend not using the bounce feature, as it's not as yet convincing enough to fool the spam merchants. |
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Simply electing a few women to assume key political positions is mere tokenism, and should fool no one. |
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After half a life sentence in the rag trade, Tim has now escaped to fool about with old houses. |
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I think that they were guilty merely of trying to put one over on a man who was acting as a gullible fool. |
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They believed it was a genuine news story, for why would anyone use the radio to fool and scare them? |
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Only a fool, weight enforcement officers say, knowingly drives an overweight truck into a weigh station. |
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If they choose to go with just one quote, and it's a big one, well more fool them! |
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The fact that Colmes, who is demonstrably brighter than that, can sit there and shuck and jive with this fool says a lot about him. |
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I had lied to my friend, probably my best friend, and made her feel like a fool when I was the one playing stupid games. |
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At first glance, the portions may appear small, but don't let these miniatures fool you. |
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The result is power densities are going from 40 watts per square fool to 68 watts per square foot and higher. |
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They expect to meet someone there to click with, but fear being trapped and made a fool of. |
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Yet Shaft keeps on operating, pulling questionable legal tricks and using deceit and deception to fool the gangland trash of the streets. |
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It's as though he's desperate to fool us into thinking we're watching a Hollywood action flick minus machine gun fire, explosions, and fast cars. |
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To some, the director-general is an oaf dressed in jester's clothing, a big-mouthed fool with a propensity to put his foot in it. |
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If it does not qualify me as a teacher, label my advice the ramblings of an old fool, and seek a teacher in whom you have confidence. |
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Was all this vague new age waffle disguised as insight still managing to fool people? |
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Between the four of you, you must trick the tricksters, fool the foolers, and outwit the outwitters. |
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Good magicians are good tricksters and good tricksters can fool the smartest of people. |
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As a middle and long reliever, Pina continued to fool hitters with his sidearm delivery and deceptive palmball. |
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They relish telling stories about moonshiners, smugglers, and contraband runners who successfully fool and evade federal agents. |
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He claims that they accused him of being a fool and implied he was a knave who was guilty of dishonourable conduct. |
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It was a foolish, late-night idea powered by a little too much alcohol, and a few soppy fool tendencies. |
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At some point in any market boom, the greater fool theory comes into effect. |
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Salt eyebaths did not help, and, although a dentist who treats himself has a fool for a patient, I prescribed more radical care for myself. |
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Any fool can be pedantic and snipe at what they think are minor errors in grammar. |
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They are intense to the point of being slightly odd, but only a fool wouldn't love them to bits. |
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According to them, these are, if not the best of times, pretty doggone good times about which you'd have to be a fool to complain. |
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Jaques is looked upon as something of a doddering old fool by some of his younger comrades, but as Wright plays him, he's far, far more. |
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Each and every one of them appears to be trying to fool the populace into believing that potty training is fun. |
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Of course, being the stupid fool macho man that I am, I was trying to do it alone! |
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However, the little fool went and evaded us all and snuck you away to his old home. |
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She could fool the other two bozos anytime, anywhere, but it was this guy who made her wary. |
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That fool Peacock's great idea of disguising the real level of attacks on teachers by neds hasn't worked. |
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If I promise you that, will you go away and stop risking your fool neck to Kevon's temper? |
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Pity the next poor fool to pass through that spot, they're probably going to soil their pants. |
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This is a first, she's generally really ditsy looking, though don't let that fool you. |
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Do you accept that the intelligence you were actually given was duff intelligence and it's made you look rather a fool in the eyes of the world? |
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Camouflaged clothing and scent neutralizers can fool a whitetail's eyes and nose, but there's no mistaking a human voice. |
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Only a fool likes to hear the sound of his own voice. We welcome dissenting opinions. |
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What none of our fool leaders have thought about is the fact that you never tell the enemy what you are going to do. |
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Put a microphone in the face of the fool clergy, and they will say something stupid. |
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Comedians, philosophers, evangelists and fascists have all used distinct styles of speech-making to move or fool their crowds. |
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I took a bit more time to fool around flying the chute, doing turns and spins, and also having a better look around. |
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And either there aren't any facts or else I can't keep them in my fool head. |
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The nonsense lyrics are either the ramblings of a burnt out fool or transcendent works of genius. |
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The cannon in question is retired and would be used only as a decoy to fool enemies in the event of an attack. |
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It will fool you with just how well behaved it is, cruising quietly on B roads or nosing through the traffic. |
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I know the manor, but not well enough to know the workings of my fool brother's mind. |
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The narrow win here may fool the handicapper into giving Gift Horse only a small rise in the ratings but I doubt it. |
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A thousand times he had pleaded with her, and like a fool she had listened to him, hanging on his every word. |
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To have accomplished such a thing he didn't have to merely fool a gullible public. |
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Destined for academic greatness, Masters says he still had time to fool about at grammar school in Richmond, North Yorkshire. |
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Everybody was under very clear orders to be on their best behaviour, and yet this complete fool chose to carry on like he was a monkey in a zoo. |
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Her cute, pixie looks will fool many into believing Veronica is a pushover. |
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And when you feel so extremely a fool and a bad golfer to boot, what the deuce can you do, except throw the club away? |
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Now I didn't want to take heed of this advice and end up making a fool of myself. |
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Anyone attempting to compare Domingo's voice on record to those of the great Heldentenors makes a fool of himself, and possibly others. |
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Where once spams used false origination addresses to fool spam filters they are now using the same trick to fool users with phishing scams. |
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Gabby makes an utter fool of himself playing strip poker with some Mexican federales, and yet still manages to bust Brass out of jail. |
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We can only fool ourselves so long and then only by shrilly outshouting that voice inside. |
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He is clearly a fool for writing such an ill-conceived and prejudiced article, and the editors of the Express are even more stupid for being foolish enough to print it. |
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I hope you didn't let last year's fake new millennium fool you. |
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This might not fool a knowledgeable whiskey drinker, but how many of those desperate for Pappy are knowledgeable whiskey drinkers? |
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And also probably because this fool stopped at a red light in the middle of an intersection. |
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He was an old romantic fool at heart, that one, and he believed in marriage as a legally binding and not even entirely necessary act between soul mates. |
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When threatened, Rubber Boas will sometimes hide their head and elevate the tip of their tail to fool a predator into attacking the tail which looks somewhat like a head. |
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They don't fool me in their red vans and their long white beards and their false ho ho ho laughs, coming down your chimney at Christmas with sackfuls of letters. |
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As with the fool in King Lear, there is wisdom in his lunacy. |
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Then there were those songs that were either too half-baked or half-hearted to even fool us into turning them into smash hits. |
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And as returning officers have learnt over the years, only a fool would stand up to announce an official result without checking first with the tallyman. |
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Nobody makes a fool of Sr. Giovanni and lives to tell the tale! |
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The important thing is not to mind making a fool of yourself. |
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Let's assume you've reached a level of expertise where you can handle intermediate blue runs and gentler red-run moguls without making a fool of yourself. |
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Also, experienced pros will give out false tells to fool players. |
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We want to see how each of them deals with voice compression and how they fool the wi-fi base stations into giving the phones sufficient bandwidth. |
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It would fool people into thinking that by joining and supporting the aims of Countryside Ireland that they are supporting the existence of rural Ireland. |
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Now the stereotype has morphed from the boring little bean counter to the mad, incompetent and corrupt fool placing the financial security of millions at risk. |
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Even a tone-deaf fool like me can tell she has a voice like an angel. |
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I was made to feel a failure because I don't keep old toothbrushes to clean those hard to reach cracks with and was made to feel a fool because I still have a toilet brush. |
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Don't let the innocent name of this sweet bell pepper fool you. |
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I thought maybe that was for the best because that way if I made a fool of myself and fell off or something, at least Ben and the other guys would not see it. |
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Neither was he trapped nor did they fool him for a nanosecond. |
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Obviously, when you're going against speed and you can do misdirection and get them going the wrong way and fool them a little bit, then you've got a chance. |
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With the experience of the trial run, they hope to fine tune the system and make it fool proof, so that passengers using the facility will not be disappointed. |
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Inside the tent, U.S. officials said it was standard practice to use morticians putty to prepare bodies for viewing and was not intended to fool the Iraqi people. |
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I blew up my old inflatable pool and put in in the backyard under the shade of a willow tree and put on Dylan's swim pants and let him fool around in the water. |
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They've toured with both The Strokes and The Dandy Warhols, but don't let that fool you into thinking they're into sharp image-manipulation or limp boho affectation. |
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Don't let the ads fool you into thinking this is some kind of edgy French thriller, by the way, or you'll be too annoyed by its unhurried pace to enjoy it. |
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As she crossed the road, some fool driving at 70 mph smacked into her, and she was thrown into the air and hit the road at the other side of the car. |
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Call me a fool to be holding onto this unrequited love for so long. |
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There the fool enjoyed special license to ridicule pretense and turn upside down social rituals and solemnities, including the dignity of the king himself. |
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Experts believe the goal of the hijacking was to fool users into divulging personal financial data such as credit card numbers and account usernames and passwords. |
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Only a fool would pass up that deal after crunching the numbers! |
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I could try to fool people by letting it grow a bit, but as my father told me when I was a teenager, there's a fine line between Byronic and Moronic. |
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Who but a fool would entrust his life to the hands of such a captain who steers his vessel according to his whims and fancies, and not by the Government chart? |
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She's always laughing and carrying on and making a fool out of someone. |
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Poor Marilyn Monroe had to suffer the torments of the casting couch, and anyone who tells you that's a thing of the past is either a fool or a liar. |
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She was wearing her high heels and didn't want to make a fool of herself by missing a step and falling flat on her face in front of Jesse and everyone else. |
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The silly old fool was probably fooling around with some young chippy. |
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He's always smiling, always acting the fool and being chirpy and happy. |
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Here the comparison to the dot-com era is spot on, when the greater fool theory of stock investing reigned. |
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While software had previously been able to detect and reject fake notes, counterfeiters had now evidently become more sophisticated and could fool the system. |
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I pity the fool who has to guess what people are going to buy. |
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She and Bruce have been playing me for a fool since the beginning. |
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Our people, who discovered the cause of my mirth, bore me company in laughing, at which the old fellow was fool enough to be angry and out of countenance. |
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Your email, as any fool can see, verges on illiteracy and incoherence. |
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No doctor wants to appear a fool in front of his or her colleagues. |
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After a while I got concerned that some fool would shoot it. |
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He didn't want to look a fool in front of his newest friend. |
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Because he wouldn't fool around with her, and for that he must suffer! |
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Most were about love and betrayal and many others were indecent things Arnel tried not to think about, although it was hard with that fool grin on the old man's face. |
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And McClain would be known as the fool predecessor to Thrice. |
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I played the fool through much of university and I always had fun. |
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However, the milk content of this fool makes it rich in calcium, a vital bone-building nutrient, which means that it's quite healthy if eaten in moderation. |
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Tasted blind, Chateau Benoit's genial '00 Riesling, from the Willamette Valley in Oregon, might fool Germanophiles into thinking it came from the Mosel, a Riesling Eden. |
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Cheaper speaker systems have used psychoacoustic methods to fool the ear into thinking sounds are being produced from virtual locations surrounding the listener. |
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Feisty and fizzing with energy, the 40 year-old multi-millionaire was in his element, playing the fool for a BBC film crew following his every move. |
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Only a fool alloweth an enemy inside his own house in hope of trapping him within his own chambers when first he could set ambushments outside and perchance ensnare him there. |
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Neither Vicky's rhubarb fool with a chewy biscuit nor my banana and chocolate Eton mess were unpleasant, but we probably wouldn't order either again. |
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Only a fool would prescribe remedies for the current problems of the Net, which is developing explosively and uncontrollably into an outlaw world. |
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Of course, you can bumfuzzle your patient into the idea that you sterilize the instruments just as readily as you can fool them about dental operations, if you are that class of man. |
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He was the morosoph, cloaked in the form of discourteous comments or unfiltered remarks, King Lear's fool was able to express the thoughts that others were reluctant to express. |
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Were his wishy-washy answers in the debate merely an attempt to fool the center into voting for an extremist candidate? |
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The only racism Alicia Keys is likely to encounter in the territories would be some fool trying to touch her braids. |
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In our shock at the way things have turned out, we wonder if there is anyone left in charge who's not a charlatan or a fool. |
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He didn't have time to listen to the weak-minded fool prattle on. |
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I hope every fool who voted for that jug-eared clown has to suffer. |
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Laughable they may be, but a fool and his money are soon parted. |
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After all, a fool and his money are soon parted, and the victims of these scams have brought financial misfortune on themselves, isn't that right? |
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The indictment against Adams, as I read it, is that he's a fat, pompous old windbag who assumes that anyone with an opposing viewpoint is a fool or a knave. |
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Alice's sharp wit and blunt pronouncements could be intimidating, but if you didn't put on airs and weren't a fool, she was fiercely loyal and endlessly forgiving. |
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I'm glad he's going since IMO, the man is a fool and a knave. |
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Do we really want to watch world-class players being made a fool of? |
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I'd be a fool if I wasted words savaging wuxia for not being high art. |
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Once in a while the really dense woods, such as boxwood and ebony can fool me, and I really have to work hard to tell the difference between Madasgar and Honduras rosewood. |
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All was yappy before, during and after a fight, but we always knew he was playing the fool, was a pup so full of life that he had to yip and yap, prance and dance. |
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In return I flashed the lopsided grin of a fool in an amusement park. |
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The uniform response to him is that he has a tin ear, that he is blind to ordinary people, that he is a fool, et cetera. |
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Fakes that fool scholars have been around as long as there have been scholars, and they have always created a good amount of anti-intellectual satisfaction. |
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One can well imagine Powell acting the Horace, reeling out a sonic logic, playing the fool and the tragedian, the eulogizer and the satirist. |
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Racing car fool Will Ferrell fails to tag fancy-pants foreigner Sacha 'Borat' Cohen as a serious rival. |
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Even while he was lecturing in economics at Coventry Technical College he still found time to play the odd fool or baddy. |
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It is so easy to fool the reader with the pseudo realistic and the pseudo analytical. |
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I tell you I am going to the music shop. I trust to your honour. Lord Rawson, I know, will call me a fool for trusting to the honour of a quiz. |
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When he listens to those poor creatures he has a weakness for gathering around him he generally makes a fool of himself. |
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The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story, who resolved not to go into the water until he had learnt to swim. |
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She certainly meant well and was not a fool, but nobody can maintain that she was wise, nor entertaining in conversation. |
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As for Hundert in particular, Kline sees the well-read don as something of a holy fool. |
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You don't have to be a fool to look at our back line and see how good it is. |
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You have to risk it, and be in danger of looking like an absolute fool. |
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How my fool of a soft-headed soft-hearted brother would rage if he knew how cunningly I have saved his pocket. |
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Comics could be tucking into BBQ rib-ticklers, cheese and tickle sandwiches, pulled leg of lamb followed by deadpan-cakes and gooseberry fool. |
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Since he's such a self-regarding and aggrandising fool, we look on and laugh. |
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Whate'er these book-learned blockheads say, Solon's the veriest fool in all the play. |
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Truth is so easily told, that the veriest fool can give a straight story, where no twistification is necessary. |
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If you've ever tried to cut or abrade deer antler, you're well aware it is one of the toughest organic materials you'll ever fool with. |
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The fool I am, the fool. A citizen of Chelm, an idiot, one of those characters my grandfather's legends are made of. |
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Stressing over whether you might make a fool of yourself in front of a boy is so not your style. |
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Notions didn't come more cockamamie than this one, but one unrepressed chortle and Delbert would be furious, or feel like a fool. |
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Hodges has made a great fool of himself, by getting gradually cockier and cockier. |
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With that in mind he conjures up a delicious sea vegetable salad, followed by a tangy elderflower and gooseberry fool for dessert. |
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She and a group of lookalikes sneak out of the house dressed in wigs in a bid to fool the waiting photographers. |
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A reproof entereth more into a wise man than an hundred stripes into a fool. |
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By swimming, drunk, late at night and alone, he was being a fool to himself. |
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And if you think he won't have his wits about him, just you try to fool him on some deal, and see. |
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Did that make her a good judge of character, or a fool who was letting her hoo-ha do her thinking for her? |
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He's dead-eye correcto when he say's they's great to sing along with though, 'cos I found myself singing my fool head off that night, buddy. |
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Thus the conception of Claudius as the weak fool, controlled by those he supposedly ruled, was preserved for the ages. |
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He was replaced around 1600 by Robert Armin, who played roles such as Touchstone in As You Like It and the fool in King Lear. |
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Many affecting wit beyond their power, Have got to be a deare fool for an houre. |
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No wit to flatter left of all his store, No fool to laugh at, which he valu'd more. |
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You didn't come to me in time. And by the time you came to me that fool of a doctor had bled and leeched the lifeblood out of Timmy. |
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A fool is usually extravagantly dressed, and communicates directly with the audience in speech or mime. |
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And if the fool, or the pig, are of a different opinion, it is because they only know their own side of the question. |
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They have not, from popocratic pipsqueaks such as Otis Ferry to Harry Meade, the fox-hunting fool who held the party,helped Harry. |
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One is to fool the audience into seeing something seamless, and that's how I try to use it. |
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I'm no crowd pleaser, just a word teaser, No people pleaser, who's trying to fool ya. |
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We are thereby made to believe that the Democratic Party has turned Hitlerian, and any fool knows what that means. |
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However, he thought Whitehouse no fool and suspected that he might have the practical skill to make the existing design work. |
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But one could tell from her assurance that she was nobody's fool and would stand for no nonsense. |
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He was nobody's fool, and there was no doubt but he had very soon detected the trick his cousin had played upon him. |
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Also, he is nobody's fool. He possesses the brain and strength of character to play his part. |
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In which the former dancing fool in genie pants stopped cavorting for KFC and morphed into a mack daddy gangsta, a media illusion that would have shocked Guy Debord. |
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But when you have a radical alt left fool appointing radical alt left judges who put radical political agendas above the law, this is what you get. |
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Indeed, when in close quarters to Rooney, it must prove almost irresistible to stick a plastic moustache and silly clownish shoes on the potato-headed fool. |
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When his father saw him he fumed terribly, cursing like a pagan, and asking whether his son were a roysterer fit for the gallows as well as a fool fit for a cassock. |
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Worthy a nobler heart than a fool such as I could have given her. |
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Seneca's Apocolocyntosis reinforces the view of Claudius as an unpleasant fool and this remained the official view for the duration of Nero's reign. |
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James told Buckingham he was a fool, and presciently warned his son that he would live to regret the revival of impeachment as a parliamentary tool. |
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Biographers have noted that Hitchcock had always pushed the limits of film censorship, often managing to fool Joseph Breen, the longtime head of Hollywood's Production Code. |
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He cherished the usual wise monitions, such as that one was not to make a fool of one's self and that one should not carry on one's technical experiments in public. |
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Few people, he claims, would choose to trade places with an animal, a fool, or an ignoramus for any amount of bodily pleasure they might thereby acquire. |
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Using their knowledge of the eye-brain, they did no more than was necessary to fool the eye into seeing acceptably detailed and nonflickering images. |
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As he swallowed the soup his heart warmed to this fool of a girl. |
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But poor fool, he did not know until that minute that there were one thousand and one reasons why a new building should not be assessed so much as an old one. |
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As a dog returneth to his vomit, a fool returneth to his folly. |
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Look like a fool walking about with an empty shooting-iron in my hand. |
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He may be insulting, a miserable rotter and a fool, but unless he slanders or libels you, or damages your property, you do not have standing to sue him. |
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All verse should be tinklesome and vague, and so written that it cannot offend any known or possible variety of fool who can raise the price of a magazine. |
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This smug, interfering fool doddered off to Iraq as a peace campaigner. |
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Think of the people who come away dissatisfied with the consultation but shy away from returning for another for fear of looking like a fool or a pesterer. |
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The internet can be a wonderful thing, but not when there's a compassionless fool with a camera who thinks every heartbreak is just another hashtag. |
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Research has also shown that vehicle registration plates have also been stolen by car cloners for use in crimes, to beat the London congestion charge or to fool speed cameras. |
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A chatterbot is a programme that attempts to simulate conversation, the aim being to at least temporarily fool you into thinking you are actually talking to another person. |
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Don't let the accordion, fiddle and scrubboard fool you, Donna the Buffalo's danceable music with reggae and rock roots has a socially conscious message. |
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We snared a few people with our April Fool prank, and saw the first signs of house-price weakness. |
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