Rather than writing a bunch of gregarious, funky booty calls, White writes endearing, romantic lyrics with music that matches. |
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House sparrows are approximately 30-g passerine birds that are gregarious during and outside the breeding season. |
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He was always a gregarious and sociable person and loved to set up opportunities for people from all walks of life to come together. |
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For most people, beaches are gregarious places for fun and games, cricket and football, volleyball and kites. |
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Like societies of many other gregarious mammals, social groups of spotted hyenas are structured by linear dominance hierarchies. |
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I am a gregarious person and have always been given to being a humorist, but I am also an observer. |
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They flocked to Blue Harbour and Coward's gregarious personality, some for the day and some for the month as house guests. |
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He was a cheerful, gregarious man, as endlessly curious as a cat, highly emotional and susceptible. |
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He was very gregarious and his home became a centre of activity for a variety of pursuits. |
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Locusts can exist in two different behavioral states, solitary and gregarious, whereas grasshoppers generally do not. |
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They are fairly gregarious, but will sometimes gather in groups separate from the other rock shorebirds. |
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Rheas are gregarious in habit, and tend to live in flocks ranging in size from 5-30 individuals. |
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Many of these raptor species are gregarious, which accounts for impressively large flocks of impressively large birds. |
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Common hippos are gregarious, live in herds, and are well adapted to life in the water. |
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Caspian Terns are less gregarious than other terns, nesting in smaller colonies, although this is changing in Washington. |
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Eared Grebes are typically gregarious in nesting season, living in colonies that sometimes number thousands of individuals. |
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Black-crowned Night-herons are gregarious at all times of the year, and are often seen in very large groups. |
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I am a fairly gregarious person, but I am quite comfortable in my own company. |
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I'm reasonably happy with my own company, but I'm naturally gregarious so I think that three months would be my limit on the island. |
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I'm gregarious up to a point and then I have to have total solitude for at least two days. |
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He was gregarious, delighting in conversation, good food, wine, and, of course, malt whisky. |
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Even though she was so gregarious and loved to chat, she also liked to listen. |
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Richard was a gregarious person and he thought Edinburgh was the most perfect place because you could party 24 hours a day. |
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Sociable, friendly and gregarious, Beatrice enjoyed the social life provided in her parish in London and made many friends. |
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It is a gregarious spreading herb that quickly covers the ground and rocks. |
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In the Western Ghats, at an altitude of about 1,600 metres, in the region of sholas and grasslands, the kurinji flourishes as a gregarious shrub. |
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It was gregarious, and chiefly abounded on the acclivitous glades of the woods. |
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He was presented as the quixotic radical, the gregarious populist, the lovable dissenter, the rare honest liberal, the minority of one. |
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Latham seems to be a reluctant joiner whereas Abbott is naturally gregarious. |
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Although they are frequently found in pairs, broadbills also tend to be quite gregarious and are often found in small feeding flocks. |
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Western Grebes are highly gregarious in all seasons, wintering in large flocks and nesting in colonies. |
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The narrative, like the author's life work, reflects a gregarious, optimistic American spirit. |
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His gregarious and eccentric personality is the perfect mix for a good television programme. |
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He can be a bit of a loudmouth, he's loud, he's gregarious, he's not discreet. |
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The social system of pikas varies considerably among species, ranging from solitary individuals to large, gregarious colonies. |
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American White Pelicans are highly gregarious and breed in large, dense colonies. |
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Make you dream about him, his movements, his gregarious nature, his constant babble. |
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The other type loud and flamboyant, gregarious and unrestrained, life-loving and vigorous, passionate and strong. |
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Normally chirpy and gregarious, the 49-year-old has become increasingly tetchy in the build-up to the tournament. |
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They are gregarious throughout the year, with the exception of the laying and incubation period. |
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He's still a fun-loving, gregarious guy and that spirit infused his concert performance. |
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The Baya weaver is a gregarious bird and breeds in colonies that can be found in scattered trees in open country. |
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For anyone traveling alone, or someone who is naturally gregarious, the cheery companionability of the other guests might have been fun. |
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They are more gregarious during the spawning season when they congregate in large groups. |
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He's impassioned and animated, perceptive and entertaining, gregarious and charismatic. |
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Other evidence, though, suggests tyrannosaurs were gregarious. |
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In person, Reiner is gregarious and very chatty, regaling you with great anecdotes from his back catalogue. |
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He may not be gregarious but Petraeus wields a bony and ascetic charm which he combines with practical intelligence. |
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He's gregarious and tactile, always ready with a cuddle and a chuckle. |
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Their subject is the gregarious, loquacious, remorseless killer Benoit. |
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He was gregarious and sociable, enjoying the company of entourages whenever he went to Cannes or some other film festival. |
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His parents were the village awkward squad, anti-socialists in a community of socialists, who built fences to separate them from other, more gregarious pioneers. |
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The six-foot redhead is known as a disciplinarian and a diplomat, a gregarious, backslapping sort who goes to extraordinary lengths to inspire the troops. |
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The novel takes place mostly early in milia's marriage to a gregarious but overmatched man named Mansour. |
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Speer admires Hitler to the point of hero-worship and Walker plays him as a gregarious, personable genius with a commanding presence and a quick wit. |
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Dr Dharmakanta, famous surgeon, gregarious and home loving, knew everything from pisciculture in aquariums to baking cakes and pizzas, but not how to fly a kite. |
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For example, although she was gregarious, she avoided social gatherings in which there was too much gossip, observing that such conversation was at best unhelpful. |
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Being in the public eye doesn't necessarily mean you're gregarious. |
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However, Nick, a gregarious chap, had young friends who were in the hospitality industry who suggested that being a hotelier would be more to his liking. |
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These are by and large a generous, friendly and gregarious bunch. |
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He is naturally gregarious, and the work obviously suits him. |
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He was known throughout the region as a hospitable and gregarious host. |
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Gray Jays are gregarious and are often found in family groups. |
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During the winter, they are gregarious, feeding in small groups. |
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Snowy Plovers breed in loose colonies, and they are gregarious in winter. |
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Some pipits and wagtails are solitary, and others are gregarious. |
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The last gregarious flowering of muli bamboo in Mizoram, Tripura, Manipur and Barak Valley of Assam was reported in 1958-59 and was followed by famine in those areas. |
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Ocencyrtus johnsonii is both gregarious and engages in superparasitism. |
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She was gregarious, opinionated, and in charge, the kind of person you'd describe as a real pistol, and I was immediately drawn to her. |
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Grazing species such as the endangered barasingha and very common chital are gregarious and live in large herds. |
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Group size is an important characteristic of the social environment of gregarious species. |
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Think backslapping, friendly, gregarious, hypersocial extroverts in sport coats. |
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The gregarious flyboy describes getting shot down on his 100th mission two days after D-Day and being helped by French resistance fighters. |
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Macaws, like other psittacines, are gregarious, but movements between sites were not simultaneous. |
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In addition, the European rabbit is a gregarious species with a high reproductive rate. |
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They fed at night and young ones were gregarious and moved in processionary chains, but in the last 2 instars they are solitary. |
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Characterisation of the bacteria associated with barnacle, Balonus amphitrite, shell and their role in gregarious settlement of cypris larvae. |
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Most apartment buildings are old, gloomy crapholes well-stocked with New England's most gregarious cockroaches. |
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Dubya, for all his manifest faults, is a very gregarious guy. |
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He's the gregarious, trouble-magnet who's brought some much needed sunshine to the sombre, squabble-filled soapiness of Albert Square. |
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The effect of direct and indirect defenses in two wild brassicaceous plant species on a specialist herbivore and its gregarious endoparasitoid. |
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The dunlin is highly gregarious in winter, sometimes forming large flocks on coastal mudflats or sandy beaches. |
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They are gregarious birds, travelling in flocks, hunting cooperatively and breeding colonially. |
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Cod are gregarious and form schools, although shoaling tends to be a feature of the spawning season. |
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Those, along with multiple trackways, suggest that gregarious behavior was common in many early dinosaur species. |
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Common pheasants are gregarious birds and outside the breeding season form loose flocks. |
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This is a gregarious species, which can be seen in large numbers from boats or headlands, especially on migration in autumn. |
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It is gregarious at all seasons when feeding, often forming flocks with other types of birds. |
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The rock dove is often found in pairs in the breeding season but is usually gregarious. |
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Rabbits are lively at nightfall, and when evening rain drives them underground they still feel gregarious. |
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The Indian sambar are more gregarious in Sri Lanka than other parts of their range and tend to form larger herds than elsewhere. |
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Indian sambar can be gregarious but are usually solitary or live in smaller herds. |
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The griffon vulture is a gregarious bird often roosting in flocks. |
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At night it roosts in trees or on cliffs, where it tends to be gregarious. |
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Disraeli, favoured by the queen, was a gregarious Conservative. |
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The interpretation of dinosaurs as gregarious has also extended to depicting carnivorous theropods as pack hunters working together to bring down large prey. |
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Harbor seals are solitary but are gregarious when hauled out and during the breeding season, though they do not form groups as large as some other seals. |
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Their flight is strong and direct and most are very gregarious. |
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While less gregarious canids generally possess simple repertoires of visual signals, wolves have more varied signals that subtly inter grade in intensity. |
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Male red deer retain their antlers for more than half the year, and are less gregarious and less likely to group with other males when they have antlers. |
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A slight boost in temperature can save days in development time, so Ruf and Fiedler propose that the warmth might have helped drive evolution of the gregarious tenting life. |
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Gregarious and well-connected, he is a lifelong Washingtonian who knows both the city and its political culture. |
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Gregarious and jovial to the point of being manic, his movies are excuses for unforced frat boy fun. |
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