I mean, some people are hurting out there, and they need the money, and they should go ahead and accept it and move on. |
|
The UN, the United States, Europe, and other interested parties urgently need to move the process along. |
|
This story of parting manages to be poignant and pretty yet not cloying and the rhythm will move you as much as the words. |
|
Maybe one day I'd move to a place where I could hunt my own food in the wild, not have to resort to caged rabbits in a basement. |
|
Mr Wallace claimed that the move would have a huge impact on local companies and could result in job losses. |
|
Organise some food, invite all party animals, move your television into the living room and it's gonna be one party that you'll always remember. |
|
Sectarian organizations with party lines and hierarchical, anti-democratic structures disrupt attempts to move forward collectively. |
|
In a flowing move he was on his feet and hurried over, ignoring the guards and grabbing my arm without any hesitation. |
|
In one swift move he gathered his brother into his arms and hurried him back into the house. |
|
Collecting data for this experiment is about as exciting as watching the hour hand move on a clock. |
|
A full understanding of elegy needs to move beyond a syntagmatic analysis and follow the genre in its evolution. |
|
Just as I was making my move and passing the table I tripped and fell, lunch tray and all. |
|
The walk up the stairs took no time at all, Kyle started to move slower as they passed Jenny's room. |
|
When the traffic finally started to move, I passed an embankment on the right hand side of the motorway which was covered with grazing sheep. |
|
A final exam score of 70 percent is required to pass the lesson and move on to the next one. |
|
Parliament is expected to pass legislation approving the Prime Minister's move early this year. |
|
In another audacious move he sent envoys to the Crusader leaders in Acre asking for safe passage and the right to purchase supplies. |
|
The move is part of the Government's plans to overhaul the criminal justice system. |
|
The best method for a small garden is to have a few in a movable hutch and to move it around the lawn every day. |
|
Taking a more systematic approach will prevent you from having to move items around later. |
|
|
Their passing and movement was excellent and Walsh added to his tally on ten minutes following an flowing move through midfield. |
|
If the hydraulics or brakes fail, that jet would start to move across the flight deck and could go over the side. |
|
Without further qualification, his position will guarantee that the bishops' pastoral letters will not move hearts and minds. |
|
Coming in at speed, he couldn't quite make a clean contact and the chance of crowning a superb move with a goal was gone. |
|
The surprise move clears the way for closing arguments, expected to begin as early as Wednesday. |
|
The move clears the way for the EU to apply the tariffs later this year if talks with the US fail to yield a compromise solution. |
|
The peristome teeth operate hygroscopically to move the diaphragm up into the wind. |
|
However, in a surprise move, the bank said on Friday that it would also compensate anyone who had surrendered a policy by paying them a lump sum. |
|
Next we move to the classroom where a slow pan reveals that the pupils are all chewing gum. |
|
What the movie does do, is move quickly with a great deal of style and panache. |
|
He sees this as a crucial move to ensure the longterm survival of democracy in Namibia. |
|
That's all I need, having the boss watch my every move so he can bust my chops. |
|
It's almost as if we experience an unease, a dislocation, because our freedom to move somewhere else is temporarily suspended. |
|
The gendered colour schemes and tribal patterns also embody stability of identity in a culture constantly on the move. |
|
The emphasis of government health care policy is to move care away from hospitals into the community. |
|
A third change has been the move to the hospitalist and intensivist model of care. |
|
Opponents claim the move will cost tens of thousands of jobs in the hospitality industry and voluntary no-smoking areas in bars are the answer. |
|
I love the hospitality industry, there's so much opportunity to move in your job and every day's different. |
|
The move implies he is open to compromise in the area, and will be seized upon by publicans and hoteliers, anxious to water down his proposals. |
|
After the peas are planted and have matured and are ready for harvest, the swathers move into the fields cutting windrows. |
|
|
However, in practice, as you have said, the money tends to be hot money, to move in and out quite rapidly. |
|
The achenes produced by each capitulum are similar, possess a pappus of bristles that causes them to move upwind and a well-developed elaisome. |
|
Golden eye or yellowtail grunts, chubs or scads would move unhurriedly across, changing direction with uncanny synchronisation. |
|
Once the symptoms begin to abate and you can move around comfortably, mild physical exertion may help sweat out the evil humors. |
|
From my third floor vantage point, I could see a young would-be car thief trying to hot-wire an old van that I had not seen move in over a year. |
|
He gestured with the knife in a wide sweeping move, and from between the pillars, several dozen young people entered the circle. |
|
And because they churn their portfolios almost by the minute, their trading volumes move markets. |
|
I was paralyzed with fear the whole time, unable to move a muscle even if there had been anything I could have done. |
|
As Coventry swelter in the heat, Mikkel Bischoff still maintains he made the right move in switching to the Ricoh Arena. |
|
Our young people in particular need affordable housing and starter homes to save them having to leave their community and move elsewhere. |
|
She smelt a foul smell of cigars and cigarettes, and suddenly she wanted to move away. |
|
These fans move a truckload of air, but the catch is the tearing, howling sound that owners of highspeed fans will be familiar with. |
|
Those who do have to move will undergo traumatic shock and this needs to be taken into account before parcelling them up and shipping them out. |
|
Pinch and double tap to zoom, swipe with your finger to move around and tap on objects to explore them. |
|
I was unable to move between full-screen apps using the sideways four-fingered swipe. |
|
At times, they resemble mere ciphers who are there to move the story on and no more. |
|
I started to blindly move ahead, swishing through the pool of water about my feet. |
|
The combatants were circling each other warily, and waiting for the next move. |
|
To perform this workout as a circuit, move from exercise to exercise without rest until you complete one set of each. |
|
The radio station has until the end of the year to make the move and is drawing up plans to make sure it stays on air throughout the switch-over. |
|
|
The move is the start of a rolling industrial action over pay parity with colleagues in acute hospitals in Dublin. |
|
Good air circulation will encourage plant health in a confined area, and I would suggest adding a small fan to gently move the air, if needed. |
|
These cells move throughout the body through the circulatory system or through the lymphatic system, often lodging in tiny capillaries. |
|
The defendant's friend's boyfriend had offered to move her car from a car park so she would not get a parking ticket but kept stalling it. |
|
Wanderers hope their pioneering swoop for Japanese striker Akinori Nishizawa will prove a smart move both on and off the field. |
|
To move it could involve changing an act of Parliament which governs the use of the downs. |
|
Greater control by national parliaments and the European Parliament would represent a positive move. |
|
The circumstantially imposed corrections refer to the discursive move toward offering impartial, even detached, moral judgment. |
|
Experiencing his mercy should humble us, fill us with gratitude, and move us to be merciful toward those around us. |
|
The parochial church council has unanimously rejected plans to move the 11 th Century church. |
|
The move is being considered by some leading members of the parochial church council at trouble-torn St James's, Wetherby. |
|
Now we have to ask the question, has anyone seen any mountains or sycamine trees on the move lately? |
|
I continually move between langue and parole, between the oral and the written, and vice versa. |
|
We might need to move them later, but at least they're now out of the hot and humid atmosphere of the sun room. |
|
The Abbe de Rance, a reformer of the Cistercians, was also a regular duelist before his move to La Trappe. |
|
The humidity dampens the desire to move, motivation of any kind thoroughly drenched by the onslaught of heavy tropical rain. |
|
So he began to move away from such division to reluctant toleration of partition of India. |
|
Rather, they were partaking in physical activity to feel good, to move, and to stay alive. |
|
Fears that young members of the community are being forced to move away from the town have prompted civic leaders to investigate the issue. |
|
The offers include part-exchange, stamp duty of deposit paid, extra fixtures and fittings, or free legal fees and surveys if buyers move quickly. |
|
|
Our eyes move past abandoned buildings, tombs of a civilization in decline. |
|
At times like these, I feel the urge to move away from home and try to find a more civilized environment to live in. |
|
It was not a harbinger, it was a symptom of the move from a bipolar to a unipolar world. |
|
I like the way trees move in the wind, the sound their branches make as they clack together in the leafless winter. |
|
Examples of joints in the body that never move are the synarthroses in the skull. |
|
This isn't a war against an enemy that will surrender and move on. |
|
London has always drawn in the poor and hopeful, and churned out the richer and more successful, who move out because they are worried about raising children in the city. |
|
Crocodiles move using this 'sprawling gait' when they are in no hurry. |
|
I see where some of the pubs are looking forward to the day when smoking will be banned in their premises by trying to cut the move off at the pass. |
|
We've made no move to become more concrete or classifiable in our sound. |
|
Isolated gain involves utilizing solar energy to passively move heat from or to the living space using a fluid or air by natural convection or forced convection. |
|
Local shops, cafes, and even the swimming baths will lose the lunchtime trade that the town hall workers currently provide if the move is successful. |
|
We have peace in the broader context and national security, but that is not enough to move the country forward to sustained democracy and economic growth. |
|
Once they have an idea of how things move on screen, the students will work with paper cutouts, again shooting them in sequence to make a short film before trying claymation. |
|
The pastoral Fulani move about with their cattle for much of the year. |
|
A brave move but, as we all know, hubris is followed by nemesis. |
|
When a pen of treated cows were returned to their home pen, additional labor was required to move gates and cattle, which disrupted cow traffic from the parlor. |
|
Your basic attack move is a one-fingered swipe on your target. |
|
Now we move over to the Hoyland house, where Kayla is swanning around the living room looking like she's instantly been transformed back to her pre-baby figure. |
|
They are on the move more, so they need hot-desking facilities. |
|
|
But in the last few weeks after a few changes, it's become hard work and my heart's not really been in it so I've decided to move on to pastures new. |
|
A labour court in February ordered that the workers be re-instated and the six are back at work but they are refusing to move back into their humble houses on the farm. |
|
Players break from huddles quickly and swiftly move from drill to drill. |
|
The end tackle should consist of a paternoster and it should NOT have a running lead since it is important that as the fish takes the bait, the lead is forced to move. |
|
There is, for example, a serious move by some bishops to have the June meeting consider a proposal for convening something like an extraordinary synod of American bishops. |
|
They circled each other like two mad dogs, neither making a move. |
|
On days like today, news and rumors and reaction and hot takes move so quickly and change so fast it's hard to jump in with any relevant commentary. |
|
A meeting of the parochial church council is to be held on September 17 and the legal move could be made then, or at a later meeting, said Mr Haskins. |
|
Half of the party of 200 helped to sweep the floor and move a tractor and other machinery while the rest grabbed whatever they could to take to the new venue. |
|
Before the startled girl could move, the witch made a pass with her hands and muttered a spell and the girl was instantly transformed into a bird. |
|
The loan plus the interest is then repaid when you move house or pass on. |
|