A teaspoon of oil added to a hot bath will also help to relieve muscular aches and pains. |
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She reached her neighbourhood clinic late in the evening with labour pains. |
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But planning ahead can help to ease labor pains while you look forward to holding your baby in your arms. |
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She meets with one teenage girl who is afraid of labor pains and started smoking to keep the baby as small as possible. |
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Archeological findings at an ancient site in Jerusalem suggest that marijuana was consumed to alleviate labor pains 1,600 years ago. |
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The saga began when labor pains prematurely struck Lo's daughter, Teresa Lo, at her flat. |
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At around 11 in the morning, she was said to have started experiencing labour pains in the kitchen. |
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It is believed by Samoans to be a means of helping men appreciate the prolonged labor pains involved with childbirth. |
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As Izumi's labor pains came quicker, Dr. Chambers administered the epidural anesthesia. |
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In early 1932 we encounter Johnson being driven to hospital, writhing in the back of the car with stomach pains. |
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Lack of effective marketing has to be addressed and the makers should take pains to carry out word-of-mouth marketing of their films. |
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Oil of wintergreen, also known as methyl salicylate, is a time-honored rub or liniment used for sprains, strains, aches, pains and arthritis. |
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Unless the bitee is severely allergic to the biter's venom, what will usually result is some swelling, chest pains and fever. |
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In a previous report of Lyme-associated extrapyramidal features in 5 patients, 5 all of the patients exhibited akinesia, pains, and rigidity. |
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All new industries have growing pains but few face the challenges of biotechnology. |
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You'd think a high school would take pains not to title their cookbook so that it sounded like, well, a high school project. |
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She beat the illness, but earlier this year, she started suffering stomach pains and was re-admitted for treatment. |
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This may briefly cause pains similar to having wind and the urge to go to the toilet, but as the colon is empty, this will not be possible. |
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Adriana listened without comment, setting herself at a distance from the old pains quickened by his words. |
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He has been at pains to assure a sceptical public of various other safeguards to check against the rampant abuses of the disinvestment process. |
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It's good for muscular aches and pains, sinusitis, minor chest complaints and for when your immune system needs a bit of a boost. |
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Good posture can minimize discomfort and keep aches and pains at a minimum. |
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Support and reassurance that growing pains will pass as children grow up can help them relax. |
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Sir Evelyn said despite a few sore backs and minor aches and pains, the ride had been a great success. |
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Magnesium can help keep muscles supple and prevent aches and pains, and may also lower the risk of osteoporosis. |
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I still get aches and pains in my muscles but what could have happened when the car fell just doesn't bear thinking about. |
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The signs of cold or flu are sneezing, coughing, a sore throat, fever, or minor aches and pains. |
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Every day when I hear about some of our boys being killed, it pains me something fierce, but I still think it has to be done. |
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Common symptoms include cramps in the legs, and aches and pains in the muscles, headaches and eye pains. |
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There's been a real touch of heat in it all day, lifting the spirits and driving minor aches and pains away. |
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However, now he had returned to England, he had developed generalised muscle aches and pains and a vague malaise. |
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It's involved in glucosamine synthesis for speedier joint repair, and it soothes aches, pains and inflammation. |
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The elderly lady was left with pains to her ribs and back, as well as high blood pressure and a weak heart. |
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Taking to the waters to soothe aches and pains has been a hallmark of the resort for more than a century. |
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By 9.30 I was kneeling beside the phone and the pains were now bringing tears to my eyes but bizarrely I was still racked with doubt. |
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I've managed to pull my hip out of joint somehow and have stabbing pains when I stand up. |
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She takes great pains to explain that May is happy, settled, well-balanced and at a good school. |
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He takes pains to limit the range and reach of his case against censorship. |
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Clarke is always at pains to point out errors and misconceptions in earlier writings, and he does so convincingly. |
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It is at pains to point out that much of the ceremony took place during the Christmas vigil and on the feast of the Nativity. |
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After the attack she suffered pains in her stomach and was afraid for the health of her baby. |
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This causes the shooting pains in your buttock and up the right side of your back. |
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By midday the pains had gone from sharp twinges every 5 minutes or so to a constant, agonising pain. |
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These are more likely when the disease is active and include skin rashes, mouth ulcers, joint pains and anaemia. |
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It pains us to see people buying quack nostrums that we can't touch because of the way the law is written. |
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With Thierry Henry close to signing a new contract, however, Wenger is at pains to keep accentuating the positive. |
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There are the same anxieties, the same pains and disappointments but those motherly instincts are still there. |
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Then, as the tunnel neared completion in 1996, dozens of the crew developed hacking coughs, chest pains and breathing difficulties. |
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He used to be more important, but guys get edged out when the growing pains start. |
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This is a bit long, but, much as it pains me to say it, it's my sort of spoof and I wish I'd written it. |
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You have to put your aches and pains in the back of your mind and that takes mental toughness. |
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It is used to treat delayed menses and congested blood and abdominal pains. |
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The pains of exile, as it turns out, extend outward into a pained contemplation of the sorry state of things worldwide. |
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It obviously pains him to let an ordinary member of the public contribute and he does so as little as possible. |
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After inventing the skin flick with The Immoral Mr Teas, he took infinite pains in a genre where very few pains were really required. |
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Since the shooting, Lee has suffered sharp pains and almost constant headaches. |
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He has been at pains to make it clear to staff that he is open to suggestions on ways to improve their work. |
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These pains are typically sharp and knife-like due to the fissure opening up each time your bowels are opened. |
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It will also help to ease aches and pains associated with winter colds and flu, clearing catarrh and encouraging you to breathe more easily. |
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Neil is at pains to stress he is not the oppositionist wrecker of the devolved parliament. |
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She was at pains to stress that job losses and branch closures are hers to decide and are not based on orders from the Melbourne headquarters. |
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Her children are grown, and want her to marry some old, boring, stuffy man who talks about his aches and pains a lot. |
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We've had some growing pains but overall the outlook for the future of the league is very positive. |
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She says 2,000 Chinese addicts were treated with the non-narcotic to cope with withdrawal pains. |
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I learned to cover my pains and overcame my poverty with hard work and a new hope for my future. |
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Still, it pains me that birds hit my house and that they risk encounters with my husband's bird dog and my daughter's cat, a rescued stray. |
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The director seems at pains to reflect upon the suitability of his story for younger viewers. |
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And in the late evening I was bundled off to the Accident and Emergency department suffering from bad pains in the chest. |
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I dare you to share the pains and fears of another, to share hope with the hopeless, and to resurrect our underserved communities. |
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One moves on, yet the pains and joys remain below the surface for years and cannot really be discussed. |
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Serena felt the first pangs of labour pains on New Year's Eve and made her way to Wexford hospital. |
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Varicose veins usually result in tumidity, atony and pains in the legs as well as eczema and ulcers, causing great trouble to the patients. |
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Peter Holman, who writes the introductory essay to this symposium, is at pains to remove the obstruction. |
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They will never see their marriage discussed, or their hurts and pains made public. |
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It pains us to see you so ignorant and uneducated, and so eager to place yourselves in bondage. |
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The powder of the dried flowers is also beneficial for various intestinal pains and colic. |
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But the pop princess was at pains to point out her reputation for tantrums is undeserved. |
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For if there can be phantom pains in the hand, then a pain cannot be ontologically dependent on one's actual hand. |
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She could feel the phantom pains from long gone bruises and cuts she had once received, but knew the scars in her soul would never heal. |
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But even strong women, and indeed strong men, can wake up in the morning with aches and pains in the upper body. |
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But he often complained of aches and pains and did look like he was slowing down. |
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A week after the wedding the bride's mother complains of pains in her stomach. |
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He just complained of chest pains and the lifeguard suggested we take him to hospital. |
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Those who drafted the Convention have taken pains to confer rights differentially according to a classification process. |
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It only took a few seconds before sharp, piercing pains began to sting the insides of Chase's body. |
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Prison systems must begin to take the pains of imprisonment and the nature of institutionalization seriously. |
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I'm impressed by the pains taken across the system to ensure consistency and fairness. |
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He is at pains to stress that the roles he and wife fulfil are as city missioners, God's workers, not charity employees. |
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In the commentaries that precede the extracts, the editor is at pains to present potentially contentious figures as unanimously acclaimed. |
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Psychedelic popsters Grandaddy have had their share of aches and pains over the years. |
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This bakery produces a range of delicious continental breads such as croissants and pains au chocolat, as well as speciality loaves. |
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There remains in my heart, I freely admit, a small kernel of bitterness which pains me whenever I think of that night. |
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The higher self craves freedom from the cumbrousness, the limitations, the pains and disabilities of the body. |
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I am as yet undecided which of the two errors, misquoting me or mistaking me for a woman pains me the most. |
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As a Lecturer I took pains to share my knowledge with the students but was surprised to read the answer booklets. |
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The growing pains he experienced during the preseason are a thing of the past. |
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A former soldier and a former prisoner of war, he knows both the needs of the military and the pains of imprisonment. |
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He complained of giddiness, shivering, vomiting and pains all over his body. |
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People take great pains to thank us for our efforts and whilst it is not necessary, it is good to be appreciated. |
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Far from allowing alcohol on the wards, doctors are finding a four-legged friend expert at taking patients' minds off their aches and pains. |
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Money, you think, is the sole motive to pains and hazard, deception and deviltry in this world. |
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Then as I began to relax and almost enjoy myself, the twinges and pains started. |
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One symptom that doctors find most helpful in making a diagnosis of growing pains is how the child responds to touch while in pain. |
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My head was light, I felt extremely weak and the joint pains got the best of me. |
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Which means that many State Associations have completed the growing pains that we are now facing. |
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If at any time you experience sharp or nagging pains, consult your physician immediately. |
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He started being sick, early hours of Sunday morning and was sick a few times during the day complaining of abdominal pains. |
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Ireland, a young nation, is still suffering from the growing pains of her remarkably rapid rise. |
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It plans to replace them with younger players, which could result in growing pains this year. |
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After two or three days of illness, pains of extraordinary severity develop. |
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As it turns out, houses and neighborhoods abroad suffer from similar growing pains as those in the United States. |
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The dull pains that occur in a partially obstructed viscus seem often to be worse with the torso fully extended. |
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I began to panic from the ripping pains in my stomach from the belly button down. |
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Feldman specifies many tonal colors that the musicians go to pains to reproduce accurately and engagingly. |
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Louis went to great pains to prove by an autopsy that the death was due to natural causes. |
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You still get the runny nose and cough, but it gets rid of the aches, pains and general uncomfortable lassitude. |
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As much as it pains me to be fair to Kissinger, he isn't the only public figure whose travel plans mysteriously synchronize with bad news. |
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An expert in the field weighs in on meditation, self-knowledge and what they have to do with keeping aches and pains away. |
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Naturally, when with a great deal of pains a throwing stick had been made out of carefully chosen wood, the hunter did not want to lose it. |
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They were at pains to point out that she had no such scruples later, and made her exit bareheaded. |
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One customer of Peter Jones told him that she could only get relief from pains in her feet by walking barefoot on a beach. |
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The York theatre legend had to bow out of the star role after the opening night when he was taken to hospital with intense stomach pains. |
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As much as it pains me to admit it, there may not be an important moral argument for using an apostrophe rather than a tick mark. |
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Hal displays a couple of good trout, but the competitive youngsters Martin and Jim have nothing to show for their pains. |
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It physically pains me to give away the money which makes me feel comfortable and stable in this life. |
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Mulder is at pains to point out that anti-depressants are very effective for those who suffer from severe or chronic depression. |
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Taxidermists are at pains to point out that they merely preserve to ensure that humans' understanding of nature continues to grow. |
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But publicly at least, Parliament's senior media handlers are at pains to emphasise that they will show no favour. |
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He was rewarded for his pains by more jeering, whooping and the sound of broken glass. |
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He visited his doctor who sent him home and when he phoned later that afternoon his chest pains were still bad so an ambulance was called. |
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The water was a bit soapy and although she never got pregnant, she had some really bad aches and pains for weeks after that. |
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I had chests pains, a very bad headache and my eyes were sore and bloodshot. |
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The company will be at pains not to let this type of embarrassing schoolboy error happen again. |
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Bow Wow may be more famous than the average teenager, but that hasn't made him exempt from life's growing pains. |
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The Lt Col. was complaining about chest pains and the driver was in a state of severe shock. |
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And I do get a decent bottle of wine and I and a guest diner free for my pains. |
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A few minutes later, my nose is running, I'm sneezing and coughing, and there are sharp pains behind my eyes. |
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At any rate, because of that feeling, it pains me somewhat to bring up this. |
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He started to get up and groaned aloud as all sorts of aches and pains assailed him. |
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You may have a high temperature, aches and pains, and a headache a day or so before the rash appears. |
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There were sharp pains, and sudden dizziness, and then profuse bleedings at the pores, with dissolution. |
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It pains me to say this, because I've been a long-time fan of narrative cinema. |
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His actions have distressed the great many journalists who go to pains every day to uphold the lofty ideals of their chosen craft. |
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Naturally, having gone to such pains to acquire new clients, enterprising energy companies are loath to part with them. |
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Aches and pains and sore muscles are almost synonymous with sporting and recreational activities, and just day-to-day living. |
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Pat began to have pains in her right hip and side and mild stomach upsets in January last year. |
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They were at pains to point out the integration of Sunni and Shia, whether by marriage or by tribe. |
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By the end of the ride, I was suffering from heat exhaustion and sweating profusely, and I had shooting pains in my inner thighs. |
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The jolting from walking here from the scoober had caused her broken arm to have shooting pains, and this time they weren't stopping. |
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He is taking strong painkillers, but has bad nights, with shooting pains in his head. |
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I had shooting pains, and my right arm and fingers and shoulder were useless. |
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He has also had to endure shooting pains in different parts of his body, abdominal discomfort, nausea and some irregular heartbeats. |
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When I went to yank the pillow, I had never used that muscle and sharp pains started shooting everywhere. |
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Then one day at work, I started getting shooting pains along my scar line from my previous birth. |
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When I turned 28, I started suffering from sharp, shooting pains in my knees. |
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However, he was having excruciating electric shock-like pains shooting from his hand to his elbow. |
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Diarrhoea, nervousness, rapid pulse, insomnia, tremors and, sometimes, anginal pains indicate the dose is too high. |
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Yet, the film-makers took great pains to get it to look realistic, staging numerous reshoots for the final few scenes. |
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Lenders are usually at pains to point out that they are happy to reschedule debts if you run into problems. |
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I know it pains him that he hasn't seen me grow up and that, now, I seem ambivalent about our relationship. |
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She'd been in hospital for 8 hours on Monday night coz her side pains had gotten so bad that she could barely move. yikes! |
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Ginger is a good alternative to aspirin to relieve minor aches and pains. |
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Frankly, this sounds like the kind of nonsense frequently trumpeted about period pains or conditions such as ME by people who have never experienced them. |
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You will use the knowledge of heraldry and blazonry taught to you at great pains by your father's herald to identify other characters and know them for friend or foe. |
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With nontraditional families on the rise, by choice and by circumstance, these growing pains prove a threat to marriage. |
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There is no evidence of the growing pains that often bedevil follow-up albums recorded with additional personnel and the dubious luxury of a multi-track recording desk. |
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In the 1960s, the music resembled the slow romantic Cuban bolero and the lyrics of the songs were poetic statements about the pains and pleasures of love. |
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A month after the invasion of Okinawa, he complained of stomach pains and was admitted to a naval hospital in Oakland. |
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At the same time, interim government and military officials alike are at pains to emphasize the seriousness of their response. |
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Hot chocolate warms me before I retire to my room for a pre-dinner nap and a good long soak in the bath to pre-empt any aches and pains from the day's exercise. |
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Serious neuralgic pains in his legs often caused him insomnia. |
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But there are a lot of positives in the relationship, too, and both presidents were at pains to stress them. |
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However, he remains at pains to locate his own wife and when his colleague Silvio and daughter Teresa are also abducted, things take a sharp nosedive. |
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Fragile or not, June had a family and a place in their lives, and thus a coherent, stable identity despite the pains and doubts of her daily life. |
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It pains us to be a subject of real calumny, unjustifiably so. |
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But a setback came when he had headaches, nagging pains and dizzy spells. |
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She hoped the bags under her eyes that she'd taken great pains to hide with concealer would not give away just how much sleep she'd not been getting. |
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The manual takes pains to underscore the ills of overdoing things. |
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From the rainforests of Tasmania to the dunes of the Sahara, they swapped the pains and palaver of the 21st century for the pleasures of a purer planet. |
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Like a portrait painter who takes pains with all the details of a face, the chorographer tries to catch the detailed architectural characteristics of a city or town. |
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He falsified the medical records of Hazel Wood when she died of serious heart disease because three months earlier he attributed her chest pains to stomach problems. |
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He takes pains to claim back credit from his producers and fills three pages with the playbill of a 1968 Italian concert to show there was a time when his name came first. |
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All he got for his pains was a look that would have curdled milk. |
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Calder, however, was at pains to pay tribute to Boroughmuir's dashing performance in conditions that varied between plain nasty and downright vicious. |
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As much as it pains me to admit it, I'm a bit of a goof when it comes to being co-ordinated enough for anything more complicated than a walk in the park. |
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He conceded there are many definitions of a diploma mill, and CCU's administration has gone to pains in the past to deny the charges, saying it is a legitimate university. |
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Most companies prefer a more gradual transition into complex 3D software because the growing pains and costs associated with the transition are minimized. |
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Its appeal, he argues, can be explained by the fact that it came at the right time, when workers were suffering from the growing pains of industrialisation. |
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His puck handling, offensive skill and offensive instincts are good enough that he continues to get ice time while he goes through growing pains and improves his two-way game. |
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Higher demand for coverage and the reality of rising healthcare costs have created unfortunate growing pains for the long-term healthcare insurance segment of the industry. |
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It's reflective of the current PC games market, and part of the growing pains of the hardware leading the software, which is almost always the case in the PC universe. |
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The most discomforting abdominal pains are the acute and gripping ones. |
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Her final plea that he entreat divine grace on her behalf can only be read, given the pains she took to equate divinity with intellect, as a request for intellectual freedom. |
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In the not-so-distant future, an independent country, which belongs to Kurds, will rise from these wants, pains, fire and ashes. |
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In addition, it can lead to uncomfortable conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome and other aches and pains. |
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By the early 1850s clashes between Indians and wagoners were so common that the travelers often took great pains to hide burials in unmarked graves in the middle of the trail. |
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We mostly take the walking wounded but cannot see people with illnesses, chest pains, head injuries where someone has lost consciousness or where they have been drinking. |
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It is no secret that the aches and pains from a day exerting one's self in the garden can resemble the muscle fatigue and aches that can be generated while playing sport. |
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She sat up wincing in pain at the aches and pains in her body. |
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Severe or sharp pains are more significant than dull, achy pains. |
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She was given Du Huo Angelica and Loranthes Combination with the addition of 4 gms of prepared aconite to relieve the chronic arthritic condition and pains. |
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Heartburn sounds such an innocuous affliction until you actually experience it but stabbing sharp pains in your chest when ever you bend down or lie down is not very fun. |
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He listens to everyone and removes the pains and afflictions of all. |
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Cruz also took pains to build up his credentials on foreign policy, appearing at anti-CPAC event sponsored by Frank Gaffney. |
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A week into the trip, however, Rob went down with stomach pains. |
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The brave bride had amazed guests when she made it to her wedding ceremony on time despite being rushed into hospital with agonising stomach pains the night before. |
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There were no technicians with the latest equipment waiting to help him decipher the coughs, bellyaches, chest pains, dizzy spells and fevers that ailed his patients. |
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The pains aux raisins need to be started early, but if getting up at six to knead dough is not your idea of bliss, make them the night before and reheat in the morning. |
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It's like your heart pains and you wonder what's wrong with human beings. |
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Her due date had come and gone without an inkling of labor pains. |
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Three miles into the journey she was seized with labour pains. |
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All of a sudden, she felt labor pains and was rushed to the hospital. |
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Using water as a way to ease birth and labour pains is very popular. |
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Pregnant women take Lamaze courses not because what they learn will quell their labor pains, but because knowing what to expect helps them to handle the pain. |
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What activity could a player from the World Cup-winning French soccer team share with an alcoholic on the road to recovery and a woman peacefully controlling her labor pains? |
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These guideposts transformed my negative thoughts into useful work, the way Lamaze mothers learn to re-imagine labor pains as muscle contractions. |
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By 1850, ether and chloroform were available to reduce labor pains. |
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They had a host of injuries, from broken bones to premature labor pains. |
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He was so sure of their gratitude, so compassionate for their plight, that he opened his door to an Arab woman feigning labor pains on the first night of the rampage. |
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For years he had been taking them once a week, as a way of unwinding and relieving the aches and pains from the hard manual labor required by his landscaping business. |
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Most of them are severely anemic and suffer from aches and pains. |
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My right ear was sending shooting pains through my head and being the usual hypochondriac that I was I immediately diagnosed myself the worst possible illness. |
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Seaweed baths in Sligo are popular with a whole spectrum of people including fishermen and farmers for curing rheumatism, aches, pains and sore joints. |
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In the fortunate first world, we are warm, fed and dry, and largely free of the famines, pains and diseases that brought misery to our forefathers. |
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Since the explosion of invasive aquatics in Texas waters during the past decade, conscientious boaters have taken pains to remove any plants trapped on their boat or trailer. |
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To ease the aches and pains of the office, ask your partner to gently rub your shoulders, or try one of the exercises below to get your blood flowing and loosen your muscles. |
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But I have a hunch that Sullivan will survive the growing pains and emerge as one of the leading blues stars of his generation. |
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The response included denouncements from his growing pains costars Tracey Gold and Alan Thicke. |
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Tracey Gold became the face of anorexia nearly 20 years ago when she admitted she had the disease and left growing pains. |
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No longer should she mask her fears and pains with lustful desires. |
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Severe belly pains, a headache, and fever were the only conclusions Breman could draw. |
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The main symptoms of fibromyalgia are pains, tender areas, and tiredness. |
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They are at pains to state that this impasse has not been brought about by the demands of people in their profession, but is rather because of promises not kept. |
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The firm's advisers were at pains to claim that this was not a hostile move, but it is evident that the 810p per share price is not enough to satisfy investors. |
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He was at pains to stress that his whole-hearted commitment to drawing in larger crowds with gate reductions and the acquisition of quality players seems to be in vain. |
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The 44-year-old was at pains to defend his record at Coventry, claiming that with City he proved five years ago he can keep teams in the Premiership. |
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While always judged in retrospect in terms of their ability to predict a result, pollsters are at pains to emphasise that their numbers should never be regarded as predictive. |
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However, the minister was at pains to stress the need for greater co-operation between third-level colleges if the fourth tier is to become a success. |
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Howard was at pains to point out, however, that the labour needed to run a system like his would not be available to the vast majority of farmers. |
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Typically then he sat almost unobtrusively in a crowded dressingroom and when asked for comment was at pains to stress that the victory was down to a team effort. |
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As much as it pains me to admit this, I too was a teenager once. |
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I have always tried to keep up my existing friendship networks, and it really pains me to realise that perhaps I don't have much in common with my old friends anymore. |
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It pains me to the core every time I have to write to you about this debilitating but curable illness called bipolar disorder, also known as clinical depression. |
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I did all I could to hold him in, and he hated me for my pains. |
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Beno moved forward, and received an elbow to the chest for his pains. |
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The elder Vidyarthi had gone to jail for his pains, and his son had continued in the family tradition, as a courageous anti-establishment publisher. |
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You'll only get kicked and beaten and trampled on for your pains. |
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The heavy, tensive, aching pains are the main indication for its use. |
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Her poor, martyred heart is then subjected to all the glorious pains of unfulfilled love we associate with the Petrarchan traditions of the late Elizabethan era. |
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I was nervous about my first massage, but my masseur, Tony, managed to ease away the aches and pains of a working life spent hunched over a keyboard. |
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But as Bernanke took pains to reassure the market, and as the stock market recovered, the panic has subsided. |
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Signs included muscular aches and pains, headaches, inability to relax, and irritability. |
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That's what Lindsay's character did in the 2009 straight-to-cable flop labor pains. |
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He also suffers from stomach pains and has been drained of energy. |
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The book touchingly described the pains, miseries and hesitation of its young characters, winning great acclaim and empathy from those who had similar experiences. |
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Places that dealt on the shady side of supply often went to great pains to know who they were dealing with, fearing the police, or worse, the Empire. |
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Kelly takes pains to disguise them, to remove all traces of expression. |
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What is clear is that Strauss took great pains to recruit disciples who could transmit his ideas to future generations of impressionable young philosophers. |
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I am also taking pains to distinguish crossdressing from transsexualism. |
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England's foremost lutanist received an eye-watering 40 shillings for his pains. |
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The society of beach-combers always repays the small pains you need be at to enjoy it. They are easy of approach and affable in conversation. |
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Soon after, Welsh's health began to deteriorate and he began complaining of severe chest pains. |
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That said, movement leaders are braced for further growing pains. |
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The pregnant woman was rushed to a medical clinic in Varzaneh, a small town near Esfahan, after experiencing severe labor pains. |
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I suffered for months and months with excruciating pain in my stomach, which I can only describe as like labour pains. |
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Speaking from the hospital ward, Abe revealed she crashed on purpose and that her due date was Wednesday but she had no labour pains. |
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A MIDWIFE accused a mum-to-be of lying about her labour pains and of being a nuisance, a disciplinary hearing was told yesterday. |
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Octuplets woman Mandy Allwood was in hospital yesterday after collapsing with stomach pains. |
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Lee would stay up late, unable to sleep from the pains he had in his back. |
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Here, Mackin is at pains to point out the largeness, the variousness, and the complexity of Scarbrough's brand of regionalism. |
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She had again been troubled with the torminal pains and diarrhoea, but her pulse was moderate, and her febrile symptoms inconsiderable. |
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The salve made the soreness go away, but with the aches gone I suddenly noticed my other pains. |
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At that time, doctors recommended bathing in the sea to help cure aches and pains. |
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Your spots are nothing compared to my ghastly rheumaticky pains behind the knees. |
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I get phantom pains in amputated leg and real pains in my right leg because I was wounded there too. |
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A child is learning to spell, but no special pains are taken to make him respell, and respell, until spelled aright, every misspelled word. |
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Because of the circumstances of his accession, Claudius took great pains to please the Senate. |
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It is also useful in abdominal disorders, ben-ben and sorus, head ache, joint pains, leucoderma, liver disorders,paralysis, ulcers etc. |
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Thumbsucker is a deeply-moving rites of passage story that makes Adrian Mole's growing pains seem rather mundane in comparison. |
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Many amputees feel burning, cramping, or shooting pains in these phantom limbs, often at specific anatomical points. |
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It pains me to say this, in the year 2014, we are in a death match. |
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It was one of the syringes Splinter ganked from the hospital the other day when he was in there for chest pains. |
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This began as impeachment proceedings, but then became a different procedure as a bill of pains and penalties. |
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For there is no going forth from the pains and afflictions of the secret places of the desires until these be mortified and put to sleep. |
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It is unnecessary to take any pains to show how much this prolixness must enervate the eloquence of all modern languages. |
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Obvious pains like Socha's, or merely visible imperfections like black toenails or calluses, often indicate imbalances that can lead to injury. |
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If you experience premonitory pains, please consult a physician immediately. |
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The traveller had been at the pains of going a long way up-stairs to his sleeping-room to fetch his pocket-flask of brandy. |
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He took pains with his work, and to some degree anticipated the modern historiography. |
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The roots of Plantain and Pellitory of Spain beaten to powder and put into hollow teeth, takes away the pains of them. |
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Temptation or pains of conscience originates from a conflict between evil spirits and angels. |
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Mint was originally used as a medicinal herb to treat stomach ache and chest pains. |
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It was also used in folk medicine, as a cure for gout, various aches and pains. |
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She was rushed to hospital in Monaco on 23 May 2008 to have an emergency operation on her stomach after complaining of abdominal pains. |
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It is made from pure volcanic ash, pine oil and salicyl, an aspirin base which helps relieve aches and pains. |
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Most people think of chiropractic as, at best, something good for back pains and, at worst, pure quackery. |
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Elderflower, peppermint and yarrow is good for both colds and flu while boneset helps for aches, pains and fever. |
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Most neuroresearch vendors now take great pains to emphasize their adherence to scientific and industry standards, transparency and ethics. |
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If one rows with poor technique, especially rowing with a curved rather than straight back, other injuries may surface, including back pains. |
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The attacks often came with headaches, eye inflammation, neuralgia in the head and rheumatic pains. |
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