Moments after his temporarily absorbed brain registered someone's presence behind him, he heard a sweet, syrupy voice speak up. |
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It's time for Democrats who are sick of such shenanigans to speak up and repudiate these clowns. |
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If it continues to be a problem, they're going to have to speak up and articulate their position. |
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But at the end of the day there are policemen actually who are beginning to speak up. |
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Anyway, speak up, I'm really interested in hearing what people think, especially you lurkers at the back. |
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Some of us journalists have been made to feel like pariahs for daring to speak up for policyholders and give them a platform for their concerns. |
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Please stay the nice person that you are, but learn also to assert yourself and to speak up for yourself. |
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Even if you never write letters, sign petitions, or speak up in public, you can still make a difference in this world. |
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This is an election year, and I think we're in desperate trouble and it's time for people to speak up and not pipe down. |
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But the fact that they felt free to speak up and raise their concerns shows that some of our old spirit has survived. |
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He snickered amusedly and was about to speak up when suddenly, an alert window blipped onto his screen. |
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I was trying to speak up on behalf of the unjustly stigmatized, but I was treated as if I were some kind of soft-headed liberal spam lover. |
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The military pilot in the jump seat did not speak up because, not being part of the crew, he didn't feel it was his place to say anything. |
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At one point the jury had to send a note to the judge to ask him to speak up, and he was the closest person to it. |
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To speak up for or defend animals who cannot defend themselves against abuse is not a crime, nor should it ever be one. |
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She was always a person who would speak up for what was right, even if feathers got ruffled. |
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However, when no one else was willing to speak up, it was necessary to stand up and be counted. |
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It's an image that is rife with a frank sexuality that isn't shy to speak up for its otherness. |
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I made a decision to speak up against an unjust law in Florida because I was victimized by that law. |
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Hopefully Powell fils will learn to love being angry and speak up on behalf of his employers, the American people. |
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And the path to power is not dominance over others but the ability to speak up for oneself. |
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What is the best way to speak up for myself while still taking the high road? |
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We have to get off our duffs, get our noses out of the TV, and get our children to speak up. |
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Their inability to speak up for themselves, their numbing inhibitions, their fear of exposure is the psychological residue of this catharsis. |
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I realized then that what I had said sounded incredibly selfish, yet I did not speak up. |
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When political hot air is turning into cold blood, when duplicitous spin is becoming lethal, somebody's got to speak up. |
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Teachers and their families have been targeted because they have the ability to speak up for justice and fairness. |
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Finally, I should like to speak up for a community that cannot do so here for itself. |
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First, it is important to encourage and protect those individuals who speak up about wrongdoing in an organization to which they belong. |
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We hold ourselves and each other accountable for creating a safe environment where people can speak up without fear. |
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The bedridden blues icon is too sick to speak up as her son and husband battle over her estate in court. |
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He encourages managers to speak up against him, and forces them to come up with convincing arguments. |
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By engaging youth in dialogues about health it empowers them to speak up and take action to improve their overall health and well-being. |
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Feedback on how they are doing and mechanisms to enable them to speak up without fear were also seen to be critical. |
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Although it was desirable for everyone to speak in the large group meetings, it was not necessary for all to speak up in the same meeting. |
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Delegates said there is an urgent need for farmers to speak up and individually put pressure on government to address the financial crisis. |
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The older is more independent minded and can speak up for herself. |
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In this sense, it is essential that they themselves speak up and are heard. |
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In most cases, the person living with family violence has to speak up about it with someone they can trust before things can change. |
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Seniors should be encouraged and supported if they want to speak up about being abused. |
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Be willing to speak up and encourage independent thinking around roles, practices, policies, and norms. |
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Everybody knew what the answer was, but nobody dared to speak up first. |
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The objective is to create an upstander culture, an anti-bullying phrase used to encourage students not to be a bystander when they witness cyberbullying, but rather to speak up or notify an adult. |
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Republicans who disagree with the federal intrusion into education, who have said they're waiting to complain until after the election, will likely speak up. |
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As a group, we're hesitant to speak up for ourselves, lest our decorousness be tainted by saying something too self-aggrandizing. |
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This made Michael so angry that he took time off from installing telephone lines to urge Dunkers to jolly well speak up for himself, or he would have to do it for him. |
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In supporting the Manley report, the Conservatives have always said they are opposed to the NDP and others who dare speak up for peace. |
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The leader of the free world missed a golden opportunity to speak up on their behalf. |
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Making the media and the public aware of the situation and encouraging them to speak up for persecuted journalists and media outlets. |
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In this situation, the Middle Eastern nations understand the necessity to unite together in order to speak up for themselves. |
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An important basis for being able to speak up for yourself is a strong self-image. |
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Stories about members of the correctional industry who speak up against other members are rare. |
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To promote government intervention, CSEA plans to lobby and speak up for farmer's interests. |
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He was also selective about who he would speak up for in court. |
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If only subordinates see it, then the subordinate with the highest rank should speak up. |
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That is one of the many reasons why we should continue to speak up for human rights and democracy, including in China. |
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If fathers do not speak up collectively to identify the place they wish to occupy within the family, the government will not budge! |
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I wish it could speak up for communities on child care, Status of Women funding and the court challenges program. |
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After his death, Jackson tried to speak up for her friend on a Facebook forum. |
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Nobody wanted to speak up for the European common good, and most governments clung to their own interests, such as they imagined them to be. |
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Challenge systemic barriers such as racism, sexism, classism, ageism, homophobia and transphobia that make people reluctant to speak up. |
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But if that is how you see the world, amity seems unlikely. In this section The next phase The need to speak up Who'll be lucky? |
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When will the government speak up for our Canadian workers, show leadership and act now? |
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But it will be too late for our colleagues opposite, who will be sorry they did not have the courage to speak up. |
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With your family, friends and colleagues, at home, in your parish, school or university, learn to speak up on important issues. |
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And when the Board feels that not enough has been done to address the safety issues we have uncovered, we will speak up as we did last month with our Watchlist. |
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If participants are not confident enough to speak up the leader could read statements and everyone who agrees or disagrees with the statement could swap places. |
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While children are often asked in school to sit down, quiet down and settle down, a children's government encourages children to stand up, speak up and take action. |
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Recommended for all those who dare not speak up, who do not express their feelings and keep them bottled up and those who are easily influenced by others. |
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Accordingly, I call on policy-makers, communities and civil society to speak up for cultural diversity and to promote it by every possible means so that it will be recognized more widely and will grow stronger. |
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They fear that if they speak up about personal family matters, they will be rejected by their communities, so in a sense, it is like your family disowning you. |
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If you speak up, you may help your spouse, but you risk hurting him or her, too. John McCain's wife, Cindy, gazes adoringly at him on the stump but says little. |
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Now that the deposition of the complainer and the work of the defense come to end, God-The-Judge, so far silent, must speak up and give his ruling. |
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So I think that any good cartoonist or commentator is going to try to keep that in mind and speak up for the smaller person when they can or they feel they should. |
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We need to use this election to speak up for co-op housing. |
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I call on them to join in the battle, to stand up and fight for the farmers, to speak up for the farmers and convince the government to try something new, to try our proposal. |
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For our part, we will continue to propose solutions and we will speak up for the interest of Quebec every time, on every issue, in a responsible way, dedicating our hearts and our minds solely to the interests of Quebec. |
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The second is that «all of that is possible thanks to the committed work of women who take risks and speak up for those women who do not have a voice. |
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But with this change comes a wider consideration, linked more to the ability of a commercial industry to speak up for the system and the means by which it survives and prospers. |
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With reference to the Gospel we speak up for a justice that not only assures the unfortunate a bare survival, but a dignified life, free from all threat. |
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These northern European states scrupulously respect press freedom in their own countries but also speak up for it elsewhere, for example recently in Eritrea and Zimbabwe. |
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In this debate we need to speak up for what we ourselves believe, we need to put across our standpoint actively, vigorously and above all in a credible way. |
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In their case, we need to speak up for the journalists as individuals and victims persecuted innocently while trusting mainly the modest strength of sanctions. |
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I understand that your voice might be under some stress tonight, so if you grab hold of that microphone stand and bring it a little closer, you won't have to speak up too loudly. |
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I know now that there are members of the Bloc and the Liberal Party who are now questioning this whole issue and are concerned about it as more and more voices speak up against it, Judge Moshansky being one of them. |
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Intrinsically, the ability to participate as full citizens, to have a say in the framing of policies, to dissent without fear and to speak up against what one perceives to be wrong are essential freedoms. |
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Thanks to you and to your choosing to speak up about things that matter, and to speak loud enough to be heard above the calls for fear and paranoia. You have restored a piece of Canada's life. |
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All of us as parliamentarians should speak up and voice our concerns about these horrendous and terrible crimes that are committed against women every day in our country and throughout the world. |
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There's lots of discontent, but also a strong fear to speak up. |
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We must appeal to the majority to speak up and denounce those who disrespect the values and principles of solidarity that are present in all great religions. |
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In that connection, the permanent contract was of fundamental importance, since when staff were insulated from career vulnerabilities, they were empowered to speak up and do what was right for the Organization. |
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So, at last, backed by a formidable phalange of femfans, I dare speak up, brave lassie that I am. |
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Supermarket suppliers with a grievance have been urged to speak up soon or forever hold their peace. |
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So we do demand justice and we do speak up and make demands. |
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If an editor at the paper will speak up for journalistic ethics, hurrah. |
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I'm not a tribalist and am quite independent-minded, and determined to speak up for this part of Wales, which tends to get forgotten. |
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Many initiatives designed to reduce harassment in Egypt encourage the women to speak up and go to the police if someone harasses them. |
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But after a turbulent first three months in this, the biggest job of his fledgeling managerial career, Deila sensed the time had come to speak up for what he believes in. |
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I feel that somebody has to speak up for those oppressed by the system. |
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The co-pilot didn't feel free to speak up to the pilot in the cockpit. |
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