We have come to speak with your father on matters of some importance, mademoiselle. |
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I realize you are my employer, but I'd like to speak with you man to man for a moment, if I may. |
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The Sunday Herald remains committed to encouraging our female captains of industry and entrepreneurs to speak with a louder voice in the future. |
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The remarkable thing, though, is that both instruments speak with a distinctive voice that is recognisably the same. |
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Unable to speak with forked tongue, they might be obliged to speak the truth or at least stand firm on the side of a single opinion. |
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No doubt there will be members who will speak with forked tongue, and who will deliberately try to misconstrue that. |
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Your life experience has really given you the ability to speak with veraciousness and frankness. |
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She had to speak with authority in support of the party line to keep her official position in the government. |
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Orators are also expected to be able to speak with power and eloquence in an extemporaneous fashion. |
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I keep promising myself that I'll learn British Sign Language so that I can speak with my hands. |
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We'll speak with an author who says corporate America is run like a sweatshop and workers can hardly keep up. |
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We did speak with one of his next-door neighbours who claims to be a family friend as well who kind of defended the doctors. |
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And if you're stuck in a truly uncomfortable situation, speak with a flight attendant. |
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Its purpose was to replenish the paepae with members who could speak with authority. |
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It's always a good idea to speak with your auto insurance carrier to see if you already have these overages. |
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Midnight is a fairly untraditional hour to do an interview, but as I begin to speak with the HIM founder, I realize he's a bit of an odd-bird. |
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Attending physicians or their designee also will speak with the patient or family members about injuries resulting from adverse events. |
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I felt very, very alive, and so desperate to speak with an intelligent, creative woman that I rang a friend back home for a good natter. |
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I'm going to have to go back in there and speak with her as though I were an unprejudiced bystander. |
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Before his guests arrived on the scene, Abraham used prophecy as means to speak with God. |
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Driediger, worried the honks were interrupting the man's slumbers, went to speak with him. |
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After he said it, Brown was immediately angry with himself, for he truly wished to speak with the gypsies. |
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This change in events requires that I speak with you and your companion privately. |
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By and large, says Big Fat's chief strategy officer, John Palumbo, he picks people who are accessible and easy to speak with. |
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My husband waited for me in the anteroom while I entered the rabbi's study to speak with him privately. |
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We cannot speak with authority and certainty that they are safe for the general public? |
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Rutgers fans speak with envy of Midwest football schools such as Nebraska, where the fan support is rabid and the local kids stick around. |
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Captain, the admiral of the main fleet has contacted us and requests to speak with you. |
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Kate stood at the door and waited for him to pause the game and come speak with her privately. |
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In addition, to maintain credibility as a scientific advisory body, the council needs to speak with one voice. |
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Chang does speak with absolute conviction, but also with measured, genteel grace. |
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Both in fact were non-rhotic, while the majority of Americans speak with rhotic accents. |
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There are open days when the public can meet and speak with representatives of Barbican Venture, and existing staff are being met as well. |
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They carry weight because of their experience, and the expectation that they speak with the voice of disinterested patriotism. |
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On the main road, I speak with two rangers who have stopped to observe a wolf kill left next to the river. |
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But how does a movement that does not speak with one voice and that often marches energetically in different directions take the next step? |
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She finally pulled him away, and quietly told him that the councilmen wished to speak with him. |
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While the industry insists it must stick together and speak with one voice, there have been individual voices of disapproval. |
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So you want to be a united front and speak with one voice and give clear directives to the contractor even as a couple. |
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We must speak with one voice, and proudly promote the positive impact of the industry's substantial investment in server training. |
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Who should I speak with if I was thinking of translating the book into Irish? |
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She taught us how to carry ourselves, how to speak with respect, how to cope with any event. |
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We watched him on television that night speak with sadness, firmness, and dignity. |
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Even more annoying, speak with radical environmentalists and they'll lard their speech with numerous conservation biology buzz words. |
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I'm talking about galvanising the unionist family to speak with one voice instead of appeasing republicanism. |
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In a typical lawsuit, such witnesses would be free to speak with any parties or their counsel. |
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Unlike most of her neighbours, O'Brien was prepared to speak with a degree of candour. |
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I envy guys who are comfortable in their own voices and who speak with deep resonance. |
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He declined to name them but said he advised the officials to seek legal advice and to speak with their insurers. |
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Talk to a temporary agency about your needs, and also speak with a lawyer about the various legalities involved in hiring temporary employees. |
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People were elected to speak with the escapees and communicate to the media their stories and personal circumstances. |
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Leaders should not only speak with forthright approach, but base it on their own strong sense of integrity and will to work. |
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On Christmas Day they will see and speak with their families via a two-way video linkup. |
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We also believe it is important that Congress speak with one non-partisan voice on this issue. |
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After a rousing locker room speech by Coach, we went to speak with the media for a few minutes, and then made our way back to the charter bus. |
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Gay men are not the only group whose members sometimes speak with assibilation. |
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Let the record show I was wrong, and by all means keep that in mind the next time I speak with confidence and assurance. |
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By chance he bumped into her again that night at another pub and worked up the courage to speak with her. |
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Clearly it was she, and felt sorry for the creature outside, that she was tabooed never to speak with. |
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They speak with a somewhat clinical detachment that ironically casts many of their observations and findings in a rather dramatic light. |
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And I think he's somebody who can speak with authority about what that kind of leadership can provide. |
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A group of men hustled her and reporters attempting to speak with her away from the stage. |
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But to speak with humility does not mean that I speak spinelessly. |
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Frankly, I have never heard anyone else speak with such insight into Afghan affairs, post-US surge. |
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Relatives are begging his abductors to let them speak with him. |
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He reportedly has continued to refuse even to speak with detectives since he was brought back to Charlottesville. |
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She was wanting me to call her and speak with her last night, after not having heard from her for months and months, but I just couldn't be bothered doing that. |
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There are some characters in the movie who speak with heavy Jamaican accents or in heavily accented slang that I found hard to understand at times. |
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I can speak with knowledge on this point as I was there just a few weeks ago in the emergency reception area, which competes with the toilets at Dover harbour for rankness. |
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It took a bit of convincing to get DeCarli, a 38-year veteran of the department, to speak with me. |
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The award was also welcomed by Scarborough Forum for Tourism, set up three years ago to allow all sectors of the industry, including residents groups, to speak with one voice. |
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When the deputy arrived at the apartment, he asked to speak with the girls and was led to their bedroom. |
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Since then, Randolph dreamt of bring hundreds of thousands of people to Washington to speak with one voice for jobs and rights. |
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The two leaders had an opportunity to speak with each other for about 20 minutes during a limousine ride from Sunan airport to the Paekhwawon, the report said. |
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He has some grounds to speak with authority about the region. |
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I cannot speak with authority about other branches of government but I can say that the most yawning gaps are in the key areas of policing and security. |
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Earlier on Friday, Verzilov arrived at the Krasnoyarsk hospital to speak with his wife, whom he gently calls Nadia. |
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Estevez was summoned to speak with her legal aid attorney in a glass booth on the left side of the courtroom. |
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It is not fair that Ditko goes so unmentioned, but at least some of that springs from his refusal to speak with reporters, allow himself to be photographed, etc. |
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During our mobilization training, representatives from the Pentagon came to speak with members of our brigade. |
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After years of unsuccessful entreaties by the U.S. TV networks, Pippa finally sat down to speak with Matt Lauer. |
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But these pretty guys are much more cosmopolitan than just being Aussies, and they don't just speak with Australian accents, however it may sound to the undiscerning ear. |
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The osce monitors asked if there was any chance they could speak with some expert in charge for the actions conducted on the site. |
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Licking her lips she began to slowly speak with a small slur. |
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A psychiatric resident came in to speak with Dianne and the husband saw he was wearing a yarmulke. |
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I speak with a northern accent and sometimes even in dialect. |
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Ali, however, was on good terms, both with the gatekeepers and the guards, both of whom hailed and harangued him in a friendly manner as he stopped briefly to speak with them. |
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Crucially, however, even within the confines of the biological sciences, the science of genetics does not, and cannot, speak with a single, oracular voice. |
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Just a little while ago I had a chance to speak with the top U.S. Army commander who is in charge of all of these in-and-out movements from the country. |
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Church elders speak with pride of the 403 toilets and, in particular, of their own invention, a machine capable of dispensing 40 cups of communion wine every two seconds. |
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Next the flight attendant gets the co-pilot to speak with her. |
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In the meantime, she continues to speak with idiomatic brusqueness. |
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I speak with the standard middle-class sociolect and I 'belong' to the kidney-transplanted community. |
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Di Buckland's Message Sticks was an amusing piece which was a further reminder that ceramics today speak with many voices. |
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Not all Liverpudlians are brought up to speak with this variation but this does not make it any less Scouse. |
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For example, in Disney animated films mothers and fathers typically speak with white middle class American or English accents. |
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Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. |
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Even though many Chinese do not speak with standard pronunciation, spoken Standard Chinese is widely understood to some degree. |
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All of them speak with a great deal of vocal fry, and it would be an improvement if better vocal models were used. |
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The Spanish asserted that Moctezuma was stoned to death by his own people as he attempted to speak with them. |
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But it's not just Fianna Fail who speak with forked tongues, the gombeen Greens have managed to outdo their political masters. |
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Following this crisis, population returned to the lowlands and it is possible to speak with confidence of the Treveri by name. |
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Users receive email notifications of incoming voice mails and can then call back those people they want to speak with. |
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Media are invited to speak with NASA Administrator Charles Bolden on Wednesday, Sept. |
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As a result, Londoners speak with a mixture of accents, depending on ethnicity, neighbourhood, class, age, upbringing, and sundry other factors. |
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When users pair the base unit to a mobile phone or PC and make a call, all participants can speak with the party on the other end. |
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The VoIP telephone extension allows office and virtual clients to communicate with Telsec receptionists without having to speak with them. |
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Last year Speak Easily taught 800 people from over 90 different nationalities to speak with a Received Pronunciation English accent. |
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President Kirchner had earlier refused an invitation from the Falkland Islands Government to speak with a delegation of islanders. |
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Police are also keen to speak with a jogger who was running in the area at the time of the attack. |
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But Robson said Whitlow admitted he had fouled Lua Lua and Shearer was merely asking the official to speak with the Bolton player. |
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Didyou not but yesterday prostrate upon the ground the young man for that he speak with unrespect of your Vashintone? |
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If I speak with tongues of men and of angels, and I have not charity, I am made as brass sounding or a cymbal tinking. |
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The languages of Polynesia are easy to smatter, though hard to speak with elegance. |
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Parties to the case, lawyers, and witnesses are not allowed to speak with a member of the jury. |
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Several of the show's cast members do speak with pronounced Mancunian accents in the series. |
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My lord, there is a nobleman of the court at door would speak with you. |
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By contrast, Ginsburg, the senior member of the liberal bloc, reportedly has urged her fellow liberals on the court to speak with one calm, firm and unargumentative voice. |
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Humanist professors focused on the ability of students to write and speak with distinction, to translate and interpret classical texts, and to live honorable lives. |
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Police want to speak with Peter Fox, 26, after the bodies of Bernadette Fox and her daughter Sarah were discovered at properties in Bootle, Merseyside. |
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Most people in Britain speak with a regional accent or dialect. |
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Then Ayar Oche stood up, displayed a pair of large wings, and said he should be the one to stay at Guanacaure as an idol in order to speak with their father the Sun. |
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The industry must speak with a new voice that reaches the millions of fund investors whose retirement nest eggs depend on them making sensible choices today. |
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Anyone uncertain about being screened and wishing to speak with a urologist, prostate cancer survivors or both should plan to attend an Us TOO Florence seminar. |
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Martyn Margetson has admitted he had to speak with the departing George Wood before accepting his new role as Cardiff City's goalkeeping coach, writes Terry Phillips. |
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