If Scout leaders really want to teach financial survival skills to a new generation, they need a much more hard-nosed approach. |
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Detergents within the fuels, they say, significantly reduce deposits on inlet valves and in carburettors. |
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And so men are stereotypically the upholders of a false reason, because in this society they are powerful so they need some sort of rationale. |
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The pair are known as pragmatic, hard-nosed businessmen, and they are thought to have little sentimental attachment to the club. |
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The family made an application for a grant and, on April 16, 2002, they were given the okay for the work. |
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The round things in this bag are called hard tack wafers, they don't taste very good, but they will keep you on your feet. |
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But only 28 percent said they were ready to limit their consumption of domestic poultry. |
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I just thought they were ordinary people who were easily stereotyped as lovers of musical theater. |
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Large drops of rain began to fall, and they laid groundsheets and put up their oilskin tents. |
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Far from seeming hard-nosed and realistic, they suddenly appear beside the point, if not immoral. |
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It's okay to accuse your opponents of dishonesty when they routinely present quotations out of context. |
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All are stern judges and they expect others to be as serious about everything as they are. |
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Life was often difficult for the Kite family and they suffered many setbacks and hardships. |
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Hardtack was one of the food supplies they packed because it could be kept for a long time without spoiling. |
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Just as they were about to give up hope, Mr Smith started whooping and yelling. |
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Their writing is taking them in a new direction that they are fully prepared for and ready to embrace. |
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Then, they gathered their tools together and made ready to perform their conjuring. |
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No, but the union can support its members if they suffer financial hardship. |
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Under common attack, more moderate factions are forced to commit to the extreme hard line, whether they like it or not. |
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As trees take root, they would begin absorbing carbon dioxide, turning the region back into a carbon sink. |
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In their story about contraception, they discreetly avoid mention of sterilization. |
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In fact, they hardly ever come to buy anything from my shop and even if they do I refuse to sell anything to them. |
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The wider the debates the more they are likely to harass, confuse and distract hard-pressed District Court judges and magistrates in particular. |
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Other callers are just calling in to say they are okay this year or thanking the volunteers there for their support in the past. |
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Kali commanded after getting the okay from everyone that they were strapped in. |
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How else would they recognise the sterling qualities that mark her as a unique writer? |
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There was another meeting with about 12 people there, and they gave it the okay. |
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For radio the ad must include a statement in which candidates identify themselves and say they okayed the message. |
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All geared up for a crucial play-off clash, the Reds failed to provide as stern a test as they needed to against the Cumbrains. |
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The last of the setting sun glinted on antennae, radar and spotlights as they hugged the stern of the pilot boat. |
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Shouting, whooping, hollering, and shooting into the air, they raced toward the ranch. |
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Finally his words were drowned out by the crowd, and they whistled, yelled, whooped, hollered and applauded in a frenzy. |
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Cubs were aged when they were first seen, when their age could be estimated to within an accuracy of 1 month. |
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Though Kaumai was 'Aukele's nephew they were nearly of an age and surfed and boxed together. |
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Anyone would think that they would be worn out and ready to hand the reins of the grand tours over to their heirs. |
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Their activity picked up and they began putting explosives into bags and readying their weapons. |
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Municipalities would set their own tax rates once they had determined the market value of properties in their areas. |
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That can happen only in a company whose leaders make it clear that they value learning. |
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And they both just stood here with their mouths agape and wondering what had made the bucket spin like that. |
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Yorkshire's committee decided last week to take a hard line and tell Gough that they expected him to see out the remaining year of his contract. |
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Men also wear a sarung, but instead of a kebaya, they wear a long-sleeved batik shirt or a fitted, embroidered jacket. |
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The impasse is encouraging hard-line Unionists to target the rule as a critical flaw of the reforms they oppose. |
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The reforms of the NHS may have tested his ability to carry the party with him but they have hardly begun. |
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The holes were flushed with sterile saline to ensure they were clear of debris. |
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Always use commercial potting mixes in your containers as they are sterilized and disease free. |
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Once the animals have been sterilised they are issued with collars and identity tags before the owners or new owners can take them home. |
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If they are serious about securing a European place next season then they will have to readdress this issue urgently. |
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In order to breach this communication hurdle all they have to do is send off a quick text message on their keitai. |
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The girls continued their work and giggled among themselves as they continued their work and conversed in the Ojibwa tongue. |
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He showed them whiskey and other items he had with him, including a couple of rifles so they would not regard him as common white trash. |
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Despite their large holdings, they didn't get whomped half as badly as Freddie did. |
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They seemed to take the news okay, but Shaune noticed that their relationship changed and that they began watching his every move. |
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I'll tell my parents once you get the okay from your mom so they can send in your reservation. |
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And while they play a bit of funky hard rock, the band threw in a old-school punk song that warmed up the audience. |
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They saw school achievement as within reach if they put forth the necessary effort, and they were willing to make good grades a primary goal. |
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A misconception is that if they give the okay for organ and tissue retrieval, they won't be able to have an open casket or a funeral at all. |
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Loach's poor may be downtrodden, but given a chance they will still reach for the stars. |
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As the fibres relax, they reabsorb the juices from the centre of the meat, and draw it back towards the edges. |
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Now despite that quite stern warning, the gate's wide open and absolutely anybody could wander in if they wanted to. |
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Leitrim did provide stern opposition for long periods, but Sligo's superior skill and fitness levels ensured that they prevailed in the end. |
|
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Lycos currently do not provide keyword, impression or click-through stats, although they do intend to offer them in the near future. |
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South Grafton will be facing a stern test on Sunday when they face Casino at home. |
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I was under the impression that all questions were vetted by you before they went on to the Order Paper. |
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The children are separated into several classes according to their ages before they are enrolled into primary school. |
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They believed in an afterlife, which was why they showed such disregard for death in battle. |
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Firefighters described a red glow lighting up the sky when they arrived at Shuttlewood Boatyard, Waterside Road, Pagglesham. |
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Later, Rick's dad caught us making whoopee in the backseat of Rick's car, and the rest, as they say, is history! |
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We bought six bottles then and they have been aging nicely and drinking excellently now. |
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They have worked long and late after they have completed their day job to have the train ready. |
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Two of the sons are now 18 and 17 years old, certainly of an age when they could be rounded up. |
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Newspapers are changing the way they look and the way they write to appeal to a younger generation of readers. |
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Before the clothes get to the customers, they are first wholesaled directly from the brand headquarters to various outlets. |
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Being great intellectuals, they pretend instead that their yuppie entertainments are as worthy as any art through the ages. |
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After all, they're the ones who will have most ready access to the drugs if and when they are ever developed and marketed. |
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Her approach and insight are so modern that they appeal to her younger readers too. |
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Yes, the artefacts recovered are of historic significance, but it would be foolish to pretend they have no monetary value. |
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Never mind, they say, it will be read avidly by our more gullible readers and boost the magazine's sales. |
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As far as they were concerned, discrimination was simply a reflection of society's values at the time. |
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Now, people also take care that they don't damage inscriptions, mainly during temple renovations and while whitewashing the temple walls. |
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The British were taken aback by the enemy ship's apparent burst of speed, but they soon discovered the trick and began kedging themselves. |
|
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People will now vote for whom they are told, forced to vote by people who have a hold over them. |
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Some companies are creating prototypes before they do the hard launch of a new store concept. |
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The school ran a breakfast club as well as an after-school club, to help parents with child care so they could get back to work. |
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He smiled, reached his hand down to her, and brought her gently to her feet, so that they stood toe to toe. |
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Once they reached the door Kara stopped as Robin opened it and started to go outside. |
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A sustainable cropping system is used to harvest the agave plants just before they flower. |
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In Monsoon they appear as wide-eyed, god-like creatures dressed in yellow oilskins with water-filled pipes attached. |
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So, equipped with kedge anchors and cable, and adorned in their skin-tight diving gear, they set off. |
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When our words lose the ability to convey an ethical connotation they become sterile and worthless. |
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There's clear evidence that they are taking a terrible toll on species like king george whiting and garfish. |
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Up front the forwards made no impression and the fact that they failed to score tells its own story. |
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But Edinburgh City Council has reacted angrily to suggestions that they may have deliberately clogged the streets. |
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However, and I have evidence in the form of ultrasound photographs to back this up, they succeeded in sterilising me. |
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And on the following Friday night, they kept their nerve to win a hugely-physical dogfight. |
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Either way, it's irrelevant, because there's a digital phone that they can reach me on too. |
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The fact that they were twice baked and very dry meant that they could be kept for long periods and were well adapted for use by travellers. |
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Plants kept on the windowsill will benefit from hardening off before they are planted out. |
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Not having seen the artist's impressions for the original Coppergate development, I cannot say whether they were good or not. |
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And so von Sternberg said to her, Why don't you wear white tie and tails for the first time they see you, really see you perform? |
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The sweet little Kiwi chalet girls were still glowing with excitement as they recounted their tales. |
|
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That might not have mattered, except that they kept me waiting for about 20 minutes. |
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Keeping their course on the north side of the lake until they reached its head, they started up the mountain. |
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It describes a man who has done everything he possibly can to save his job and keep his family in the way that they have expected to live. |
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Finally in October, it became obvious that they were going to lose the ship as it had keeled over, and was listing to port. |
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Once bitter rivals, they were effectively forced together as the unwinding of Japan's keiretsu led to increased rivalry at home. |
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Isaura and her husband kept a grocery nearby, and they often stayed there late in the evenings. |
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With their poor eyesight and keen sense of smell, they can get dangerously close. |
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The Gentiles or unbeliever is able to keep the moral law because they are made in the image of God. |
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They were redeemed, not because they kept the law but because they received the promise. |
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Female keelbacks return to the place where they hatched from an egg, to lay their own eggs when the time comes. |
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The experts demanded to know whether they had been keeping proper records of their excavations. |
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Many men returned to work on the mills every season for many years as they got a regular wage and their keep. |
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The keelboat was too big to go any further, so they built themselves dugout canoes. |
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Occasionally. in those days, some would be paid a wage but mostly they would work for their keep and a little pocket money. |
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If they were, then they would have been earning their keep and fending for themselves, like everyone else is supposed to do. |
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Like they say, you can't keep a good man down and the cream always rises to the top. |
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Once they were out at sea, Grapple was keelhauled every night for a fortnight. |
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Even when the equipment started melting, and they got burns to their arms, they kept going. |
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Hidden from civilisation and resisting all attempts at contact, they had kept to themselves. |
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If they offer the car at a keen price, it should prove extremely popular with Irish buyers. |
|
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Fort William, meanwhile, have given notice that they will offer a stern challenge to all comers in the months ahead. |
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This Friday they face a stern test when they travel to play Carlow outfit Killeen. |
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If they find it impossible to source local Irish produce at keen prices, they must ship in much of their supplies from England and the continent. |
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If they had troubles, they kept them to themselves, setting a pattern for the rest of their lives. |
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Whether they will be able to keep offering such keen prices if the banks become more cautious about property lending remains to be seen. |
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After the airport reception, the contestants were whisked to their hotel where they have been kept away from the press. |
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It was lucky that the windows are double-glazed as they kept back the flames for a few minutes. |
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Although their wines require a little extra effort to find, they boast an obvious authenticity and have huge rarity appeal and keen prices. |
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Martin said some pupils had still not received their report cards, which were being kept back because they had failed to pay their school fees. |
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We're not sure what it says about our city, but everyone seems as keen as mustard to get out of Shanghai whenever they get the chance. |
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And even if directors were found to have wrongly kept back information they could not be fined, Sir Howard said. |
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You know, you have to watch the behaviors, too, and see if they seem to be keeping something back. |
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I'm much taller than the children on the field and they keep hissing at me to keep down. |
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By the time they get there they are totally jaded by the whole thing or keen as mustard to help. |
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Their eighth full-length album is still in the works, but keeners can get an early listen as they will test driving some new tracks at this gig. |
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I'm not so sure that they will prioritise the late night whoopees on private property. |
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The couple claimed that because the tiles had aged they would no longer match and the whole lot should be replaced. |
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For if you allow these beauties to age, even if only for a minute, they will lose their sharpness, their appeal and their zest. |
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The writers and the director deserve to keelhauled because of how they deal with villains. |
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When they are fully ready, they assume their positions, and the camera turns, showing us their opponents for the first time. |
|
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People who are entitled to more don't take it because they think they must keep in with the boss. |
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They are now of an age that exceeds the average life expectancy in the countries where they live. |
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So they worked their keesters off, got into the wholesale business, and began a catering division. |
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The ribs would have been treated with steam so that they could be bent sharply over the keelson. |
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The repeated photos in the papers would be more bearable and we could turn the sound down when they speak on telly and still feel a warm glow. |
|
Children with chickenpox must be kept off school when they are infectious, and avoid contact with anyone who is pregnant. |
|
Experts say more aftershocks are possible, but they are unlikely to be strong enough to cause more serious damage. |
|
After getting a jump-lead start from the police, they drove back to St James's, ready to drop. |
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Sometimes the watercolor strokes and the pencil lines run in the same direction, and sometimes they are perpendicular. |
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She kept on about how they go drinking and how much fun they have on the beach at night. |
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The private detective arrived as they were trying to decide whether to have ice cream or cake for afters. |
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We will keep on at them until they release financial figures which they promised in the first place. |
|
Screens are good for keeping the bugs out, but they won't protect your kids. |
|
Sarita meets up with the kid and they haul their keesters to the abandoned house with the dino in pursuit. |
|
The president of Rats campaign group, Paul Dainton, welcomed the reports but said they were something of a whitewash. |
|
To Manchester's credit they performed admirably and kept to their game plan right to the death. |
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Millions of middle-class families like these are working hard and trying to get ahead, but they just can't keep up with the health care costs. |
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In their pursuit of power, wealth, or sensory pleasures, they can choose to ignore all moral values or ethical principles. |
|
Somehow they look like the artist wanted to save on color and pencil strokes. |
|
In connection with the four stroke engines, they have proficient use of gas. |
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Unfortunately he had a tug with a four stroke engine and they powered right through us. |
|
A good backstroker knows how many strokes to take when they see the flags before flipping over onto their stomachs for the flip turn. |
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The problem with such exercises is that they are not specific to the swimmer's imbalances or to the different swimming strokes. |
|
What chance do they stand of growing up with a taste for wholesome, nourishing food when their mothers cannot be bothered to feed them correctly? |
|
The positive side being, they could not be stopped from reacting against portions they disliked. |
|
And, once again, traditionalists are reacting against globalization just as vehemently, if not more so, as they did against modernity. |
|
Once patients are medically stable, they should be transferred to a stroke rehabilitation unit if further rehabilitation is required. |
|
He's a very personable individual, and they like it when they go over and stroke him. |
|
Together they won the third heat today with their only real challenge coming from a higher stroking Great Britain crew. |
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When finally they kiss, Elaine closes her eyes, inhaling the scent of his skin and aftershave. |
|
Yesterday, we had a tremor that they said was an aftershock from a big earthquake that devastated Turkey. |
|
They encourage people to save as much as they can of their after-tax income and to invest it intelligently. |
|
What makes these awards special is the focus they put on design in an industry that often treats design as a superficial afterthought. |
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When they emerge from it, I believe, they will have to give some serious thought to what their country is and whither it is heading. |
|
The early European navigators arriving in South America, believed they had reached the Earthly Paradise. |
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For Grade 1, readers were selected as they are in many cases the first books that children encounter. |
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I have an old machine which has Whitworth screws on so to find out which they were I got a Whitworth thread gauge from my local D.I.Y. shop. |
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Lighthouse keepers and fisherman generally report them as they spend more time near the sea. |
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But he has made such an impression on staff, students and parents that they have nominated him for a National Excellence in Teaching Award. |
|
Doctors call these drugs vasodilators and they are available in a variety of forms, including tablets, sprays, skin patches and ointments. |
|
|
The forces of reaction in Europe rallied against what they took to be the International and all its works. |
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Chemists study these organisms because they are able to perform chemical reactions under extreme conditions. |
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It reflects even more on their achievement of reaching the final that they have done so without two of their most influential players. |
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Principles are not an afterthought to be considered only so long as they do not affect profits. |
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They have now at this point five times more the number of seats in parliament than they had before. |
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She said afterwards that they had made her feel uneasy and that she had turned to go back home to avoid them. |
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Every doctor who came to see me afterwards said they hadn't expected to see me alive again. |
|
It's actually a good thing because it means people cannot reach me in the evenings when all they have is a mobile phone number. |
|
Can they proceed without grasping how the great mass upsurge of 1979 brought to power a thoroughly reactionary regime? |
|
We have a reactionary police force and they respond to the complaints of residents. |
|
If the animal keepers find someone teasing the animals, they warn him or ask him to leave, they claim. |
|
The keepers are warning people not to play with the animal if they see it, as it has sharp canine teeth that can inflict serious bites. |
|
This makes them feel quite comfortable and they love walking up and down the enclosure, says one of the animal keepers, Mari. |
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But they do a lot of work in training with me and we emphasise hitting the target and making the keeper work. |
|
Every Wednesday they weigh-in after their keep-fit class and pay 25 pence each time. |
|
A hiker, footballer and ladies keep-fit organiser explain how they keep fit and healthy through exercise and sport. |
|
Girls learned how to cook and clean and keep house against the day that they might someday be wed to a wealthy man. |
|
Frustratingly for the family it was the first time they had stored the bikes inside the shed after previously keeping them inside the house. |
|
No longer can they depend upon their mother to feed them or protect them, or keep them warm. |
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He was kind to animals and ensured quality care for them while they were in his keeping. |
|
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They then kept me waiting for 20 minutes while they obviously checked out my story. |
|
A friendship developed and they soon collaborated on the first edition of this volume, published in 1982, and now reprinted with a new afterword. |
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In addition, most of the citizens, even though they may not call themselves Buddhists, maintain a Buddhist view of life and the afterworld. |
|
Whatever the eventual afterworld destination of the people involved, one imagines that they are keenly alive to their own survival. |
|
Not just their locations make these two books worlds apart, they are different in style and structure too. |
|
Although the three opposition leaders are worlds apart on most issues of policy, they do have two very important things in common. |
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Do you think more people would go into ag if they were taught ag at school? |
|
Many of the exiled agas eventually found their ways back from Syria and took up their feudal roles, but they did not reclaim this village. |
|
A traditional range such as an Aga is also an option if you have the space, as they can boil water as well as supply heat for cooking. |
|
The fox hunters' problem is that, because keeping a horse is a pretty expensive activity, they were always seen as some sort of financial elite. |
|
I know several families who keep a couple of horses each so that they can hunt during the season. |
|
Residents have been complaining about the sound of engines and bikes whizzing past them as they walk on footpaths. |
|
Some think it's fun to whizz over the speed hump and see how fast they can take off. |
|
The noise levels rose by more than a few decibels, while the games whizzed by at such speed that they made Concorde look slow. |
|
Make the pastry case by whizzing the flour and butter in a food processor until they resemble fine breadcrumbs. |
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If they kept these laws they were going to be victorious and happy in their promised land. |
|
Since they have two electrons that they must lose, they are not quite as reactive as the alkali metals. |
|
Because free radicals are highly reactive, they are capable of damaging the body. |
|
Although ketones are not as reactive as aldehydes, they are also important intermediates in the synthesis of many compounds. |
|
You can make information available proactively and deliver reactive messages that address specific events as they develop. |
|
|
Despite negotiations to lower the price of imported medications, they remain out of reach to all but the very richest. |
|
If anyone can read the characters on the sword itself, please let me know what they say. |
|
Most girls were not expected to use their schooling beyond the ability to read, so they didn't pay it much attention. |
|
It seems somehow odd now to recall that none of these three could read or write, and that they did not speak English. |
|
You've got to be pretty lucky to get to the final, but I kept my head down and was polite to the other players so they didn't stitch me up. |
|
But if you kept your nose clean and got on with your life, they left you alone. |
|
At least this way they pay for their crimes and contribute something towards the cost of their keep. |
|
It provides the network capabilities that enable users to personalize their communications and be easily reachable when and where they desire. |
|
In the past, promises have been made, kept and broken, and they are being made yet again. |
|
I wrote again asking that they provide the full copies of the records as requested. |
|
I saw them again the following night, and they were every bit as good the second time. |
|
As I moved through them they swirled around me like smoke, taking up position again. |
|
They hope that all visitors were impressed and made welcome and that they will return again. |
|
Most of them did not return to their beds again as they were afraid of powerful aftershocks. |
|
If an individual has won refugee status, that is theirs for keeps unless they break the law. |
|
Then again, they probably wouldn't have signed up for the show in the first place. |
|
Despite endless trips around the island by boat trying to sneak up on the beasts, they ran off again and again. |
|
Over the coming weeks they will be carrying out a survey on the streets of the County. |
|
The couple said they will be organising lots of fundraising events over the coming year. |
|
He is due to visit Britain in the coming weeks, to ask the group to decide if they want to press for an earlier trial. |
|
|
When heron's leave the marsh and fly above the clouds they announce the coming of a storm. |
|
If it is a view shared by staff and players, they are keeping it to themselves. |
|
I think our intelligence officers have the information but they keep it to themselves. |
|
When people think of Turkey and shopping, they tend to think of rugs, kelims and other fabrics. |
|
They're slow at it, and they never achieve full ability to read quickly and automatically. |
|
Add the prawn cutlets and toss until they are just sealed and turn a whitish pink colour. |
|
But then no one reads a newspaper in the same way as they do a magazine. Newspapers primarily inform. |
|
Even if they can't speak another's language, they can still read their emotions. |
|
He had learned to read her moods and expressions well in the past year since they had married. |
|
After your date reads the first clue, they will be on an exciting adventure to find you. |
|
To do this they turned to techniques developed by Freudian psychoanalysts to read the inner desires of the new self. |
|
Becki wondered who had done it and whether they would let her do the same next year. |
|
But who are you to say that they wouldn't have the scars from living with a bad marriage, either? |
|
I mean, this is the United States of America, and who am I to tell someone they can or cannot serve their country? |
|
It's okay if they have other girlfriends in their past, but let their girlfriends have a boyfriend in the past and whoa! |
|
But he said they were an important weapon in the fight against terrorism and organised crime. |
|
I have had many students who have been kept back a year, and they have had great success. |
|
He said they were up against opposition from some people who were concerned at the damage done to the hillside. |
|
That approach eats up staff time because they must read meters at fields, Fagan said. |
|
How on earth do the supply companies know how much gas or electricity we've used if they haven't actually read the meter? |
|
|
If the truth be told, many have not read it, claiming that they hardly see it as a beach read. |
|
Although this was the amount of rations laid down by law some of the shady crews often kept back food for to sell when they reached shore. |
|
It seems that maybe they did have a good read on the will of the people after all. |
|
Some of those have crowed before that they can read me like a book, that they're great with people and can get to the root of any problem. |
|
Artists may join a union from which they receive insurance against unemployment. |
|
I think maybe they scroll slightly every time you wave or something, but they're not as readable as regular text messages. |
|
I suspect they were visiting a local family and had come to pay respect to two old folks who'd not seen this last winter through. |
|
Not only will they be unable to use parasols for protection against the sun, they will not be allowed to take in food or drink. |
|
Arrange an expensive short-term loan secured against these properties until they are sold. |
|
Landlords can offset the interest they pay on their mortgage against rental income to reduce the amount of tax they pay. |
|
If they do win, it really will be a magnificent team performance but I would not bet against Wigan in this. |
|
Would anyone bet against Real Madrid reaching the latter stages if they were pitched into the World Cup? |
|
If they continue in this vein it will be a brave man who bets against them winning a fourth successive title. |
|
It is also interesting to remember that slightly different standpoints are taken only after they were banned and reaccepted. |
|
Even some of the biggest losers in the aftermarket say they're relieved they got their deals done. |
|
Women do not necessarily grow to love the man they marry against their wishes. |
|
Most young people are afraid of not being accepted if they go against the grain. |
|
She had been sick before but when I rang last night they said she had kept her food down and I was able to speak to her and she seems all right. |
|
Both teams tend to have the attitude that whoever wins this one wins the tournament, even if last year they discovered otherwise. |
|
And Lou is certainly not going to be the first to jump to the defence of the arsonists, whoever they may be. |
|
|
Both of these might have elements of truth, but they can hardly be the whole truth. |
|
Height, weight, hair colour, the way they walk plus a whole host of other factors allow you to identify them. |
|
Then he sized up the two Irish reporters, figured they could take it, and told the whole truth. |
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This way, the participants get to see a whole lot of India, which they would never have otherwise. |
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Everyone has kept their children in today, they are so shocked and can't see why it has happened. |
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To Justin, they seemed just like friends, ready with compliments and always offering gifts. |
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The doctors decided to keep him in overnight because they were worried about the injury to his eye. |
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Don't get me wrong, they still play the same two songs over and over, they just sound a whole lot better. |
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The designers have to wake up and realize that the clothes they create can influence a whole new generation. |
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She also lent me a couple of Ben Elton books which were good, but not as good for relaxing as they have a whole dark seedy side. |
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Owned first in part by Sweden, then in whole by Russia, they always maintained their distinct identity. |
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I used to walk up and down the aisle passing sweets along the rows and making sure they kept their feet off the seats. |
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Unfortunately, refusal to try a wide range of fresh and wholefoods deprives children of the very nutrients they need for emotional stability. |
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In an attempt to come up with the cash, they formulate a plan to rob a ragtag gang of criminals who are planning a heist. |
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A couple have vowed not to be pushed out of their own street by gangs of youths they say have made their lives a misery for years. |
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Passenger lists were keepsakes, and they often included attractive cover designs and copies of paintings, posters, and drawings. |
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The men, too, were making guttural, animal-like noises as they whacked baseline strokes. |
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One reason I am not keen on them is that they work by causing vasoconstriction. |
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The streets are awash with gangs of youths and people who look like they have not bathed in weeks. |
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The amberjack latched on to the foot-long hardtail they were using for bait. |
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