After much careful deliberation, I had finally managed to whittle my wishes down to just two. |
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After a bit of experimentation, Jill is able to whittle the problem down to four steps that always cause the same behavior. |
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He volleyed as if he was using his racket to whittle wood, slicing this way and that and caressing the ball into submission. |
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My awkward phase lasted for 9 long years and only began to whittle away during my junior year of college. |
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The archives will be shipped with a full-scale reproduction of Mailer's ego for articulate Third Wave feminists to whittle down in a nanosecond. |
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Instead they hope you will sit passively as they progressively whittle your deposit rate down and their profit margin up. |
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There's less vox here than on Folk Music, but that leaves plenty of room for Fisk and company to whittle about. |
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If nothing else, these talks might give him cover for another whittle at what is left of old republican absolutes. |
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Mr Khamenei wields much control over the Guardian Council which must now whittle down the 686 presidential candidates to around a dozen. |
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It's been so difficult to whittle it down, in fact, that I'd suggest going to the GuardianWitness site for a peep at all the entries. |
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So, too, with many other verbs: to wilt, to whittle, to fellowship and to approbate. |
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With as many as three storylines in each half-hour episode, it can be a challenge to whittle down each program to its 21-minute run time. |
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Furthermore, we certainly do not wish to whittle down the capabilities of the Atlantic Alliance or to weaken the transatlantic link. |
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If you cannot pay the balance owing, whittle down the outstanding balance by paying smaller amounts weekly or biweekly. |
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That framework allowed us to whittle down the number of possible solutions and to reach a final agreement. |
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Those changes could whittle down the dollar figure by several hundred billion dollars. |
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The firm is aiming to whittle down its compensation ratio to the mid-50s percentage range. |
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It too incarcerated its contestants and obliged them to whittle down their own numbers. |
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It was in such climates that governments were able to whittle away at migrants' rights. |
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If the government continues to drag its feet, Canadians will be forced to watch CBC whittle away at its essential programming. |
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To whittle away, however, at the provisions of the Treaty and the annexed acts is a method that is not worthy of the parliamentary institution. |
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As their environment continues to whittle away, they will not be able to continue their own activities. |
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To whittle away at that number, the city has arrested 100 people this month. |
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Henein's barrage of questions sought to whittle away at my allegations by undermining my credibility. |
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Modern employment law has largely been a prolonged battle to whittle away at this doctrine. |
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But the recent spectacular assaults have begun to whittle away at that notion. |
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Republicans play, too, hoping Green candidates will whittle away liberal voters who would otherwise support Democrats. |
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Davies explores how an abusive person can whittle away another person's sense of self. |
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When you shear it of all its pomp and extravagance, when you whittle it down to the very basics of musical comedy plotting, Half a Sixpence should work like a lucky charm. |
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Flakes with concavities exhibiting steep, unifacial retouch were used to whittle or plane wood, and flakes displaying spurs were used to incise bone or antler. |
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There are times when the auditor cannot whittle the point of his pencil fine enough to write the profit. |
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A bat lasted longer than that, of course, but if it broke, you could always go to the poplar bluff by the barn and whittle out another. |
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What generally happens when I'm working on an album is I get around thirty songs together and then I whittle these down as I go along. |
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It's your job to refine their recommendations and whittle them down as much as possible to make them as economical as possible. |
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In the last number of years, we have seen numerous cases in the Supreme Court and other courts in the land that did whittle away and undermine the supremacy of Parliament. |
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Mr. Codey was not about to let them whittle away at Mr. Bartels' resolve. |
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Delays and the complexity of the process whittle away at complainants' rightful expectations to obtain a remedy for the violation of their rights. |
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This proposal would whittle away Parliament's rights. |
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I will say quite frankly that the result of the vote gave us cause for regret and we hope that this is not an attempt to whittle away at Strasbourg's role or to revive the issue of Parliament's location. |
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Actually, these anti-terrorist laws like the Patriot Act in the United States, or the « décision-cadre » adopted by the European Commission whittle away individual liberties and criminalize de facto all forms of objection. |
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We identified the next six to eight weeks as obviously a critically important time not only to meet basic shipment targets but to whittle away at that accumulated backlog. |
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From there, the numbers whittle down quickly. |
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Citigroup continued to whittle down expenses. |
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We then whittle down to as few cars as possible and drive to the location. |
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If you are an educator, say with a college on your hands, you wish to get as many students as possible, and you whittle down your requirements accordingly. |
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Particularly to the extent that security concerns are adding to the tasks of border officials, it is vital to whittle down the border's regulatory burden. |
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I don't think anyone would argue that it's probably better for little Johnny or Jane if their parents would rather whittle wooden figurines with them than pop them in front of Frozen or Angry Birds on the iPad. |
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It's been a two-year process to whittle excess supply down. |
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This is just a terrific and coherent set of briefs, and is really helpful, so thank you for the time you took to whittle them down to just a few pages. |
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They were actually larger than that because there was a lot of year end spending to whittle it down so that taxpayers would not get sticker shock. |
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American makers Hammacher Schlemmer claim that the green coffee and brown algae infused fabric will whittle down love handles. |
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Pa would whittle while Geoduck and Crowbar, his Native American friends, did all the work. |
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Neither Cipriani nor whittle responded to requests for comment. |
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How did you whittle all that material into the final shape of the film? |
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You'll remember that we're starting with a list of slightly over 7,000 names that are alums that we'd like to whittle down to a manageable list of prospects. |
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David Whittle had a half chance late in the first half but his shot from 25 yards was just off target. |
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A determination to overcome long odds was instilled in Whittle at an early age. |
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Mr Whittle said the football club site was the prime location under consideration, but any more offers of land would be looked at. |
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I believe there was a much more serious attempt to pervert the course of justice by concocting a story that shifted the blame to Mr Whittle. |
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The Wright's may have invented the first real aeroplane, but the credit for the invention of the jet engine goes to Sir Frank Whittle. |
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Manchester, now coached by former Sale stalwart Dave Baldwin, will use a 25-strong squad that should include Sale old boys Andy Whittle and Chris Wright. |
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Today, the turbojets in many British and American aircraft owe their origins to Whittle and the many Lancashire workers who brought it into production. |
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In October, Cripps told Whittle that he decided a better solution would be to nationalise Power Jets only. |
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In April Whittle learned of Rover's parallel effort, creating discontentment and causing a major crisis in the programme. |
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On 10 December Whittle suffered a nervous breakdown, and left work for a month. |
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The money never arrived and, entering into default, Falk's shares were returned to Williams, Tinling and Whittle on 1 November. |
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Encouraged by his Commanding Officer, in late 1929 Whittle sent his concept to the Air Ministry to see if it would be of any interest to them. |
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Whittle showed his engine concept around the base, where it attracted the attention of Flying Officer Pat Johnson, formerly a patent examiner. |
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In January 1923, having passed the RAF entrance examination with a high mark, Whittle reported to RAF Halton as an Aircraft Apprentice. |
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Whittle would later concentrate on the simpler centrifugal compressor only, for a variety of practical reasons. |
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In 1928, RAF College Cranwell cadet Frank Whittle formally submitted his ideas for a turbojet to his superiors. |
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Whittle died of lung cancer on 9 August 1996, at his home in Columbia, Maryland. |
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Whittle received the Tony Jannus Award in 1969 for his distinguished contributions to commercial aviation. |
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In 2002, Whittle was ranked number 42 in the BBC poll of the 100 Greatest Britons. |
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In August 1996, Whittle died of lung cancer at his home in Columbia, Maryland. |
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Whittle met with Cripps to object personally to the nationalisation efforts and how they were being handled, but to no avail. |
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Early members include Eric Gill, Enid Marx, Sir Frank Whittle and numerous other household names. |
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Medal winners include Nelson Mandela, Sir Frank Whittle, and Professor Stephen Hawking. |
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From an early age, Whittle demonstrated an aptitude for engineering and an interest in flying. |
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Whittle was unable to interest the government in his invention, and development continued at a slow pace. |
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He was so impressed that in 1926 he recommended Whittle for officer training at RAF College Cranwell. |
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Whittle developed a rebellious and adventurous streak, together with an early interest in aviation. |
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The quality of these attracted the eye of the Apprentice Wing commanding officer, who noted that Whittle was also a mathematical genius. |
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Whittle was born in a terraced house in Newcombe Road, Earlsdon, Coventry, England on 1 June 1907, the eldest son of Moses Whittle and Sara Alice Garlick. |
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Of the few apprentices accepted into the Royal Air Force College, Whittle graduated in 1928 at the age of 21 and was commissioned as a Pilot Officer in July. |
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In 1948, Whittle retired from the RAF and received a knighthood. |
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Steve Jackson has been making the most of the carp fishing on the syndicated Western Reservor at Whittle Dene landing four carp, three of which were doubles up to 14lb 12oz. |
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By the end of the Second World War, other UK engine companies were working on jet designs based on the Whittle pattern, such as the de Havilland Goblin and Ghost engines. |
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Lindsay Whittle confirmed he would contest the Caerffili constituency. |
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Whittle hated the strict discipline imposed on apprentices and, convinced there was no hope of ever becoming a pilot he at one time seriously considered deserting. |
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In January 1944 Whittle was awarded the CBE in the New Year Honours. |
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