The publican claimed that this new law was jack boot government and government by dictation. |
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This alone should be reason enough for us to pack the car boot with French bread and bubbly cider. |
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It is not a rooster, or the four cardinal points that we traditionally find perched atop French roofs, but a laced boot. |
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And, you can be sure that these soaps are environmentally safe and cruelty-free to boot. |
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Eight hours later, the nightmare continued as he was frogmarched out of the warehouse, tied up again and thrown into the same car boot. |
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Just put a boot in the binding and press the cuff of the boot from side-to-side and look for wobble and slop. |
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It pulls the cable and snugs down the cuff of the boot as if you were operating a separate buckle. |
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Many soft boot models are outfitted with a plastic hinged cuff for added support. |
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When they attacked, Parks was invariably the fulcrum, prompting and probing with his educated boot and exposing the Ospreys' frailty in midfield. |
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Colonel Everson about-turned, raised his boot and applied it heftily to his batman's fundament. |
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He cast a furtive glance around the square and, seeing that his admirer had not yet gone away, bent over his boot again. |
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It can log your keystrokes, mine your data, reboot your puter, even cause it to not boot up. |
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The boot is small and its usefulness is further compromised by the presence of a bracing cross member. |
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Yes, he could have bowed out on top back in June last year and become the only PM other than Ming not to get the boot or die in harness. |
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His boot were high up to his knees and his cloak hung disarrayed behind him. |
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She has an equestrienne profile with boot and jodhpurs as two essential items. |
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Also, if in a deployed location, shouldn't one dog tag be around the neck and one on the boot? |
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Ford has flared the wheel arches, given it a handsome front grille, twin steel exhausts and a subtle boot spoiler. |
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It seems quite strange that what is essentially a car boot sale happens at night. |
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It's more spacious in the back, particularly in the boot, its extended roofline giving it the look of a small estate rather than a hatchback. |
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He missed, and the Wilkinson boot, after an early failure, slowly ground Wales down. |
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Cecil somersaulted, landing a drop kick square in Ashley's face with his boot. |
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I lit the way upstairs and Erchy, assisted by the roadman, pulled the protesting Tearlaich off the bed and put on his boot. |
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Using boot from SAN capability, the servers can be deployed or decommissioned with no disruption to applications. |
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The Wellington boot was bucked off one foot and the prince-alberts following in due course. |
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To boot, he is a gifted writer, a natural wit and a passionate defender of liberal values. |
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Gazing down from her perspective of about ten feet off the surface, boot prints showed up in the dust around the craft. |
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I couldn't move my left foot because the thick metal of the firewall had deformed around my boot. |
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When in doubt, forwards, don't just boot the pigskin into the air, look to another TEAM member and pass the ball. |
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Linebacker Maiava departed the field house after practice on crutches, with his left foot in a walking boot. |
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Redwing boots also sells products to help you condition your boots, like Boot Oil or Mink Oil. |
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Hotels are a pittance, the national park is free, and there's mini-golf, ice cream cones and bowling to boot. |
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He was spot on with the boot with another two place kicks and a further one-pointer to ensure a berth to the next round. |
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He has obviously decided to put the boot in, knowing that the majority of unions have played possum for so long now on so much. |
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When I attempt to boot the program, I receive a message stating there is an invalid system disk. |
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Garnett, conversely, has a joyous personality and a charismatic style of play to boot. |
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The boot is of a reasonable size and compared to other convertibles, the roof does not intrude. |
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Four minutes later he stroked his second point majestically with the outside of his right boot. |
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In fact, regular as well as irregular troops opposed the US in many of the conflicts Boot cites. |
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Most boot related injuries are the same injuries that wearing any tight, stiff shoe can cause, meaning corns, calluses, blisters, and bone spurs. |
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So everybody knows the British are tea-drinking, snaggle-toothed ponces, and gay to boot. |
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Once the length is correct and your boot snaps into the binding correctly, setting everything else is easy. |
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On top of a roomier cabin, the specially-designed body pillars, rear floorpan and tailgate means a large boot. |
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Just after the main file systems are mounted, the boot process stops and asks for a formatted floppy. |
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It's part of a commitment to flushness which is mirrored in the totally button-free boot. |
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Several families had to untie bikes from the backs of their cars before they could gain access to the boot. |
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Rossignol's X6 boot now sports an upper cuff and heel counter and has the look of a suede hiking boot. |
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York had not used the wind well before the break and their lack of boot power was evidenced as they repeatedly failed to clear their lines. |
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The way the back seats fold flat to create the boot and swivel round so you can watch an event or have a picnic would be a selling point. |
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Like its 206 CC sibling, the 4.32 metre long 307 CC is equipped with a foldaway roof that automatically stores itself in the boot. |
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Microsoft's enviable Xbox 360 car was on-hand complete with three fold-out high-definition gameplay stations protruding from its boot. |
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To secure my footing I had to pack the snow first by pressing my whole body into the slope, then my knee, and finally my boot. |
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Boot soles are chevroned for hiking and accept crampons for climbing up icy chutes. |
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Just boot from the CD and it will format the hard disk, then install a security-hardened Linux kernel and load the Corporate Guardian software. |
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He handed the bowl and spoon to Ben and kept the plate for himself, pulling a bent and crooked little spoon of his own from his boot. |
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She said yes to a guy that had a bod not dissimilar to a cross between a wine barrel and a pear and cross eyes to boot. |
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League clubs appear powerless to stop their top stars leaving, but a decade ago, the boot was on the other foot. |
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The sisters have even gone to the precaution of popping their valuables into the boot and they've still been stolen. |
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This is a glorified car boot sale and I propose refusal on the grounds of road safety. |
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The boot is in the original grey presentation box and is in good condition apart from a dent at the front. |
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On 15 September 1998, in LaSalle, Rosalind Burrowes was loudly objecting as bailiffs bolted a Denver boot on her wheel. |
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However, he can play a more traditional game because he is strong on his feet, good in defence, and has a solid and dependable boot. |
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She is a blonde gorgon just back from the hairdresser, and with a powerful voice to boot. |
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And when you feel so extremely a fool and a bad golfer to boot, what the deuce can you do, except throw the club away? |
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My grandda thinks I should go to boot camp and my grandma knits booties that she insists I wear. |
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It's not very nice either when people wheel through it with pushchairs and then have to fold them up and put them back in the boot of their cars. |
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Every scrape of my boot uncovered green, blue, and turquoise potsherds. |
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Here, you can change the first boot device from the disc drive to the hard drive. |
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He needed no signature once he turned 18 and soon after, he was at boot camp on Parris Island. |
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The door-pulls and the gear lever are in translucent coloured plastic, and the rear seats individually slide, fold and stow away to enlarge the meagre boot. |
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The four day boot camp began in northern Virginia in 1996 and is now in its third year in New York. |
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With all seven seats in place, there is no boot space beyond room for a few tall and thin items, such as flat-packed furniture or a fashion model. |
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He lashed out with his boot at his own car, denting the door bodywork. |
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However, researchers believe there are actually around 50 bodies buried in and around boot hill. |
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Minority investors can boot out non-executive directors where a big investor – such as Mr Ashley – has a majority stake. |
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Instead it is part culinary adventure, part travelogue, part gonzo journalism and part social politics, and it is a hilarious page-turner to boot. |
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The foot valves are designed to keep air from getting trapped in the boot. |
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The exhibit most people ask about is a pixie ankle boot in turquoise velvet made for Brigitte Bardot, made in the same era is the black flattie designed for Audrey Hepburn. |
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Trimming your toenails so they are short enough not to rub on the end of the boot, yet not so short that they will cause ingrown toenails, is very important. |
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The boot, with a 500-litre capacity, is a double-decker with a false floor, which can be folded, concertina style, to reveal a handy hideaway for valuable bits and pieces. |
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The grumpy dog was concertinaed into a tiny corner of the boot. |
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Use good judgment and go to boot crampons and hand tools if need be. |
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He took a flying kick at it and struck it heavily with his boot. |
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Nirvana was able to seek refuge in two camps, with one foot tenuously dipped in the waters of grunge, and one grimy boot firmly set in the world of punk rock. |
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As well as a huge range of stalls and a car boot sale with about 150 pitches, people were able to enjoy entertainment provided by majorettes and a falconry display. |
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They may remove the insoles that are in the boot and replace them with soft off-the-shelf orthotics to improve the fit and the alignment of your foot within the boot. |
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Boots are constructed with a stiff piece of leather at the back of the heel, called the counter, and two or three layers of leather in the body of the boot. |
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Inside the boot is the lever for opening the fuel filler cap. |
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A family who launched a frantic search to find their missing dog were reunited with the pooch after discovering he had been locked in their own car boot for four days. |
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When it comes to boot space, the estate obviously takes the gold. |
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They held an election, and the people voted to boot out the local Vichy authorities. |
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It is generally perceived to be a bit of a doss job and well paid to boot. |
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The snow is smooth, unfrozen but dense enough for boot crampons. |
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A talented writer with an insatiable curiosity and a legendary dedication to thoroughness, she was also incredibly intelligent and drop-dead gorgeous to boot. |
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Mary Roche who advocated the setting up of a Boot Camp where the perpetrators of serious crime would learn discipline, respect and how to control themselves. |
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Select this device if you want the virtual machine to boot up from a floppy disk image connected to its virtual floppy disk drive. |
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Maintaining strength and cardiovascular fitness can be a challenge when a dancer is immobilized in a boot or a cast. |
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Check out this women's high top boot that is warm and versatile yet has the comfort and style of a sneaker! |
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Most likely, your Windows boot is set up with no delay, so you don't see the boot menu. |
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That is why today, one can only hear laughter and young people skateboarding and not boot on tramp on Große Straße. |
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So, for the champion of fiscal duress, the vilifier of tax exiles, the boot seems to be pretty much on the other foot. |
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He became as polarizing a figure as the war itself, court jester to Nixon and corporate shill to boot. |
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Steve's a really interesting guy and a convert to the Faith to boot! |
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And, like a true critic, Menkes dwelled for a moment on the centerpiece of that collection, the infamous armadillo boot. |
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All that was left of the corpse was a headless, armless torso with one leg, still wearing a stiletto-heeled boot. |
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Then, with wind blowing him out horizontal under the wing, he hooks a boot on that balky wheel, kicks the mother home. |
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Even Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, whom the army sought to boot out as recently as 2007, has aired misgivings about its conduct. |
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Upon rebooting I was thrilled to receive no errors of any kind, but to my disappointment during the next boot I was greeted with the same corruption error as before. |
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One of the Corps most iconic recruiting commercials showed a sword being forged by pressure and fire, a metaphor for the process of boot camp and training. |
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The rule is that every time a new writer enters the canon an old one has to get the boot. |
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Somebody had broken into the house, kicked in the door of her study and kicked a hole in the wall opposite, leaving the very clear print of a size 10 boot. |
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The Recovery Media Builder allows the user to create bootable recovery media on a USB flash drive, then boot the PC and perform any operations directly from flash drive in case of operating system corruption or boot problems. |
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Along with the aforementioned Adidas Predator boot, Adidas manufactures the adiPure range of football boots. |
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Maccabi's Yoan Ziv also saw red in the second half for kicking a boot at the assistant referee. |
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Suddenly a little boy somersaulted around the corner of the house as if he had been projected down a flight of stairs by a catapultian boot. |
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Had you not been wearing such a fine boot, your leg probably would have broken. As it is, the bruise is a deep one. |
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The dwarf hacked at Sod's boot, sinking his axeblade deep into the Banker's foot. |
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Earth and Mars have been stepping on the necks of the Belters out here for over 100 years and I didn't want to be the boot. |
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The body is constructed of welded steel panels, with the bonnet, doors and boot lid in aluminium on steel frames. |
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We will institute a boot camp for training the sales force in these new products. |
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Where have all the TV Westerns gone? A genre once adored by viewers lies dead, but not forgotten, in television's Boot Hill. |
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A kind of fine Norwegian hay, used as packing in the finnesko to keep the feet warm and to make the fur boot fit firmly. |
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The red gumbo soil uttered ugly sucking sounds at the touch of a man's boot. |
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Bloodhounds are also used to hunt a human runner in the sport of Hunting the Clean Boot. |
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The Golden Boot is awarded to the top Premier League scorer at the end of each season. |
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The Golden Boot Award is a rugby league award handed out annually for achievements in rugby league by Rugby League World magazine. |
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In 2011 they decided to give Schofield his Golden Boot and he is now included in the roll call of winners of the prestigious award. |
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In the island, the most noted footballer is Salvatore Schillaci, who won the Golden Boot at the 1990 FIFA World Cup with Italy. |
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You know, Dan, that's the man I rowed with all day, never did know I had a peg leg in that big boot, and that I wasn't really a flooder. |
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On Morden's death in 1934, building tycoon Charles Boot bought the land and turned it into a country club. |
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With the body being too big to fit in the boot of the car, the body was wrapped in an eiderdown and put in the back seat of a car. |
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The vowels occurred in the words bite, meet, meat, mate, boat, boot and out. |
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Other types of domestic child labour include working in commercial plantations, begging, and other sales such as boot shining. |
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The Central Fells when seen in plan best resemble a boot, although one facing the other way to Italy. |
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Beginning with Walla Crag and Bleaberry Fell in the north, the range climbs gradually to its apex at High Raise, the 'ankle' of the boot analogy. |
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An alternative route heads directly north across Knoutberry Haw to pass Whernside Tarns and reaches the Craven Way at Boot of the Wold. |
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They also find Sir Henry's boot, which was used to give the hound Sir Henry's scent. |
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Stapleton had taken Sir Henry's old boot because the new, unworn boot lacked his scent. |
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Groundhitching the horse, he left the Winchester in the saddle boot and reached under his duster to unsling the scattergun. |
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On the premiere, the scornees are sent to a life coach, Debbie Ford, who runs an emotional boot camp in Palm Springs, Calif. |
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The wide spur leathers are to protect the boot from chafing on the stirrups. |
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That was when I learned that every Taswegian worth his salt carries an axe in his boot and, more often than not, two in case of axe-less friends. |
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He had a boot in his left hand, and, in his right, what cobblers call a wax end. He seemed very seriously at work on that boot. |
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The boot is pretty spacious with a recess available for things like a first aid kit or warning triangle, while there's also under-floor storage. |
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To boot, seizing the opportunity, Junius Otho, a praetor, and Brutidius Niger, an aedile, submitted an additional charge of maiestas. |
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Season three was the strongest one the series has produced yet, to boot. |
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And he was less than a month from his third decade, to boot. |
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How about if you flunked out of boot camp in your second week? |
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I attended a two-week boot camp called the Estates Project Force. |
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Every few days, some unfortunate was buried on Boot Hill, a victim of his own inexpertness with the six-shooter. |
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That boy was one of the new draft, fresh out of boot camp, and yet it was his duty to pass messages upon which the fate of a battle might depend. |
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Arthur Rank created a partnership with Boot and together transformed the estate into a film studio. |
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Boot based designs for the studio complex upon the latest ideas being employed by film studios in Hollywood, California. |
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In lenny and later, a new kernel mechanism for hardware discovery may change the order in which devices are discovered on your system on each boot, affecting the device names assigned to them. |
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Most blame Keanu Reeves, whose performance as British gentleman Jonathan Harker was like watching a pony trying to do an impression of a Timberland boot. |
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The Prince of Wales, having machinated to block Rogers Stirk Harbour's scheme for Chelsea Barracks, held back from putting the royal boot in this time. |
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French presidents in trouble traditionally boot out their prime minister. |
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My dad was a right old male chauvinist pig, and an alcoholic to boot. |
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If nothing happens, look around in the control panel for boot information. |
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Creating a bootable USB flash drive: While a USB device can only be booted on a machine which can boot from USB drives, it can be created on any machine with supported USB hardware. |
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Sutcliffe stomped on her thigh, leaving behind an impression of his boot. |
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They have been waiting a long time, very silently, the mud sucks slurpingly at a boot as a soldier changes his position, the mist thickens, beginning to turn to rain. |
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Check piston rod for scoring by skinning back protective rubber boot. |
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Just after Boot, the significant tributary of Whillan Beck joins the river from the north east, the beck being the outflow from Burnmoor Tarn, four km to the north. |
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The Esk continues past the small villages of Boot and Eskdale Green. |
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A pleasant but lengthy alternative begins from Boot in Eskdale, following the River Esk upstream, and scrambling up to the summit by way of Foxes Tarn. |
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The leg half way between the knee and ankle was almost entirely severed, except a small portion on the outside, but the boot was scarcely marked at all. |
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I took my sign out of the boot and put it up that morning, then arranged the advertising and open house viewings as soon as I returned to my office. |
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The property also served as a chemist's shop, and later Dick's boot store. |
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It was decided by the judges that Garry Schofield should be the winner in 1990, but unfortunately the sponsors of the Golden Boot backed out and the award was shelved. |
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Jack played the Devil's tattoo on the door with his boot heels. |
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At 41, Jockey Richards was still up and at 'em last week, and his wrists and knees were still persuasive enough to boot home the winner in Newmarket's Icklingham Stakes. |
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To boot and saddle again they sound. Rog. Tara! Taratantara! Taratantara! |
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Sam pulls a switch blade from out of his boot, and runs toward Daton. |
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In each boot was a small knife, in her left pocket was a pocket knife, taped to her right wrist was a switch blade, and holstered to her shoulder was a dagger. |
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The narrow gauge Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway runs from Ravenglass on the west coast up Eskdale as far as Dalegarth Station near the hamlet of Boot, catering for tourists. |
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