A Silver eagle broach is pinned to her cloth coat, a Hermes scarf splashes pink and black across the collar. |
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So if I decide that I want to be a polyamorist, how do I broach the subject with my girlfriend? |
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One area the cutting remarks never seem to broach is the safety standards of the vehicles. |
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If this can be offset by rudder action the boat will remain on course, otherwise sail adjustment is necessary to prevent a broach. |
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The two main parties have become a cartel, operating a tacit understanding not to broach any important issue. |
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Ideally, it would broach such sentiment cleverly, without resorting to dime-store spirituality or heavy-handedness. |
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Obviously I haven't been brave enough to broach this topic amongst our friends for fear of an outcry. |
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I have read a lot of really good posts recently about current affairs and such, so I'm a bit loath to broach similar subjects. |
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It featured broach cut rifling, was lapped by hand, and was made from 4140 carbon steel. |
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I hope they broach their bottles, because the whisky, with its honey and praline richness, deserves it. |
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She's wearing a red jacket, pink blouse with gold broach, rust coloured dress and shoes, large camel coloured coat and brief case. |
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Gem touched the diamond broach that lay at the center of her low, curved neck-line. |
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Her family exchanges uneasy looks as they all wonder how to broach the subject of her son's disappearance. |
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Someone dared to broach the subject of seasickness at the breakfast table, and a few pasty faces glowered at the culprit. |
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Both men's and women's traditional costumes include a decorative broach used to fasten shirts and blouses. |
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The boat commenced surfing down the face of each new wave, at high speed, and I had to steer the boat aggressively to prevent a broach. |
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He paid tribute to the officers who broach the subject of tissue donation with bereaved families. |
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If the recruiter does not broach the subject, don't raise the issue of salary or employment benefits during the first interview. |
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These talks can be an incubator for new ideas that may be too sensitive or premature to broach in the formal talks. |
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This visit was also the opportunity to broach the possibilities of reinforcing exchanges between our two teams. |
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Some of his supporters remain so passionate that the subject can be difficult to broach. |
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Without chipbreakers, the broach would produce ring-shaped chips that would wedge in the tooth gullet and eventually cause the tool to break. |
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A spline broach is used to finish cut an involute spline or a straight sided spline. |
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Open-access requirements are on the horizon, so broach them with the publisher. |
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These are those of an ethical nature, which pop up whenever scientists broach the nature-nurture nexus. |
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In the Laeken Declaration, I should like to broach the following crucial questions. |
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I should like to broach some of the points the Commissioner mentioned, notably the question of financial resources. |
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We must broach the topic without any taboos so that little by little we in Belgium can fix our position in the European debate. |
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Initial observation: it is difficult to broach the subject of youth mobility in Europe owing to a lack of reliable data. |
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Look for events that your audience will attend, and broach the organizers with ideas for content you could present or lectures you could give. |
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In order to pursue this route, schools must therefore broach real education in values, which first need to be clarified. |
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The cyber meeting in January has no pre-determined theme and participants can thus more easily broach subjects of interest to them. |
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Slide 21 goes beyond the 2009 balance sheet to broach topics that we need to work on in 2010 in preparation of our future. |
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May I broach an important topical issue, for example the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? |
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It is difficult to broach the question of children and armed conflict without referring to the necessity of putting an end to impunity. |
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This exhibition meaningfully ends with an overview of prominent De Stijl achievements to broach the issue of cities and public areas. |
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Inquirers will limit their sources to a handful of primary texts and broach them with a popular academic theory or through a socio-political theme. |
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Unfortunately, I did not have the courage to broach the subject, and I remained guiltily silent and accepted the blame. |
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White was unafraid to broach the notion that life is not only mysterious but sometimes completely inexplicable. |
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Now as always, Republicans need bipartisan cover to broach the subject of serious budget cutting. |
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This symbol may come in the shape of a broach, lapel pin, medallion, anything imaginable, but it is keyed to its owner and allows them certain abilities. |
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But, perhaps with a few revisions, Pacamambo could become one of those unflinching stories that teachers and parents can rely on to broach difficult subjects. |
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A dozen of us watch five sperm whales broach, and then hyperventilate like marathoners on the starting line, filling every air-bearing cell with oxygen. |
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Yes, but I don't want us to broach to and go over if the wind shifts. |
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The rudder sits in the outflow of the keel and is called upon to provide lift at very small angles of attack and not stall when required to prevent a broach. |
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Her pale green suit is adorned by an ornate marcasite and onyx broach. |
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It was time to broach the subject of my sterile fruit garden again. |
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This allows the broach to be pulled two or three times. |
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A taboo and private subject for many people, it is difficult to broach. |
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That is why the UN Conference must also pluck up the courage to broach the subject of legal small weapons, and Europe must be able to argue for a total ban on the advertising of firearms. |
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Letterbox was approached by Mike Bryon, a lecturer at the college, to broach the issues students face as they embark on job hunting. |
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The Committee could use that fact to broach the subject of amnesties. |
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The baby shoes are hand smocked, each one has a broach with a rose on it. |
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It is possible that in the margins of the talks in Baghdad American and Iranian envoys could broach such broader questions, including the nuclear one. |
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Beware of gifts designed to be kept with you at all times, such as an expensive pen, lapel pin or broach, or used in your office, such as a beautiful paperweight or large picture. |
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I will undoubtedly be an apprentice of sorts in that I will be learning more about your inner workings but I will also seize this opportunity to broach some of the matters which I deem important. |
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In an effort to untangle the web, Stefano Pulga suggests that we first broach the subject by theme, establishing an order of priority and examining it in a theoretical way. |
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Iron clavis, the solid web-shaped at the edges to fit the wards in the lock, and having a pointed broach and a kite-formed looped haft. |
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The last teeth of a broach burnish or hone the pieces. |
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French knights at Agincourt were unable to broach the English line. |
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It does not engage, broach or even indicate any larger transferential phenomena pertinent to the meaning and value of human relationships and of life at large. |
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