A graduate of Manhattan's FIT, he stayed on to live in New York, finding employment as a fashion designer for Pierre Balmain. |
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After dropping out of FIT, Oliver focused on his brand, branching out into sweatshirt design and ready-to-wear. |
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Another highlight was Purac FIT Plus, Corbion Purac's multi-purpose acidulant for beverages. |
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A FIT and healthy teenager died moshing at a nightclub after suffering an exercise-induced heart problem. |
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He owns Yun Strength and Fitness Systems, LLC, and runs YUN FIT in Columbus, Ohio. |
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When it rained or snowed, the little carbine was compact enough to fit under your slicker and to tuck up under your arm. |
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The baby-size pocket guns, the compacts, the full size, and the long target models, all fit the same holster. |
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Nevertheless, abbreviation pays off in having everything fit into a tight volume. |
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If the weather turns rough, your guide can no doubt fit you up with waterproof clothing and waders. |
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Bring the classic look of frame-and-panel wainscoting to any room in your house using simple shop-made moldings and custom fit plywood panels. |
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A tailor will also fit your shirts, which can help make your waist seem narrower and your shoulders broader. |
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In connection to chaps, they are made with exceptional fit to emphasize the thighs and waists of women. |
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Drawstring pants with elastic in the waist allow for a closer fit with added flexibility. |
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Instead of darts, gently ease the waistline to the waistband for the most flattering fit. |
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Seyyed Nasr rightly but abstrusely laments science's inability to fit consciousness into nature. |
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There are many other hotels nearby to fit any budget, for the accommodation of guests. |
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It had to be compact enough to fit in the tight shelf space reserved for impulse buys at the supermarket. |
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The device would fit all sizes of pram or buggy, including three-wheelers, and was compact enough to fit into the overhead lockers on aeroplanes. |
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For travelling it is carried split in a padded carry case, which is compact enough to fit even a small overnight travel bag. |
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She is into animal rights, she says, and a vegan and is pretty fit herself, she adds, demonstrating flexed forearms, biceps and abs. |
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The parts fit together jaggedly, but the crude welds enable the robots to function. |
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Whether he is fit for the job is, of course, irrelevant to the continuing absurdity of the job itself. |
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Her medical condition means she has to swim with an observer on the poolside, watching for the first sign of any fit or seizure. |
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She looked fit and healthy, she showed no signs of any physical abuse, and she was outwardly happy. |
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It is built to very high levels of quality, and the fit and finish is worthy of a much more expensive Audi model. |
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Let us judge whether people are fit to represent us, not these unelected, unaccountable standards quangos, committees and commissioners. |
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Churchill drove himself hard but drove his subordinates harder, for they had to fit into the rhythm of his working day. |
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They are timed to fit most appropriately with your child's education, so could be held at any time during the academic year. |
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In his book A Place for Strangers, Tony Swain argued that Australian Aboriginal peoples did not fit this model. |
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We are reasonably experienced walkers, acceptably fit and have walked the route several times before. |
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If you're feeling fit, there's a two-hour walk down from the clifftop path to the village of Yallingup. |
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If your mower is electric, check the cable for loose connections and for cuts and abrasions and fit a circuit breaker to the plug socket. |
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That game was called off because of the frozen pitch, giving some of the walking wounded more time to get fit. |
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The American empire did not develop, as has been said of its British predecessor, in a fit of absence of mind. |
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The Justices are perfectly entitled, should they think fit, to convict absent such evidence. |
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The referee played it by the book and said that League rules say that if the pitch isn't fit at 12 noon it won't get any better. |
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The wall plate top cap is fitted last, meaning the fitter has to climb over the roof to fit it. |
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The value and rightness of knowledge are not empirical absolutes, and the benefit of truth does not fit everyone the same. |
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You need to be fit because anything you do at that altitude is three times more difficult than normal. |
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There is a tip wand that stretches the sail out to fit onto the winglets, which are held in place by the aluminum tip tube. |
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His shirt is comically baggy on him and he's absorbed in an experiment to see if his head will fit inside the long, floppy sleeves. |
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The person has to fit from A to Z or else they're just not wanted. |
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Be assured, this latest XJ is compact enough to fit into a normal-size garage, and can easily cope with the tight spaces of multi-storey car parks. |
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Corner cupboards and wardrobes are very useful in an awkward space, but check the cupboard forms a true angle, as some were custom built to fit an irregular wall. |
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Trying to fit a quart into a pint pot really is very difficult. |
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Strapless or V-neck tops, corsets and kimonos with shaped waists fit the bill, while ruched or shirred details can also help create shape and a lean line. |
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After the transplant she had to spend six months in quarantine to avoid catching an infection while her immune system recovered, but now she is fit and well. |
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I took film canisters and, essentially, rolled each breast around the canister, then fit them into the cup of the corset. |
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The idea that competent writers produce first-rate verse in a fit of absence of mind, not knowing it to be good, is altogether too absurd to be considered. |
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You suggested I should wear a burqa, since you believe that's probably the only clothing that could possibly fit me. |
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The life-sized statue was the same size as the subject, and since he had never fit in that chair, neither did the statue. |
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They said Bruce should get the all-clear by May and be fully fit months later. |
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The trio have been working out in Germany to keep fit during the tournament. |
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This table has a heightadjustable work station mounted on a rectangular base for each person that the table can fit. |
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Sometimes, a parent will request a broad-spectrum antibiotic such as amoxycillin to fit in with school. |
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Is it just something that they have carte blanche to do as they see fit? |
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Tickets can be collected from Angel Cakes in Norton, Perfect Fit in Billingham or Discover Stockton on Stockton High Street. |
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Drawers with cutouts for utensils that fit neatly into the spaces, from zesters to corkscrews and more. |
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My dog cain't fit in her puppy bed anymore, but she still tries, bless her heart. |
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I'd get my weight down for the event, then blimp out to where I couldn't fit into Orson Welles' cape. |
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Perhaps the wood had warped too much during the monsoon, I thought, and the lid of the old box-bed did not fit properly. |
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William had looked kind of stupid wearing it the day before, but now that he stood in the field with a bunch of other 'bucket-heads, he fit in. |
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Throughout, Lynch ably chops logic and tests positions for their fit with the Constitution's text. |
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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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She distressed the new media cabinet so that it fit with the other furniture in the room. |
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Special seals, which fit over the cutter opening when it is out of the flow, prevent dustout and sample contamination. |
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This month Jawbone will release a series of earbud replacements, which are designed to fit so snugly that you will not need an earloop. |
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The eastside was an area fit for Mule because of his harsh no-nonsense approach to doing business. |
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The next step is to cut a piece of plastic eggcrating to fit the bottom of the box. |
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The cuffs, or epimanikia, which fit over the sticharion, bear little or no resemblance to the maniple. |
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I have a strip cutter and I can cut the exact widths I need to fit, they are easy to fay together and attach very firmly to the bulkheads. |
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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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You don't have to be a good climber for Kilimanjaro, but you do have to be fit. |
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So fit to shoot, she singled forth among her foes who first her quarry's strength should feel. |
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In my eyes, Nick Nairn is still in his early 20s, invincible and as fit as a butcher's dog. |
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Icelanders will assure you that their economy is really as fit as a fiddle, and it is true that the country does produce a tidy budget surplus. |
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As a retired sergeant, you should fit into the crowd at the officers' club. |
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If you've also been caught in a traffic jam, you're maybe fit to be tied by the time you get to work. |
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Skates that are not quite a fit, my dear Smith, May flabberghast even a chap of your pith. |
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Having gained the regulation freshman fifteen meant that my skirt that day fit. |
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The Camry interior styling and fit and finish get eights, even from the East German judge, but the Kia's pull solid nines. |
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Now the fucknugget tells me he'll give it back. Thinks he can return a bribe like a pair of pants that don't fit. |
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Seriously, somebody needs to give this toddler a bottle and put him down for a nap. That baby pitches a fit when he gets hangry. |
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She'll have a fit when she finds out a younger woman got the job she was hoping for. |
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If you reduce the header of this document, the body will fit onto a single page. |
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The share makes the horizontal cuts the separates the furrow slice from the soil below and when it is worn it is important to fit a new one. |
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His mother and grandmother quickly put a stop to it, and this may have convinced them that Claudius was not fit for public office. |
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Bari Jones, in Archaeology Today in 1998, identified Blodwel Rocks at Llanymynech in Powys as representing a close fit with Tacitus's account. |
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There is no textual proof that that was so, though it might be plausible if the definition of 'bagaudae' is changed to fit the circumstances. |
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There is no need to do this, as any number of rational scenarios already fit the circumstances. |
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The spectrum of Anglican beliefs and practice is too large to be fit into these labels. |
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His style was fit to convey the most intricate business to the understanding with the utmost clearness. |
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Instead, Parliament functioned as a temporary advisory committee and was summoned only if and when the monarch saw fit. |
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Not all Members of Parliament can fit into the Chamber at the same time as it only has space to seat 427 of the 650 members. |
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He reported to Francis Egerton that Bradshaw was no longer fit to be Superintendent, and then persuaded Bradshaw to retire on his full salary. |
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Had Eden been fit, Churchill's premiership would most likely have been over. |
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These economies would not fit the colonial straitjacket when efforts were made to renew the links. |
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The final piece of the equation fit into place on June 10, 1993, when the Nunavut Act received Royal Assent. |
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Figures before 1971 have been reconstructed by the Office for National Statistics based on past censuses to fit the 2001 boundaries. |
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Many early Northern sports players were working class, and needed to organise their matches to fit around their work hours. |
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The passenger module is sized to fit in the payload bay, and can carry up to 24 passengers and 1 crew. |
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This cashmere version is designed to fit snugly and adjust to jauntiest angles. |
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The more abstract we are from the body... the more fit we shall be to behold divine light. |
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A man in a fit of anger, is actuated in a very different manner from one who only thinks of that emotion. |
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The problem is that they didn't allow for the extra centimetre of overlap, so it didn't fit correctly. |
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Even objects that lie about haphazardly were fit for mantic purposes. The prcatice was called apantomancy. |
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He was tall, with an Arnold Schwarzenegger chest, and fit with the flower shop as well as the proverbial bull in the china closet. |
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These students, along with some faculty, are the non-believers who fit the atheophobic stereotypes that I mentioned earlier. |
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The autoscaling feature changes the x and y axis of your graph to fit the available data. |
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Bill had so many pictures of his family stuffed into his billfold that it barely fit into his pocket. |
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Finally, we associated names back to biocollections records and fit logistic models to test potential drivers of issues. |
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Water to him is fit for nothing but making punch and a birchy beverage they call tea. |
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In death, Reuben, with his birthmarked red face, is finally more ferociously alive to his father than he ever was as a boy struggling to fit in. |
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It was as if the blackfellas were their property, and the Board could do with them as they saw fit. |
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For some men, a gangster influenced zoot suit may be the best fit. |
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I later learn this fore-signal is called an aura, and that what I am experiencing is a form of epilepsy, a small 'focal' fit, affecting a speech centre. |
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The key differences that exist between qualitative and quantitative research fit together so that one method's strengths balance the other method's weaknesses and vice versa. |
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The three new cases are each made of tough anodized aircraft-grade material and are precision molded to fit the exact dimensions of specific PDA models. |
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The Deluxe Aluminum Case for iPAQ h4100 model PDAs is made of tough anodized aircraft-grade material and is precision molded to fit the exact dimensions of the iPAQ's profile. |
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The Linear, quadric and cubic functional forms were estimated and the one with the best fit was selected and used for interpreting the phenomenon. |
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Liverpool seems a good fit for what was already a very Anglophile town. |
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Such findings fit with speculations that amylin nomally helps fine-tune blood sugar levels by counteracting insulin's action at the cellular level. |
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Obviously, Mexicans are very ingenuitous, and adapt them as they see fit. |
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When the fit had spent itself he walked weakly to the window and, lifting the sash, sat in a corner of the embrasure and leaned his elbow upon the sill. |
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If he have never drunk wine afore, it will go near to remove his fit. |
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At 18 I was fortunate enough to receive an offer to study at Oxford University. I was enthralled with the exciting new world around me and tried desperately to fit in. |
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This is almost an antimarketing argument, since in its purest form it implies finding customers to fit the service rather than fitting the service to the customer's needs. |
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Ty, who once woozily sang, How many girls can I fit in my cabana? |
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When the remnants of the Napoleon's army crossed the Berezina River in November, only 27,000 fit soldiers survived, with 380,000 men dead or missing and 100,000 captured. |
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Can you give me a guarantee that he will be fit for the match? |
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You have nothing to say about it. I'll do exactly as I see fit. |
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Posthoc, a bifactor model in which a general factor is hypothesized accounting for the commonality of the items showed a significantly better fit than the five factor model. |
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There the Admiralty ordered him to fit Albemarle for sea and join the escort for a convoy collecting at Cork in Ireland to sail for Quebec in Canada. |
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This is my hard-earned money, and I can spend it how I see fit. |
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If I lose a few kilos, the gorgeous wedding dress might fit me. |
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The small shirt doesn't fit me, so I'll buy the medium size. |
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I wanted to borrow my little sister's jeans, but they didn't fit. |
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She had a fit and had thrown all of his clothes out of the window. |
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He put out his hand, and Mr. Burd gripped it with unselfish warmth, assuring the tall, lanksome young man that he was fine and dandy, and as fit as a fiddle on Fourth of July. |
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It was a dispatch intended specifically to communicate a sense of closure to the Spanish monarchs, to show that England possessed a dynasty fit for an infanta of Spain. |
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Instead, we added each gastrointestinal parasite predictor to the best-fitting hemoparasite and extrinsic variables model and observed whether the model fit was improved. |
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The thousand odd officers and men on parade nearly threw a canary fit. |
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But anyway, if healthy minds in healthy bodies was a New England requirement then, at least chieftainly Hawaiians, though frequently corpulent, were impressively fit. |
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While all that herky-jerky mathcore in your collection might not fit the bill, put some Portishead on your Pod and the attached OhMiBod will respond rhythmically in kind. |
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I was fit to be tied though I wouldnt give in with that gentleman of fashion staring down at me with his glasses and him the other side of me talking about Spinoza. |
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If there's no spline, the cassette is an older design requiring two use spline-interfaces to fit cogsets onto their freehub bodies, they are not compatible. |
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The world, of course, is seen by the commentariat as a side issue, yet another diversion from his real work, which is to answer whatever questions they see fit to pose. |
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Now you are ready for the copy shop! Have your parents take you to the copy shop and ask the technician to reduce your art to fit the memo-pad size you want. |
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There's a building in St. Louis called the MEPS Building where doctors probe every crook and nanny of your body to see if you're physically fit enough to join the military. |
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When his father saw him he fumed terribly, cursing like a pagan, and asking whether his son were a roysterer fit for the gallows as well as a fool fit for a cassock. |
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The actor had to make his cutting shorter to fit the audition time. |
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Upon this rub, the English embassadors thought fit to demur. |
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In a fit of misplaced municipal energy, the local council is paving the desire path that countless walkers have beaten diagonally across my local park. |
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And not only these acts, but the dispositions which lead to them, are properly immoral, and fit subjects of disapprobation which may rise to abhorrence. |
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Some girls can set around until they're blue moulded, and never a feller to ask 'em, and others the boys'll fret and pleg until they're fit to be tied, with nerves! |
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Change Thackeray's spirited devil into a dancing skeleton with an answering grin, and you have a picture that would fit into a medieval, or Holbeinian, Dance of Death. |
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If you fold the sheets, they'll fit more easily in the drawer. |
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