How can one feel like a citizen of a geographic area whose limits one can't place and whose capital cities one can't name? |
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We have wiped out more species than I can name, from the dodo to the moa to the quagga to the thylacine. |
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And, true to his name, this ace comedian has been making everyone roll up in laughter for years. |
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A blog, or web log to give the term its full name, is basically a journal available for other people to read on the web. |
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I have yet to determine the name of the artist originally sited in the blog. |
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So we will take a quick look at Pi Fast, which, as the name suggests calculates Pi to as many digits as you want. |
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With its quick intelligence, it has no trouble learning its name and how to use a litter box. |
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It is a television drama from Japan that is based on a classic novel of the same name. |
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The name is misleading, since this is not a member of the rush family, but a distant relative of water plantains and water soldier. |
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Mercury has long been known also by the name quicksilver, because it is a silver liquid. |
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While in the US, however, people rarely needed me to repeat my name, calling out to me without inhibitions or jeering me. |
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The willow tree bark and leaves are rich in salicin, a compound similar to acetylsalicylic acid, the chemical name for aspirin. |
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It takes its name from the life-sized shipwreck centrepiece containing a 150 ft-long water slide. |
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For example, Jell-O Oreo Pudding launched in May 2001, uses the Nabisco Oreo brand name and the Jello-O trademark. |
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There were medlars, and apples, and quinces, and cherries, and I think many more that I could not name by their bark or tiny fruit. |
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Some of the biggest success stories at home and abroad were not the highest achievers at school but still managed to make a name for themselves. |
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Its name derives from the Latin word quincunx for the X-like shape of the spots on the 5-face of a dice. |
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Another descriptive name is waxberry because the berries have a strange consistency that really does resemble candle wax. |
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The latter, or myrtle waxberries, as they are frequently called, and which are the favorite food of this species, have given it their name. |
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The new place name signs and the canal walk and nature trail also came in for praise. |
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Jim and his family moved to Oeo where they continued to produce top jersey cattle under the name of Glanton Stud. |
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The elder brother went on to become a member of the world's most famous pop group, while the younger one changed his name and went his own way. |
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She felt the corners of her mouth quirk slightly, tried to say his name, then fell into the darkness that had been waiting for her. |
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In the Cabala, the Quaternical system is the Tetragrammaton, the four-letter name of God, commonly pronounced Yahweh or Jehovah. |
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That is why so many advertisements for products consist of nothing more than the name of the product and perhaps a smiling face. |
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You will be able to bring up the scoreboard, click to bring up a mouse cursor, and click on the name of the player you want to mute. |
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Foes Racing is a name which springs to mind whenever big bikes and big forks are mentioned. |
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Doing that, I am educated whereby I can write constructive letters and also sign my name. |
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He is an independent film-maker with over 60 films to his name, including four low-budget features. |
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You had quite a bit of brand name talent involved for an independent, low-budget movie. |
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The Assassins kill without remorse in the name of the common folk, but they do so in secret, answerable only to each other. |
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In the future I will read any article that has your name in its byline with a very critical eye indeed! |
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Give the name on the byline an italic touch, and somehow the visual rhythm of the text may be altered for the better. |
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As the name indicates, the eyes of the sleeper move back and forth at rapid speed during their sleep. |
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I am excessively, and, perhaps, stupidly, proud of the fact that there is not a whiff of scandal about the name of any cricketer from Bangalore. |
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However, Arnhem proved to be a bridge too far, immortalised in the film of the same name. |
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An individual, whose name is marked with a double asterisk, gave a witness statement which was put in evidence under the Civil Evidence Act. |
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The name was chosen somewhat whimsically by a Florida law enforcement officer, an agency official said. |
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Whenever he does call you a bad name or threatens to whip you or anything else, tell your mom ASAP and have her talk to him and again. |
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The common practice of mixed parents here seems to be to give any offspring a western first name and a Japanese middle name. |
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I hope you will be able to take a few moments to read the following and to add your name to it. |
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Our children will have 2 middle names, my last name being the second, and his last name. |
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Discretion is not their middle name and they give such a fiery display as to be considered suitably decorative for pot plant use. |
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As straight and honest as the day is long, with integrity his middle name, he has embellished politics for half a century and more. |
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He was a stout older Scot by the name of Ian, with whiskers of a beard, and a rough voice, but had a kind heart. |
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More screams and wails of pain hung in the air, and then she heard her name. |
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Nadeau, as his name would indicate, has no love for informants and rejects the notion that he was a rat. |
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The hints and whispers pointed ever more to Kelly, who friends say believed his name would be kept out of the row. |
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But I am sorry that, in the name of health, we can be dictated to with scarcely a whisper of protest. |
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A howler monkey screamed in the tree tops and frogs and cicadas and other creatures he could not name whistled and chirped in the dark. |
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My mother was not allowed to vote today because someone had already submitted an absentee ballot in her name. |
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They are usually black, white or gray with the brand name written around the waistband. |
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The cytoskeleton is the overall name given to protein filaments and motor proteins in the cell. |
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Considering the length of his name, I was rather hoping he would have a quiet evening at the office. |
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Newsome's name was soon added to referee's book when he deliberately tripped an opponent. |
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His death was never avenged, even though the guilty party is known by name and affiliation. |
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A promoter who booked them to play in Ripley, Derbyshire, suggested he change his name to Cliff Richard. |
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It is in fact, her name being called by the dying man in the waking world, where the whiteness of his face is likened to the snow of her dream. |
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Testino arrived from Lima, in Peru, almost thirty years ago, with nothing to his name and ended up waiting tables to pay his way. |
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Yahveh, the God of the Israelites who revealed his name to Moses, was Yahveh Sabaoth, the God of armies. |
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The name conjures images of coiled rattlers ready to lash out with deadly fangs. |
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There were new evangelical currents afloat, especially the tracts the Fundamentals that gave the literalist movement its name. |
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When the mudthrowing and name calling becomes nasty, then you know a raw nerve has been prodded. |
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The director, an Argentinian who lives in Brazil, made his name in the West with the understated prison movie Kiss of the Spider Woman. |
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Mark had learnt, during their talk that the man's name was Joseph but everyone referred to him as Josh, and he was extremely agitated. |
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The audience included young and old, soap stars and Shakespeareans, household names and the hard to put a name to. |
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Now air ambulance bosses intend to name the new helicopter after their generous benefactor. |
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It would have been so easy, after all, simply to leak his name if that's what they wanted. |
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Goaded by leftist privacy advocates, Congress has been toying with the idea of regulating the private sector in the name of privacy. |
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I like RBF because its putting a name to a thing people have been complaining to women about forever and sort of subverting it. |
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He heard his name being called and bowed lowly for everyone to see, but he kept his eyes on her. |
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Metacom, Richter points out, willingly assumed an English name, Philip, and he and his Wampanoag followers raised hogs. |
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With 1,800 plays to his name, I could almost break my journalist's rule of always qualifying an absolute to say THE most prolific. |
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If investments are made in the child's name absolutely, the child has control and can realise the assets whenever he or she wishes. |
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Despite their name, quarry tiles are made, not quailed, from a mixture of natural ingredients including clay and shale. |
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As the name implies, houses in these areas were usually low-rises and were rather congested, packed closely side by side. |
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Anyone from a place with name of Moose Jaw already knows the dangers of messing around with jackalopes. |
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A prize is on offer to whoever comes up with the winning name for Mrs Mason's new shop. |
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There is also a very attractive doll on offer to whoever can guess her name. |
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Such nuptials were a union in name only, as only the king could recognize a marriage as valid. |
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It's not a name which trips easily off the tongue, unless, of course, you happen to be a warder in a Singapore prison. |
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The firm, now called Kilgour after erasing Stanbury's name, wholesales suits that are made in China. |
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And the Berkeley name for element 104, rutherfordium, was surely an honour due to one of the century's greatest nuclear physicists. |
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Police are trying to trace anyone the teenager may have spoken to on line and say he may have used the name DJ or possibly Dee Jay. |
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We usually name public places and spaces after the big shots or big donors. |
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Neither the common nor the Latin name give any indication that the hacking cough and haunting whoop are often followed by vomiting. |
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As I approach the bus, the five or so other kids cheer out my name, whooping and screaming for me. |
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The head of the wardrobe department's name is, in fact, Oscar, but he nods anyway. |
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Yet I want all the stories to be right there, at a glance, preferably with the author's name and a title for the story. |
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He and his friend Tobias Seeger needed only a few seconds to name the three girls their age who still live in town. |
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The merchants then aged the wine, bottled and sold it around the world often featuring the merchant's name prominently. |
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I find that your name is still on the waiting list and that you have not yet been admitted to hospital for your operation. |
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The label should indicate the insulation material, R-value, quantity, and the name and address of the manufacturer or distributor. |
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Your name, after you have gotten through this stage, is now entered in the official catalogues of the ryu. |
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He named the property Asgaard, the name given to the home of the ancient Norse gods. |
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Women are subject to this discourse both in the name of religion as well as in the name of age-old customs and traditions. |
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When my sister was a little girl she asked my mother the name of a certain old lady. |
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A small ship with a big name and a big heart, she was obviously a source of immense pride for her new owner. |
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Nevertheless, outside the rarefied ateliers of haute couture, few know his name today. |
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People who are Mormons but don't follow all the church teachings are called Jack Mormons, hence the funny name for a local brand of coffee. |
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It won't be the first time the keen sportsman has pushed the boundaries of human endurance to the limit in the name of charity. |
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Can we stand idly by while in the name of the fight against terrorism countries are bombed or invaded by the US war machine? |
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Almost nine months before, I had put down my name and my deposit on the wait list for a hybrid car. |
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The mining town of Coober Pedy in Australia got its name from the local Aboriginals. |
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The name of my great uncle is engraved on the war memorial in Radcliffe, opposite what was the town hall. |
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Despite their name, quarry tiles are made from a mixture of natural ingredients including clay and shale. |
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I'm only going to fill out your patient survey if you've got a strawberry-flavored sucker with my name on it! |
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Much easier to call it by its common names Warrigal Greens or New Zealand Spinach, but no less vile to eat under any name. |
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All with the convenience of a card that has your name on it and is accepted anywhere they accept Visa. |
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Instead, she underscores the importance of the players acceptance of difficult challenges in the name of promoting something they believe in. |
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It promised such delights as swordfish, chicken jalfrezi, roast duckling, pasta and vegetarian dishes, to name but a few. |
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His name was Petar, and within five minutes I was jammed into his tent along with three of his companions. |
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It is also know as Jamaica pepper, common name applied to the berry of a small West Indian tree of the myrtle family. |
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These guys are real nasty jammers, they do gypsy reggae, Latino ska funk, you name it. |
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Gogol came to have his name by accident, but that accident set in motion a series of events that would demarcate the history of a family. |
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A short, stout man by the name of Lars Benny was the general owner, barkeep and bottle washer of the joint. |
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She said Jane Doe's lawyers asked Verizon to withhold her name because she was planning on challenging the subpoena. |
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The first was by acclamation when all the cardinals agree to one name proposed without prior arrangement. |
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I also caught trevally on the fly and a bunch of other species including queenfish and others which I can't name. |
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But the name earl gradually merged with the Danish jarl and, after the reign of Alfred, earls took over the responsibilities of ealdormen. |
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Normally the operator kept an account of the person's name and amount owed and expected payment every two to four weeks. |
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Now, in September, as you recall, he was denied entry in the U.S. and his plane diverted when his name turned up on a watch list. |
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Farming a small parcel of land Tom made a big name for himself as a water diviner with his services in big demand throughout the county. |
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She told me her name, where she was from, where she went to school and all that jazz. |
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He knows every plant by name, and laid out much of the garden, including the water feature, himself. |
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The question mark is more likely to be interpreted as indicating that the group suggested has no known name. |
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A couple of weeks ago my son who has the same first name as me but he is M.A. Gray whilst I am M.P. Gray went to the surgery to have jabs etc. for his holiday in the Gambia. |
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There are panel discussions, film screenings, trade shows, softball tournaments, barbecues, after-parties, and other events without a name happening at all hours. |
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A lot of Virginians will recognize his last name from chesty Puller, who was the most decorated Marine in U.S. history. |
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His award and accolades must be numerous, though I can't name any. |
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Terrible stories of murder, abuse, violence, and trauma in the name of ragging have been reported from educational institutions all over the country once again. |
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In Spanish-speaking countries, a man takes on his mother's maiden name as a last name, but uses the patronym as the middle name and the official name. |
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Actually, we called it the crackhouse, a name we convinced our parents came from a large crack in the foundation. |
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At the sound of his name, the man on the floor raised his head and turned a convulsed face to Mr. Wilde. |
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His name was mentioned in the article, although he was incorrectly described therein as a medical doctor. |
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The 30-something heroine glamorized the metropolis and its coveted name brands, Arora says. |
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South Mountain was a name for nearby Mt. Lu, a landmark site in northern Jiangxi Province known as an abode of hermits, religious communities, and spirit beings. |
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Up to now, Sikhs forces were divided into 65 jathas. Nawab Kapur singh reorganised them into Eleven bands, each of course with its own name, flag and leader. |
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I apologize for the omission of your name from the list. It was not intentional. |
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The product name must accurately reflect the intended use of the feed. |
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In this eight-disc set, an abridgement of the book of the same name and the first of three volumes, Simon Schama retells the creation of modern Britain. |
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Discretion is my middle name, but let's just say it was a multi-tin deal. |
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She changed her name, her wardrobe, and her entire outlook on life. |
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By the way, incongruity is the middle name of this insipid film with characters too many and too sketchy and actors short of work or talent, or both. |
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His name is crispy, which makes everyone laugh whenever he introduces himself. |
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For those whose childhood memories stretch back a few decades, the name Walt Disney is likely to bring associations of wholesomeness, innocence and American virtue. |
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After several abortive attempts at spelling the name of the street correctly in his notebook, the officer co-opted some bystanders and dragged the poor horse into Hoe Street. |
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The American team, on the other hand, proposed the name rutherfordium for the new element, in honor of the great British scientist Sir Ernest Rutherford. |
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Her eyes searched for the byline to see the name of the reporter. |
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The CDA was passed not in the name of censorship but in the name of protecting children from stumbling across sexual material. |
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This indicates abortus fever and brucellosis are synonyms of a single disease name and the term brucellosis has been chosen as the preferred term. |
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Patriotism is just a name, a word dividing people, us and them. |
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There, Cornelius was presented with an honorary street sign with his name and the Soul Train logo on it. |
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It was called Windowsill Daydreaming, Rochester, New York, from 1958, and, despite its corny name, it stopped me in my tracks. |
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Erythronium dens-canis is the true dog's tooth violet, the name comes from the shape of the corm, and has rose coloured flowers on 10 cm stems and purple marked leaves. |
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As the name suggests, a yarn winder is a device used to wind balls of yarn. |
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This wonderful beast comes from South Africa and through its peculiar name, which comes from the Afrikaans language, it is the first animal in the dictionary. |
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Or so the chapter titles formally name him, in a nod, perhaps, to his pained formality. |
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Its name notwithstanding, this species is not a rush but a type of sedge. |
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All I catch is his name, Tim, and then he is off in a Lycra whoosh. |
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From paying with a credit card to knowing what my car was, they found out my name. |
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If treated as a variety of the aggregate species D. intermedia, the New Zealand plant must bear the varietal name of norfolkensis, whether it occurs elsewhere or not. |
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Shortly afterwards, getting into his car, he was called by name and, when he turned, was shot through the forehead by a fellow extremist who suspected he had ratted. |
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In the opening pages of his introduction, Ross alludes to the separate paths kente has taken in Ewe and Asante communities as he discusses the cloth's name itself. |
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Wild chervil is another name for the common wild plant cow parsley. |
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Why did the Los Angeles Times avoid publishing the name of the maid who Arnold Schwarzenegger had a love child with? |
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These Old Testament believers are pronouncing their longing for vindication and judgment in the name of Jehovah the righteous one, and in vivid poetic language. |
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For whosoever shall call upon The Name of the Lord shall be saved. |
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You'll be hearing the Brockovich name around the place ere long. |
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My name is Romulous, I lead the Dark Angels or xDAx a clan primarily based out of Warhammer. |
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I think we might go with the 8-syllable, 4-word domain name. |
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This rapprochement was The Birth of a Nation that Griffith evoked when he changed the name of his movie from The clansman. |
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It tells how this young, middle class, newly qualified Argentinian doctor with wanderlust became a dedicated revolutionary whose name became synonymous with Cuba. |
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She refused to criticize the group by name or clarify whether she believed that ethnic Koreans had special privileges. |
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Between the deafening whine of the jet engines and the music, the two men looked at each other and wondered what in God's name was transpiring up there. |
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A check mark next to your name signifies that you have met all the requirements. |
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Indeed one of the reasons the Bank is keen to refer to QE rather than its colloquial name 'printing money' is to distance itself from negative connotations. |
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Previously, as CEO of the music label Capitol Imagine Group, he went by the name Corbin Grimes. |
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So, among other things, claustrophilia might be a name for wanting to be reminded of the body through spatial constraints. |
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I'd hear a bird, follow the sound until I could see it, then flip feverishly through the field guide hoping to find a picture that would put a name to my quarry. |
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Today, in the name of progress, we have faceless interstate highways, clear-cut logging, and industrial farming. |
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Elegant accent marks can make any typical product name sound like a shimmering diamond mined from the fertile bowls of the finest dragon filled cave. |
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There are always people you know by name and face because they really haven't changed all that much and they left quite an impression on you even after all these years. |
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How has a couturier whose name is rarely recognized remained culturally relevant? |
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Balking at the double-barrelled option, our own compromise was to give them my surname as a middle name, so at least my family connection is maintained. |
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A second quarto of Richard II also bore Shakespeare's name in full. |
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Later, they had that boy and they made his middle name my father's first name, which left me stranded as the inappropriately named child in the bunch. |
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If that still does not work then use your middle name, or your last name. |
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He spends the rest of the movie struggling to clear his name and channeling Harrison Ford from The Fugitive. |
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The subspecies name idaltu comes from the Afar language of Ethiopia. |
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An article in yesterday's paper misstated the name of the district attorney. |
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The name is deceptive because this dish isn't tofu at all but consists of cream cheese cubes topped with green onions and bonito flakes and is eaten with a smidgen of wasabi. |
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Finally, since each place name is technically a waypoint, the coordinates corresponding to the names can easily be uploaded to a GPS unit and used for navigation. |
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Just take your middle name and add the name of the street you grew up on. |
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Those that had fallen in battle were buried deep within the catacombs with their name, rank, and race carved into the stone above their urn holder. |
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I always went by my middle name, since my first name was so stupid. |
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Is your name Oscar Lois Anderson?' Her Dalek voice echoed eerily through the black emptiness of the warehouse. |
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So he switched parties and changed his name to cesar Chavez. |
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But, beyond the name, there always appears in the speculation of angelology the theme of an immediately neighboring supreme Presence. |
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Mining was the cash cow first for the Sumitomo family and then for the zaibatsu bearing the same name. |
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It is derived from Artemisia annua, also known as sweet wormwood, which had been used in Chinese medicine for centuries under the name Qinghaosu. |
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What fanatics like the Taliban and now ISIS enact in the name of their perverse sense of God is not animalistic or inhuman, but all too human. |
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In turn, the sender, presumably Rajan Zed or someone using that name and address, made some preposterous suggestions. |
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Founded in 1755, Marie Brizard made its name with its signature aniseed liqueur, later to become the Marie Brizard Anisette. |
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These let light in, allowing them to grow naturally into a quadric ellipsoidal shape, to give it its technical name. |
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I prefer to call it by its rather charming country name of Jack-By-The-Hedge. |
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The Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award bears the name of the man who many regard as one of the greatest quarterbacks to ever play football. |
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Which animal, also known as the ant bear, is the first whose name appears in a dictionary? |
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The name rhymes with ant farm and it is led by 2008 national flatpicking champion Tyler Grant, above. |
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Anthelio derives its name from anthelion, the halo around bodies directly opposite the sun. |
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In fact, the original name for the plant in the United States was Jamestown weed, later shortened to Jimson weed. |
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What sincere friendship are you talking about considering you recognized our name and now you are strongly pushing us to change it? |
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She asks Jen or her boyfriend to change light bulbs and batteries, fold tablecloths and sheets, you name it. |
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He will find a wealth of Indian words and should have no problem beating her with bhaji, biriani, akhara and jhatka to name but a few. |
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Try to remember that name as you curse him out on your way to the clink. |
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I give him my name, and he flips through the paper on his clipboard. |
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A few hours later my mother phoned and asked me if Budgie Smugglers was the name of a Bond Girl. |
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The Hebrew name for Exodus is shemot because the book opens by recapitulating the names of the 12 sons. |
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Several gunsmiths hopped aboard the bandwagon, but it was Arizonian Ward Koozer whose name became synonymous with the conversion. |
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The church's full name is the Armenian Apostolic Church of St Gregory the Illuminator. |
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Matthew, and the late antique History of the Rechabites, attributed to a holy man by the name of Zosimus. |
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Some clever person came up with the apt name of little John for a suitably shaped container for those who were caught short. |
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At some point in the conversation my name came up, and I readily agreed to their proposition. |
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Quite often, cooperativists do not know even the name of their cooperative or where it is located. |
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Cumberfans from all around the globe donated money in Cumberbatch's name, with the total raised entirely exceeding expectations. |
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My informant seemed to look upon the swift as an uncanny bird, and called it by a name I had never heard before, devil-screecher. |
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Then Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpeh and Shen, and called the name of it Ebenezer, saying, Hitherto hath the LORD helped us. |
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The media's representation of this wonderful occasion is a tawdry assault on our senses in the name of commercialism and bulimic excess. |
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In the UK there is a strong ethical feeling that the first ascender has the right to name that climb and great effort is taken to do so. |
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Throughout the centuries until the 18th, the English Channel did not have any fixed name in English and in French. |
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The name of the Angles may have been first recorded in Latinised form, as Anglii, in the Germania of Tacitus. |
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Gregory the Great in an epistle simplified the Latinised name Anglii to Angli, the latter form developing into the preferred form of the word. |
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In 1097, William II began the building of Westminster Hall, close by the abbey of the same name. |
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A girl''s name, a pass made by a bullfighters cape and a Dutch radio station. |
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Spiced wine, sweetened with sugar or honey, perhaps the original of the modern liqueur, was employed occasionally under the name of hippocras. |
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Visitors to the website are able to look up a place name and see the index entry made for the manor, town, city or village. |
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The native term for the language is Cymraeg, and for the name of the country of Wales it is Cymru. |
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Polybius respects that limit, but identifies Iberia as the Mediterranean side as far south as Gibraltar, with the Atlantic side having no name. |
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The Great White Way shouldn't live too literally up to its name. |
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In some manuscripts of Caesar's Gallic War their king is referred to as Imanuentius, although in other manuscripts no name is given. |
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I know you are but what am I? Jeannie would say out loud, whenever I mouthed a name at her. |
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The British name Caedbaed is found in the pedigree of the kings of Lindsey, which argues for the survival of British elites in this area also. |
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Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. |
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This official name becomes accepted by society and future generations without question. |
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Jones had mentioned the fact of his amour, and of his being the rival of Blifil, but had cautiously concealed the name of the young lady. |
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Walking in nature, we see, identify, name, recognize. This recognition is our apotropaion, that is, our warding off of fear. |
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Nobody knows the name of the Christ's decrucifier because it wasn't so important. |
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Hercules is sometimes used appellatively, that is, as a common name, to signify a strong man. |
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In other words, they are used to name, rather than to describe. They are apposite nouns and not adjectives. |
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I've ne'er heard his name named since I saw him go out of the yard as stout a man as ever trod shoe-leather. |
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He succeeded in associating his name inseparably with some names which will last as long as our language. |
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Astrid, the person is saying. Astrum, astralis. How does it feel to have such a starry name? |
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Would the name Marcus Aurelius have meant anything to him? In all probability, he would have thought it a fancy name for a black slave. |
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Autogas is the common name for liquefied petroleum gas when it is used as a fuel in internal combustion engines in vehicles. |
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Thus all readings, like all autographings, should be gladly accepted as a means of spreading your name around. |
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But most offices either use autopens with the boss's name or simply have a staff member sign the boss's name to the correspondence. |
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The girl's name was Sherry and she was from England and was staying at the backpackers' near the beach. |
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Indeed beer, by a mixture of wine, hath lost both name and nature, and is called balderdash. |
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Petrarca had his Laura, and Dante his Beatrice, but Lorenzo has studiously concealed the name of the sovereign of his affections. |
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And though he smiled, his eyes glowed proudly at the name of Louisiana's dashing hero. |
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I suspect, for instance, that Bill Gates might not have wanted to begift such a program with the Microsoft name. |
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I requyre you of one thynge, that whan ye com to Kynge Arthures courte, discover nat my name, for I am sore there behatyd. |
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Since my father's name was Berry Gordy, he named me Berry Gordy. There's no middle name. |
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How could I condemn a name that honours so many of my friends for whose distance or loss I now beweep? |
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Another name made to stand sponsor for fables was Bidpai, said to have been an Oriental philosopher. |
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Do you want to go out there and do the right things or do you want to make that big hit to gain a big name? |
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He made a big name in the war. And since he's been in the ranger service he's done wonders. |
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Solly had carried on the old business, and was making a big name for himself. |
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The runtime binder considers inheritance and name hiding, and does overload resolution. |
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The fighters joined their admirers in lushing Blue Ruin, which was just another name for Daffy, or gin, and Heavy Wet, which was ale. |
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The fact that item 3 seems to slowly bubble up to its correct position gives the bubblesort algorithm its name. |
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I had a cousin, name was Skeeter, which should tell ya something about what kinda PWT oxycontin-suckin' lowlife hillbilly buttmunch this guy was. |
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Beshrew those caitiff scouts that conspired to sully his honest name by such an imputation! |
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It was not a way of calling a Black person outta they name but used simply as a way of referring to a person who was racially Black. |
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When officers arrived, the man, whose name was not released, confronted them with a metal candleholder, officials said. |
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She introduced herself. I said, 'Where'd you get a name like Carly?' and she said, from her aunt. |
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My name is China Bayles. I'm the owner of Thyme and Seasons and the co-owner, with Ruby Wilcox, of a new tearoom called Thyme for Tea. |
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As his name gradually became known, the circle of his acquaintance widened. |
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Beasts wild and tame, whom lodgings yeeld house, dens, or field, collaud his name. |
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Once, when I was a comiconomenclaturist, I captured the name Rick Shaw. On the radio, t'other day, was a Robin Banks. |
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The compere came onto the stage holding the gold envelope that contained the winner's name. |
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We have learned, in logic, that conjugates are sometimes in name only, and not in deed. |
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I know some who consentingly have acquired both profit and advancement from cuckoldom, of which the bare name only affrights so many people. |
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The copy sort results showed few people noticed the company name at the end of the commercial. |
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When handing in your assignment, ensure you include a coversheet with your name and student number. |
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I think the manufacturer was so ashamed of its creation that it didn't put its name on it! |
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Her death was avenged on Creone by Theseus, and her name has been immortalized in a tragedy by Sophocles. |
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The cub-reporter cannot make a name for himself unless he is favoured by fortune. |
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Rip called him by name, but the cur snarled, snapped his teeth, and passed on. This was an unkind cut indeed. |
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His company has done business under a succession of dbas because he can't settle on a good name. |
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From the fact that this was the most noticeable feature in their costume, the name came naturally to be the denominative term of the tribe. |
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In Moss Side they called the police Dibble, after Officer Dibble in the cartoon Top Cat, so the name had sprung from that. |
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Although all dogcows look the same, this is probably the very one that appeared in that stack, in which case his name is Clarus. |
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Every name in the DNS tree is a domain, even if it is terminal, that is, has no subdomains. |
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He was so doped after the surgery that it took him 2 hours to remember his name. |
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The dotted name java.util.Scanner is the fully qualified name of the Scanner class. |
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There is a parish council called the Douzaine, which, as its name suggests, consists of twelve members. |
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Name other great catastrophes this world has seen, the floods, the fires, the earthquakes, plague or famine or drouth. |
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Her maiden name is Kukulain, ellisized from the Irish in a penstroke of linguistic legerdemain. |
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Alas, we are reduced to desperately seeking Toto, in need of someone to go behind the curtain and tell us that the wizard's name is enronomics. |
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