You led me to believe you enjoyed my company, then arrogantly spurned my proposal without even admiring the ring. |
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It might have been a different story had they not spurned two gilt-edged chances in the first five minutes. |
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Following his spurned overture, he was drinking at a juke joint with Sonny Boy Williamson. |
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The spurned party sued for breach of promise and was awarded 2,000 in compensation. |
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His financial problems were solved, but he was spurned by the art establishment. |
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Will we retreat to leave the ungrateful natives to their savagery, having spurned the gifts of our civilisation? |
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He spurned the Cardinals to sign a four-year contract with the team that swept St. Louis in the World Series. |
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And in innumerable other minutes of the 90, they were carved apart by a Kilmarnock team who spurned so many opportunities it was barely credible. |
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The Scottish experience in the past half-century has been a patchwork of success, spurned opportunities and downright failure. |
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Since thou hast spurned the grace of God and made thyself unworthy of the office of preaching, we rightly deprive you of this office. |
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Having spurned the fleshpots of Glasgow, novelist Carole Morin is enjoying the sybaritic delights of London. |
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That way, when you've done the deed, your spurned lover can't burn your stuff in a fit of pique. |
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Pakistan spurned the vote because it wants a plebiscite to decide rule between India and itself. |
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Since Portugal scored, Marc Overmars spurned a half-chance to equalise, slicing a volley into Row Z from distance. |
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They have all spurned the government's five a day logo for fruit and vegetables. |
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Kahane wants nothing to do with the studio suit who has spurned him for so long, and storms out. |
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Inevitably, these cherished purchases are nearly always spurned and condemned to make an early appearance in the charity shop. |
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Having scored a superb opener, Dargo spurned the easiest of opportunities in the 23rd minute. |
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Mayobridge spurned another goal chance on the seventh minute when a beautifully placed high ball from Benny Coulter fell to Ronan Sexton. |
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The Scottish Arts Council hoped it would mine a rich seam of latent talent and take risks on fledgling authors spurned by larger companies. |
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To the world and to herself, she was a no-nonsense, practical woman who scoffed at indulgence and spurned luxury. |
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In Sri Lanka, war rages again on the Jaffna Peninsula while international peace-making efforts to unite Tamils and Sinhalese are spurned. |
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Matlock spurned several easy chances to secure an even more emphatic win. |
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She spurned his proposal of marriage, and this rebuke embittered him against women. |
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Aloisio then spurned the chance to restore Sao Paulo's two-goal advantage when he wastefully headed wide from Danilo's pinpoint cross. |
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He spurned shoddy thinking and sought to lead those with whom he talked to search their own minds for answers and illumination. |
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Disappointed and spurned, Nor was quick to side with the renegade Zarach when the gods began to disunite. |
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Alarmed by the turn of events the governments behave like spurned lovers. |
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Surely this wasn't the cold-hearted harpy that had spurned my affections. |
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Even the plebeians are people and should not be spurned or provoked. |
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Did the spurned person do something that offended the ghoster? |
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Though she was not unattractive, Ben had spurned her several times simply because she always came on too strong and would not desist her coquetry. |
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Yet Mrs Gandhi conspicuously spurned a chance to toughen her support for the deal at a Congress shindig on November 17th. |
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Like the spurned women of Manhattan, Howard and his fellow rejects should remind themselves they're smart, beautiful, funny, wonderful people who deserve better. |
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But Bush administration neocons, salivating over regime change in Iran, spurned this extraordinary deal. |
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Town spurned a fine chance to sew it up with five minutes remaining when Stephen Cross was put clear by substitute Sean Pooley but shot wide with only the keeper to beat. |
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Because the publishing industry of the early and middle nineteenth century spurned female writers, Charlotte Bronte chose to work under the androgynous pseudonym Currier Bell. |
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As the tambour was a spurned instrument, only the triangle could bring a strong support destined to accentuate the rhythms of the accordion dance. |
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Both candidates have pledged to sign the security pact that outgoing President Hamid Karzai has spurned. |
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He gave his time and labour with a reckless generosity and could be deeply hurt when it was spurned or unappreciated, which was sometimes the case. |
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One day he inadvertently bathed in the spring of the naiad he had spurned. |
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She has spurned potential lovers and judged those close to her harshly. |
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Moz also looks elsewhere for love but his advances are spurned. |
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She threw the money down upon the ground, and spurned it with her foot. |
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Once Maribor spurned the chance for a consolation via a penalty that Agim Ibraimi struck against a post, Hazard began to run the show. |
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He may have spurned his Englishness but you could not entirely remove the Yorkshire from him. |
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One of America's most iconic sports stadiums looks doomed to destruction after Houston-area voters spurned a rescue plan for the Astrodome. |
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He keeps his savings and loan company alive during the depression by reaching out to the tired, poor, and huddled masses spurned by his fat-cat competitor. |
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Qantas spurned such showstopping features in favor of a sprucely futuristic style. |
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Parliament could, like a spurned lover, delay discussing the proposals and that would mean doing the opposite to what we should be doing. |
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Unsuited to efficient digging due to its small size, the tool was spurned by many soldiers in favour of full-size shovels and picks. |
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Not there yesterday to greet her was her father, who walked out on the family when Marion was four and subsequently spurned all his daughter's attempts to meet him. |
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It has spurned attempts to forge a negotiated peace, with catastrophic results to the people of Kosovo. |
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Passed on the pretext of fighting against terrorism, it spurned civil liberties. |
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Outside of the US, the introduction of the WTO and TRIP has been welcomed or spurned more or less in line with the IP wealth of nations. |
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And patriating the Constitution without Quebec was a victory over a spurned Quebec nationalism. |
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While accepting that France might have given some aid, Avrich argued in Kronstadt 1921 that the Whites were basically spurned, checked by Western diplomatic obstacles. |
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This debate was fought over radio, this was fought over the player piano, and of course it was famously fought over the VHS recorder, which spurned an entire industry. |
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He spurned fashion, ignored overly versatile audiences, accepted marginality, and mocked the criticisms of contemporaries who frowned on the speed of his writing and his playful melodic inventions. |
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The visitors spurned several chances to make the game safe, though, and urged on by a crowd of 114,000, Mexico eventually turned the match around thanks to Pavel Pardo's prodigious right foot. |
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Similarly, a Turkey spurned by Europe could soon regress into a sour and militant Islamist mood, right on Europe's front line. So the question left by the failed constitution should not be: how can we resurrect it? |
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Instead the Northampton wing, backing up spectacularly, spurned the two men inside him and went for the corner only to collide painfully with Argentina's lock Patricio Albacete. |
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He'd quite like to live in New York for a while, where his daughter is studying, but fears he might get flak from a Britain that could feel spurned. |
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Rather than work to resolve these issues, Iran has spurned the package of incentives these countries offered and repeatedly has refused to suspend its uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities. |
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Mesgarlou had spurned both offers, and declined to make a counter-offer, thereby requiring a four-day trial, in which he was awarded only a small fraction of the lower settlement offer. |
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The fulfilment of common environmental standards should be financed by Community funds so that environmental protection is not spurned in the applicant countries or postponed for better times. |
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He was spurned and avoided by men, a man of suffering, accustomed to infirmity, one of those from whom men hide their faces, spurned, and we held him in no esteem. |
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It begs the ethical and moral argument about whether or not gambling is sinful, whether or not gambling is something that should be spurned or shunned and whether or not government should be involved in it. |
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And we in the Committee on Budgets have the feeling, Mr President, that constructive and purely institutional contributions have been thoroughly spurned and scorned. |
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They set up their own gallery of forebears, and they reinstate or exalt poets and artists who had been spurned or rejected in the name of good taste. |
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Dodgers part-owner Loreall Allmouth, spurned by Dodgers manager Johnny LaGordo, vows revenge on the team and will use black magic to get it. |
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One concerned a maiden killed by a lustful priest whose advances she spurned. |
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Domestics will pay a more cheerful service when they find themselves not spurned because fortune has laid them at their master's feet. |
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Was there ever yet preacher but there were gainsayers that spurned, that winced, that whimpered against him? |
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Any flat-track bully worth his salt would have weighed in with a few goals but Torres spurned the chance with yet another poor miss. |
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The question of whether Labour should have accepted the support of his media empire as a gift, or spurned it as a poisoned chalice, retains a certain relevance. |
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The legend of Saint Winifred tells how, in AD 660, Caradoc, the son of a local prince, severed the head of the young Winifred after she spurned his advances. |
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A shrewd and calculating leader, Teach spurned the use of force, relying instead on his fearsome image to elicit the response he desired from those he robbed. |
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Marouane Chamakh then spurned a great chance to kill the game off when he ran onto Andrey Arshavin's lofted through ball but shanked his shot horribly across the face of goal. |
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After he has spent seven years in captivity on Ogygia, the island of Calypso, she falls deeply in love with him, even though he has consistently spurned her advances. |
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