More indicative still, however, is a proverbial usage common to Win and Mary the cook-maid. |
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Soe Win is believed to espouse a hard line against Suu Kyi's movement and with foreign critics who favour democracy. |
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Frontman Win Butler's lyrics rarely bother to rhyme, allowing their bizarre but always sincere sentiments to reach the ear even more directly. |
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Another favourite for Win was a ceremony in the theme of Chicago gangsters, the men in black shirts and white ties and carrying violin cases. |
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The most diabolical gift you can give a grad is my book How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big. |
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I have been checking in with Win since he moved into Room 607, to bear witness to what can happen when someone society has given up on is given a fresh start. |
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It was the third successive victory for Phar to Win after an 18-month layoff. |
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You want to learn a really impressive second language? Try Dothraki. Win over any man in my guild. |
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Mega-Money Mine, Pay Dirt and Red, White and Win also have progressive jackpots waiting to be won. |
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The Great Wilkie and Little Win were the biggest draw on the halls when you were not so much as a twinkle in your daddy's eye. |
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And defender Joe, 18, from Portsmouth could be set for his own shot at the bigtime after making the last 22 of Samsung's Win A Pro Contract. |
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The Labour party shaped its policy of a Welsh Assembly under the guidance of Shadow Welsh Secretary Ron Davies and Welsh Office spokesmen Win Griffiths and Rhodri Morgan. |
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The motor vessel Win Far, fired what appeared to be a large calibre weapon at SH-60B from Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron Light 49, embarked aboard USS Chancellorsville. |
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If, however, not a soul has come across your plum paste, your Himalayan red rice or your Chilean boletes, you win. |
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I think he will win the title undeservingly and probably be champ for a little while. |
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The best team doesn't always win but it would be a shallow victory if winning meant resorting to undignified means. |
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Because it would allow some undocumented immigrants to win legal status, it faces resistance on the Right. |
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An uneven battle ensues, in which the slave-making ants can be said to win the war. |
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Mark Schlereth believes the Giants can keep up the momentum based off their win against the Cowboys. |
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As a batsman you're never going to win a sledging contest against 11 fielders. |
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The depressive comic committed suicide in 1968, at the age of 44, but left behind a wealth of material that has continued to win fans with sketches such as The Blood Donor. |
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Jack, at nineteen, twenty, had an unambiguous understanding of what it meant to win, there was none of that theoretical, wifty new-age stuff for him. |
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The team fell behind in the first half but rallied in the second half to win the game. |
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She suggested that he would win easily, but he demurred, saying he expected the election to be close. |
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However, the top seed showed his mettle with a string of big serves and passing shots to win the game. |
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How could Fox ever win its holiday war now? Surely all would be lost, and the nation would be forced to endure another Chrismahanukwanzakah. |
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He's such a lucky devil that he'll probably win the lottery someday. |
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Survivor reaches as many as 28 million viewers who watch contestants win a new Pontiac or guzzle Mountain Dew after scaling an arduous cliff. |
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A good deal of assiduous attention had enabled Henry to win this place in her affections. |
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Perhaps, finally, the Netherlands will shed itself of the backhanded compliment of being the best team never to win a world championship. |
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Stories were told of a brownie riding horseback to fetch the midwife at childbirth or helping his master to win at checkers. |
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After winning in the lower court, the appellee hoped she would win again in the appeals court. |
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His nearest rival bowed out after 31 pasties, leaving Pete to devour his 32nd pastie to win first prize and set a new British record. |
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Acklam, still seeking their first Yorkshire One win, tomorrow host host Wath Upon Derne who have already won five times in six games. |
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Anna Birtwhistle deputised in goal excellently for the injured Becca Lillystone in a good 6-0 win for the girls. |
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She needs to improve her game if she wants to win the championship. |
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Whoever picks the winning ticket will win a bundle of prizes. |
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The proposal to cut taxes was just an election gimmick to win votes. |
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It will take a superhuman effort for them to win the championship. |
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To win wars you need to carpet-bomb civilians. And to get away with carpet-bombing civilians. |
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Anglicanism, it thinks it can win errant sheep back to the fold with entertainment, comfy chairs, informality and glued-on gleefulness at our wondrous world. |
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We can't win if we keep throwing up bricks from three-point land. |
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Rob Kearney is also poised to return at full-back having completely recovered from the mild gluteal strain that caused him to be left out of Sunday's win over Italy. |
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The easiest way to win on this map is to camp the double damage. |
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Daly went to his bag of tricks and found, what else, a way to win. |
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As the World Cup starts, it is interesting to note the large number of people around the world cheering on ABE to win, including many millions of British. |
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Afroth with ambition, the new owners have already promised to win the Premier League, the Champions League and probably the Glenrothes by-election too. |
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He used his business experience as a bootstrap to win voters. |
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