Wince at those flared trousers and that tie-dyed t-shirt from your hippie days. |
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For example, your modified software must run on Wince, and you are required to provide end user support for your software. |
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Cecil was clocking up his fifth 1000 win when Wince battled home last season and you ignore Hooray Henry at your peril. |
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Wince at them and you risk being warned that your ignorance of Poland's cultural and socioreligious complexities knows no bounds. |
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A wince of pain flashing over her pale, clammy features told me she was slowly remembering. |
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The brothers shared a wince at the memory of the snotty chef their mother was inordinately fond of. |
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He cuffs me at the back of my head, harshly, and I wince, tears stinging my eyes. |
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The thought of it is enough to make you wince, but the performers are skilled enough to pull it off. |
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Alas, after a while, the sight of board shorts, singlets, jandals and sunglasses will make you wince. |
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He quickly became a legend with his dazzling skills that left defenders flat footed and an eye for goal that made keepers wince. |
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I saw him cutting off distinguished authors at the ankles with short, savage ripostes that made one wince. |
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In 1756, a French physician, Nicholas Andre, named this condition tic douloureux, which means painful wince. |
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It's a buzzword, a catchphrase, and I simultaneously wince and stifle laughter whenever I hear it. |
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Men are also less likely then women to wince when they look at the price tag, according to the report from market analysts Mintel. |
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Dr. Kline noticed the anxious girl wince in sudden pain and immediately stepped closer to Leanne. |
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Mike was now copying our dad's voice, which made me wince with emotional pain. |
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There was a brief moment where he could not hide his wince, his small grimace of pain. |
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Brad laughed a bit, his laughter ending in a slight wince as the pain flared up again. |
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The force of fat raindrops hitting my head was hard enough to make me wince. |
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When I see that other fellow college students rioted and destroyed the coolest liquor store in town, while in a drunken mob, I wince. |
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Her armour was scorched and burnt away in places, revealing blistered skin and burn wounds severe enough to make an experienced doctor wince. |
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Doesn't excite me sexually, but I could certainly watch it again and again, even as it makes me wince. |
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I wince as it collides against her forehead, then jump up as she tips back and falls over backwards, chair and all. |
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It was impossible not to wince, though, when the caustic chemical bit into open flesh. |
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Jinx caught himself with his hands before he fell for the fourth time in ten minutes, swallowing the wince as his aching wrist twinged. |
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We must delicately wince at their uncleanliness, while empowering them to sterilise their living spaces. |
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His unstatesmanlike behavior and childish tough talk makes many people in other countries wince. |
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When she fights back, he delivers a ham-fisted haymaker across her jaw accompanied by a sound effect that made me wince. |
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Every few steps or so I'd hit her foot and she would wince, but try to hide her pain. |
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He wouldn't wince, not even when you pursed your lips in a pose worthy of a centerfold. |
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Sometimes I read responses that seem overblown and pretentious, and they make me wince. |
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Perhaps classical scholars will wince, but putting a personal spin on history couldn't be more Homeric. |
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Think of some of the world's most famous supergroups and you can't help but wince. |
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He'd work some kind of paste-up edit, often inserting a freeze-frame in a manner that made other TV directors wince. |
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Considering that my personal number, 62, wasn't far behind his, I could only wince at the graphic evidence of time passing. |
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There was one news operation that didn't wince, that didn't back off, that stood up like no other news operation in the post-Soviet world. |
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Approaching a tight bend quickly, it never elicited a wince from me or my colleague and co-driver Marc Bouchard. |
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The public works minister must wince when he recalls those words of his rat pack partner. |
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The thought made me inwardly wince and I cast my gaze over the room. |
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The errant flashes of light in your brain depicting this possibility are strong enough to make you wince and want to cry. |
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When leaders speak of waging the war against terrorism to its final victory, one can only wince and wonder what they have in mind. |
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There was a clicking sound as the cuffs went back on, but not tight enough to make him wince. |
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Was using the tragedy of his son's short life a good defence of the NHS or do people wince? |
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Party strategists wince at the results of the ethnic minority British election study, which analysed the 2010 figures. |
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It's a subject that hits headlines, fuels discussions, sparks debate and causes some of the men in the room to wince and cross their legs. |
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But the smiles can quickly turn to a wince when we take a look at our credit card statement a few days after our return. |
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Power on and the computer enters the loading wince picture belowafter a few seconds. |
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That being so, readers with linguistic sensibilities may wince at some of the expressions or use of language. |
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Even now, Danes still wince at the name Butragueno, scorer of four goals that day. |
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If not, you wince while the engine groans due to lack of power because you are trying to get going in second gear. |
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The large all-rubber tires will let you maneuver this wince easily and ergonomically correct, even if the ground is uneven. |
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We can spend our lives dallying in false advertising and slick brochures about barren land and cheap trinkets and never for a moment wince at the dishonesty of it. |
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He does something subtle with his expression that is not quite a wince, not quite an admission of shame — something shifty-eyed. |
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I wince when I spot a bill on the doormat, I'm on tenterhooks when the car is in for a service and fear the worst when I get a receipt from the cash point. |
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Yet as celebrations go, it was a sight more muted than the drunken hooley in 2005, the memories of which still make Harmison wince. |
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She sniffed and held back a wince when he dabbed gently at the cut. |
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The violence is so real that cinemagoers wince with every thump. |
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Periodically I would look across to my friend and yoga-pal Sola, who would be twisting her slender body into poses I can only wince at, and feel rather inadequate. |
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She rests a proprietary hand on the man's shoulder, as if for security, and the little finger of her other hand-it almost makes you wince to see it-is extended primly. |
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Some may or may not agree with his right-wing views, but they will wince at serious London politics treated by the Tory leadership as a celebrity Eton wall game. |
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Memphis begins to pop up in the later chapters, and I wince at every mention because I know that is where the story will end. |
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Consequently, while there are torture scenes in the book, with enough detail to make a weak-stomached reader wince, they avoid gratuitousness. |
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It's hard not to wince when she slips into 'adorkable' mode. |
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That visit to the stately home, which makes Elizabeth wince about her brusque rejection of Darcy's proposal, was omitted from the 1940 film, to clear Greer Garson of any suspicion of mercenariness. |
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Sabathia is the Yankees' pillar, big and strong, and he absorbed a sharp second-inning comebacker by John Mayberry Jr. on the inside of his left thigh without so much as a wince. |
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What if my seatmate was a sadistic fatphobe who would lean on our shared armrest just to see me wince in pain as it dug into my hip? |
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If you asked any 12-year-old what shots she has received, she would probably wince and point to a dog-eared immunization record, received in early childhood and updated dutifully at every school immunization day. |
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It made you wince because you knew what he meant. |
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They just have to wince, then grin and bear it. |
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What wife does not wince at the stench of her husband's morning breath? |
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He sets Audubon in the political context of the day: his uneasy boyhood during the French revolution, for example, memories of which made him later wince when having his unfashionably long hair cut by an Edinburgh barber. |
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I avoided the issue last week as the loss of One Up remains a festering wound that still makes Aberdeen's musos wince. |
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Cheek by Jowl caroled Shakespeare's songs plangently in four-part harmony, but the Ridiculous' Titania had to add a placatory wince to the promise that her fairies would sing. |
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But he made no whimper. Nor did he wince or cringe to the blows. He bored straight in, striving, without avoiding a blow, to beat and meet the blow with his teeth. |
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If ITV wanted to screen the sort of sad situation comedy that made us wince through the '60s and '70s they should have bought the rights to Terry and June. |
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Instead of relishing that little twinge in your nose you know is going to be followed by a full-on sternutation, I wince at the pain that is going to come. |
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Claustrophobic readers may wince at Hurd's descriptions of spelunking, but they'll find the author's journeys a rare opportunity to explore the wild caves of the world. |
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