Balloonist Rick Walczak plans to attend to some unfinished business in the next few weeks. |
|
Be that as it may, one can't help but wonder why Montserrat does not attend to its own business. |
|
She wrote a quick note saying she was sorry and that she had some business to attend to. |
|
Calcavecchia has had unfinished business to attend to in the transatlantic challenge for some time. |
|
If you have no serious business to attend to the next day, i strongly advise you give this stuff a try. |
|
Doctors and nurses were obliged to attend to patients so they could not be blamed for admitting the patients. |
|
Then I headed to the Toronto Star newsroom to attend to all the matters one must attend to when take one's leave after 25 years. |
|
At one stage a police van was called to the street to attend to a different property. |
|
Then I go to attend to my patients and write prescriptions and directions for their ailments. |
|
Another element in the exercise will be an emergency call to Church island to attend to campers who are in difficulty. |
|
Oh, may the workday pass quickly as there is serious business to attend to this evening. |
|
In fact, there's so much story for the viewer to attend to that the spectacular humor that heavily peppers the film often blindsides you. |
|
Nor was it a case of being called away to attend to urgent state business in Brussels. |
|
This means I have to go out tomorrow to attend to my business, whether I like it or not. |
|
Father had a little bit of business to attend to so I spent two nights at the inn. |
|
I want also to see panels of voluntary nurses who can be detailed off to attend to necessitous patients in their own home. |
|
We simply have more important business to attend to right now than nursing an old grudge. |
|
Should we snarl up the streets with drivers waiting for the police to attend to remove disruptive students from their buses? |
|
This vehicle's driver stopped to attend to a call of nature, and I have simply borrowed his taxi for a short time. |
|
Unfortunately, some politicians are prepared to trade verbal punches rather than attend to the country's business. |
|
|
She found herself unable to attend to study, whether listening to the teacher or doing exercises, in class or at home. |
|
He insists that, despite the game's international attractions, he has more important business to attend to in his own backyard. |
|
Insomnia may be functional, a signal that you need to attend to what got you up. |
|
Of course they attend to a few repair works of less significance, which involve a sum that does not pinch their purse. |
|
The allusiveness requires us to attend to the internal structure of the text, and at the same time asks us to step outside it, to other texts. |
|
This is our annual general meeting and we would like to see all members, old and new, attend to discuss the future of the club. |
|
Now, would you just initial those undertakings and hand them back to the associate officer and would counsel just attend to these orders. |
|
As soon as I had collected my handbag and the papers, I left my office and went to attend to my post and deal with other College business. |
|
He said those teachers who sign in at school and then leave for the day to attend to personal matters, should be dealt with by principals. |
|
All three retirees plan to relax and complete chores they haven't managed to attend to during their lengthy careers. |
|
He had no authority towards Kaelesha's children, and more pressing matters to attend to than listening to taunts. |
|
There's important business to attend to and we want to deal with that business. |
|
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the formation of a new club, which will hopefully attend to the following aims. |
|
In 1903, for example, Meyer urged his Tuesday evening Keswick listeners to attend to things that were wrong in their lives. |
|
Finish the nursing care, attend to patient needs, do what is important to you, what satisfies you as a nurse. |
|
How organizations attend to a rich range of employees' emotions could facilitate or hinder the progress of ambitious change. |
|
This scene is familiar to some mental health care workers as they attend to trauma victims. |
|
It is that time in mid season which makes it a good idea to attend to the care of your lawn. |
|
So how does he contribute to this process and help attend to my psychological well being? |
|
Such moments of choice, Alexander found, come only when one is willing to deeply attend to or notice subtle body cues. |
|
|
If you do not agree with it, by all means dismiss it from your consideration, but attend to me on the law. |
|
But for this to happen we must first listen to him, attend to him and receive from him. |
|
We must attend to social and cultural history in order to make sense of semantics. |
|
Representatives from local hockey clubs have been invited to attend to cast their eyes over the eight teams taking part. |
|
Calmly but firmly insist on stepping into a private office or conference room where you will attend to his concerns. |
|
With the ship in the water, its time now to step the mast and attend to the rigging. |
|
The President instead chided the legislature for failing to attend to its own duties, such as passing legislation. |
|
They should park their vehicle by the side of the road and then attend to the call. |
|
In spite of near-constant challenges to their survival, tortoises must nonetheless attend to the task of perpetuating the species. |
|
Slowly, slowly, and all in good time, of course, as I have my Ph.D to attend to first and foremost! |
|
Instead he calmly fianchettoes a bishop and argues the he can attend to things like development later in the game. |
|
To use the Internet intensively, faculty must attend to delivery management systems. |
|
Of all the little maintenance procedures that harpsichord owners must attend to, replacing a plectrum is perhaps the thorniest of issues. |
|
In fact, he did attend to cross-examine one further witness but otherwise took no active part in the proceedings thereafter. |
|
It is causation that provides the real basis for the pragmatically selected natural kinds we attend to. |
|
I have duties to attend to, and you, my dearest, have only one more day aboard this ship before you have to leave me. |
|
The statement that they had not left the meeting but left to attend to other business was deplored as a perversion of the facts. |
|
Therefore, they have to mix and match their schedules to attend to children, eldercare, and community responsibilities. |
|
Families are wondering whether they can keep up this pace and still attend to their children and eldercare needs over time. |
|
It is important that parents attend to receive their enrolment forms for the September term. |
|
|
It was then discovered that I had MRSA, and the district nurse had to attend to my bandaging at home. |
|
The man leading a takeover bid for one of the UK's biggest insurance companies today said he had unfinished business to attend to when the deal was done. |
|
I was talking with some colleagues the other day about young managers and, how today, there are so many areas of responsibility that they have to attend to and deal with. |
|
Consider what you must attend to as you walk down Piccadilly. |
|
There are some practical details to attend to before the interview. |
|
It was a pleasure to present the awards last Friday and to see so many adults attend to show their appreciation and support for these champions of literature. |
|
The long queues outside principals' offices in many township schools made it difficult for the schools to concentrate on teaching as the teachers had to attend to the queues. |
|
Principal deputes in the High Court can only keep pace with their workload by using the time spent on the daily train journey to and from work to attend to papers. |
|
He had to carefully attend to each customer's fastidious demands. |
|
They stop work, attend to and resolve before sleep any inharmonious conditions that may arise, knowing that creativity lies dormant while conflict prevails. |
|
At the other end of the chamber is the bar, at which the members of the Commons attend to hear the speech from the throne at the opening of Parliament. |
|
Staff in the beauty salon attend to the bride's hair and make-up. |
|
I set the timer on my iPhone so that it goes off when I need to stop writing and attend to something else. |
|
There all done now if you two don't mind I have a sickbay to attend to. |
|
Failing to attend to these things brings prompt disciplining or patient complaint. |
|
I nurse the first baby until she's sated, then attend to the second baby. |
|
Despite being somewhat preoccupied with material and professional affairs you manage to attend to children, family and loved ones with devotion and care. |
|
That we especially attend to, and emphasize, borders and boundaries is evidenced powerfully in our use of halos, the nimbus and the aura in the arts. |
|
Reluctantly, they did, leaving me to attend to some unfinished business. |
|
Of course, if the matter goes to trial, the witness can be compelled to attend to give evidence, and may be in contempt of court for failing to do so. |
|
|
Insofar as they do not attend to the perversions of freedom and the flesh that cruelty exploits, they fail to offer a legitimate understanding of our intersubjective lives. |
|
I'll attend to you in a moment, after I've dealt with Mr. McLeod here. |
|
Social historians took eagerly to the affirmation of historicity and the injunction to attend to child-rearing. |
|
Joseph Stalin had bowed out, citing the need for his presence in the Soviet Union to attend to the Stalingrad crisis. |
|
The duke indulged himself in pleasure and did not attend to official duties for three days. |
|
Swordtail fry attend to chemical and visual cues in detecting predators and conspecifics. |
|
The women of the house would spin the thread they needed, and attend to finishing. |
|
If attribution research is to be done, it needs to attend to what authorship itself is and to what traits make good measures of idiolect. |
|
One must often attend to the tail and ensure it remains tucked and not become flippant, so as to maintain a catloaf of presentable form. |
|
When evaluating the development of meta-memes, critics engaged in memetics must attend to mimesis. |
|
Ambulance crews in the area will no longer be paid to interrupt meal breaks and attend to some types of emergencies. |
|
You should attend to your studies if you plan to succeed in the exams. |
|
I know how to read pulmonary capillary wedge pressures, defibrillate, triage, dialyse, intubate, cannulate, aspirate, rehabilitate, palliate, and attend to the deceased. |
|
Cesare, too ill to attend to the business himself, sent Don Micheletto, his chief bravo, to seize the Pope's treasures before the death was publicly announced. |
|
I asked my manservant to attend to the washing and cleaning. |
|
I received your letter by the bearer, and in reply to it I have to state that my father is an ageable man now, and not able to attend to the time appointed by your Honour. |
|
A bisque is permission from the Whips given to a member to miss a vote or debate in the House to attend to constituency business or other matters. |
|
Have I got time to attend to my monobrow with my buzzy razor? |
|
The shindig was organised by the Southam Lions' president Steve Hoyle, who deployed an army of volunteers to collect guests, and attend to refreshments. |
|