My legs were JeIl-O when I walked away from them, and a passing car's backfire nearly stopped my heart. |
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That's when we lit a backfire, which the raging combination fire drew toward itself automatically. |
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For prudential reasons, I worry that linking social benefits to the workplace may backfire. |
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Deafening car stereos, honking horns and noises like gun shots ring out as hundreds of drivers deliberately make their car engines backfire. |
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However, just a few days later the aircraft suffered serious damage following a fire started by an engine backfire. |
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On the battlefield, this engine produced a loud backfire when starting, instantly drawing enemy fire. |
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As we learned with the TV show, it's bound to be a lose-lose situation, ready to backfire any minute. |
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Getting a rush of blood to the head and trying to force through projects by executive fiat can, and will, backfire. |
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Ironically it was a backfire, set to contain the prescribed burn, that was caught by unexpected wind gusts and roared out of control. |
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It can backfire a little, particularly if you are a hound for constructive criticism. |
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At the rate he is going, it looks like his strategy could backfire and he could soon be out on his ear. |
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If they're seen as unfair, as below the belt, as smear tactics, they can backfire on the candidate in the long term. |
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Celebrity endorsements have always been naff and frequently backfire horribly. |
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There is a long road ahead to be sure, but the Carly Fiorina engine which many expected to backfire seems to be puttering along okay. |
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It'll be a popular policy for both candidates but uncosted policies can backfire, and this one will be thoroughly tested through two elections. |
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So dissing your sis, poking fun of her or re-hashing your fights to everyone at the pool will most definitely backfire. |
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Any spell with an incantation has the ability to backfire if even one word in the chant is pronounced wrong. |
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If I got it wrong the motor would backfire and try to kick me over the handlebars. |
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Katz also said he knew all along that the letter-writing project could backfire. |
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There is nervousness in military circles that such a war could backfire disastrously. |
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I suspect that this will in many respects backfire and is going to create a lot more mischief and a lot more misery. |
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However, the right candidate will cause any mischief to backfire and harm only the mischief-maker. |
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It can be a very powerful thing, but if you are overexposed it can backfire. |
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But that strategy will backfire, because nobody will take the Council's recommendations seriously. |
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But it seems to me that selling boxes half-full of dunnage is likely to gain you sales only once, and subsequently to backfire on the seller. |
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Resting and perhaps spoiling and pampering players in fact I believe can backfire and make them more prone to injuries. |
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But if the imposition of a punitive tax serves to reduce demand for starter homes, the strategy may backfire. |
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He said the decision would backfire and result in inefficiencies as the customs office was still entrapped in bureaucratic problems. |
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He knows firsthand how cornering a Gentile for his flesh, be it a pound or, in the case of the footballer, a centigram, can backfire. |
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As the landing gear was being retracted, he felt a slight hesitation and mild backfire with the left engine. |
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Down the road, this policy could backfire badly on the US and on the caretaker government. |
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Instead, by exploiting a tragic situation, I think they are trying to score cheap miles, and I firmly believe this will backfire in their faces. |
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Sometimes the very act of trying to censor what reaches the public domain can backfire and achieves the reverse result to the one intended. |
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The confrontational approach can backfire, ultimately fueling resistance on the part of the substance abuser. |
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He also warned their opposition could backfire because he was now intent on deregulating the restaurant sector. |
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However, the wait-and-see policy could backfire if those players manage to secure contracts elsewhere in the meantime. |
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In fact, rocketing to the top of a highest-paid CEO list can really backfire. |
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Overall, taking steps to get pregnant quickly is more likely to pay off than it is to backfire. |
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And so scorning the whole idea of competition just because it can backfire in a tiny minority feels reflexive and unnecessary. |
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Since the ships were used to being heated up, a sudden blast of hot air on a cold engine could backfire the engine or even destroy vital components. |
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This comes with the warning that this plan can backfire spectacularly. |
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I handled that okay, but it just so happened that a farmer was running a tractor nearby and managed to produce a loud backfire just as we reached the stream. |
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A slight backfire on starting could burn the engine off the wing! |
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For both fires, portions of the barrens sample area were burned by the backfire flame while other portions were burned by a more intense headfire. |
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He has suggested that such tactical maneuvers could backfire. |
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In fact, it could backfire on us if customer satisfaction dwindles as a result. |
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False promises or wrong assessments will otherwise backfire on you, your group and your initiative. |
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But the warm-up could yet backfire on Esperance with injuries picked up by two key components of their team. |
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The person knows, rightly or wrongly, that taking temptation through to action could seriously backfire on him. |
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That mentality could backfire if the ankle injury, without rest, becomes more than a minor problem. |
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So my question, regarding the governor: would this forthrightness eventually backfire? |
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This would cause the engine to run rough, misfire, backfire, and lose further power. |
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But with Americans fed up with corporate influence, will the move backfire? |
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However, senior figures in the SNP and Yes Scotland believe the strategy could seriously backfire. |
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A reduction in the use of pesticides in these countries compared with their current level of use will backfire on us consumers. |
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This can backfire – andouillettes topped with strong cheese looks great, but intestines taste like intestines, no matter how much gratin. |
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Milne added that Abbott's strategy of gathering votes in Tasmania was likely to backfire. |
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Simplicity helps make things memorable, but making an idea too simple can backfire. |
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They recognized, however, that this strategy might backfire in terms of how the statement is received and used by the Court in sentencing. |
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Even attempts to protect objects by enclosing them in a protective wrapping can backfire. |
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If you teach your little brother that, one day it will backfire and you'll be a victim of aggression. |
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But extreme in loco parentis protection of legal adults from their own stupid decisions is a sick and dangerous idea, and one that's destined not just to fail but to backfire. |
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This inflated yield shows the government's desire to attract investors, but as a strategy it can backfire. |
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Greenwashing, the term used to describe companies trumping up their green credentials without any real basis, can backfire on a brand. |
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What is clear is that the use of threats by Beijing to resolve the situation could backfire. |
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Where cases fail or backfire, it is usually as a result of poor preparation. |
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Yeah, it seems like eventually songs end up on some B-sides collection or single anyway, but can something like this backfire on you down the road? |
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At many workplaces, such fine divisions of job responsibility could easily backfire, with people standing on ceremony about exactly what is and is not their job. |
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But if they are not properly trained or do not have the commitment to the project the use of volunteers could backfire on you. |
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Gerald Ford and the swine flu pandemic that never happened in 1976 is a cautionary tale that government action can backfire. |
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And when that culture still holds onto sexist views of women, even attempts to rectify this imbalance can backfire. |
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It is likely that the failure of the top portion of the tappet guide roller slot was the result of the engine backfire and did not contribute to the loss of engine power. |
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Talking of backfire, frontfire or whatever, John Carroll can give it both barrels, and simultaneously. |
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He leaned the mixture in an effort to cause a backfire through the carburetor, the generally accepted method of breaking the ice loose. |
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And I think it's one which will backfire on them. |
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Nostalgia can backfire on an automaker, too. |
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So the time has come and I would ask Mr Solana and Mr Patten to tell Mr Michel that perhaps he is going a bit too far and that finally it may backfire on him, which is what I hope will happen. |
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I strongly oppose the amendments tabled by the PPE-DE Group imposing a deadline before the summer for this report, because if we do not have a considered and well thought-out enlargement plan, it could backfire on us. |
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Dont promote something controversial just for the sake of it it may backfire on you and you may lose some of the support from your internal audience. |
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It will only backfire on you when the EU starts to interfere. |
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I am not opposed to that, of course, but I believe that favouring dialogue with the USA is also likely to backfire on us when, at a later date, we have to discuss matters with developing countries, particularly ACP countries. |
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For complaints not made in good faith, the impacts of an unjustified request for the intervention of the Mediator of the French Republic may be far from what the complainants hoped to get, and may sometimes backfire on them. |
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It carried the constant risk that this power might backfire on its producers and users if not exercised with a constantly developing awareness and control of the complexity of the environment in which they lived and moved. |
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The aim of the article is to help trademark owners avoid trademark disputes that result in either a waste of money or, even worse, enforcement activities that backfire on the trademark owner. |
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But clamming up can backfire for companies. |
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It will backfire in the form of sly destructive acts against us. |
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Closing their ears to the expectations of the public and playing a waiting game was an attitude which would backfire because in so doing the farmers would lose the support of the taxpayers. |
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President Erdoğan's plans to marginalize the Kurds' political influence both in Turkey and Syria seem set to backfire, and the Syrian Kurds have just opened their first foreign representation in Moscow. |
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Netanyahu's visit to Har Homa followed his appearance at a rally in Tel Aviv attended largely by settlers and national religious voters, in a move some commentators warned might backfire. |
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Incidentally, there are also bets that totally backfire. |
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I realized that speaking up now might backfire on me later, but there was a slim chance it could frontfire, too. |
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The violation of the rights of the person charged may easily backfire. |
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The recent recall of 6.5 million Firestone tires in the United States and in Canada illustrates the extent to which tactics used by some companies to break a strike can backfire. |
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Indeed, there was some danger that Sangma's appeal to MPs on a conscience vote could backfire on him if he pushed his case too far. |
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Escalator is the backfire of the hindbrain against the conflagration of reason. |
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Greedy tactics already backfired on Sisu and from my point of view they will also backfire on the caterers. |
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Spreading a one-size-fits-all model for girls' education could backfire. |
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Over time, such overgenerosity may backfire and harm your health. |
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This tactic seemed to backfire, as the USA, leading by 2 at the start of the day, gained the 5 points they required by the eighth match rendering the last four irrelevant. |
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Unlike crying wolf, crying censorship never seems to backfire. |
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However, the use of mercenaries by Andronikos II would often backfire, with the Catalan Company ravaging the countryside and increasing resentment towards Constantinople. |
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