It might be their posture, a cocksure expression, bandy legs and butter-hued dentition, or nothing at all. |
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She has been running from the Ohio bigwigs implicated in the scandal as fast as her bandy little legs will carry her. |
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The Instructor was tanned, bored, had bandy legs, roamed around saying nothing and then wrote his name in big letters on the board. |
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He yanked his robe up to his waist and raced on naked bandy legs to the stone rostrum at the east of the forum. |
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Little Evie, two generations distant, is doing fine, pushing herself up on back legs still bandy, only to have them shoot out behind her. |
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The shark is circling Farnsworth, you of the bandy legs and discombobulated dance maneuverings. |
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Takeshi is small, thick set, with bandy legs and a disconcerting twitch to his cheek. |
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He's a skinny little hillbilly Jesus with bandy legs and close-set eyes and a clever, foxy face. |
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His bandy legs are pulled up under the distended moon of his swollen stomach. |
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The things didn't look dangerous with their soft, bandy legs and large fingers. |
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People bandy around the word tactics when in fact they are referring to all sorts of other aspects of the game. |
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King went on to say something that conservatives who bandy about his pining for a society in which race doesn't matter are loath to repeat. |
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With his cane, his downcast eyes, and bandy legged gait, he is the antithesis of Hollywood muscle-bound steroid cases. |
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Of course, enlightenment is a word which we bandy around and in a way, I would prefer to call it realization. |
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Physicists bandy around concepts like supersymmetry, technicolor, and extra dimensions. |
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Do not bandy words in your insolence with the Mouth of Sauron! |
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That is just as large a failure as letting people bandy about irresponsibly. |
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By the third day, Cin and Josh begin to bandy words like passion and intimacy, and they squint and grimace with a little more conviction. |
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The first focuses on the origins of hockey and its ancestors: lacrosse, rugby, bandy, shinny and hurling. |
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Three of hockey's precursors, bandy, shinny and hurling, were brought to Canada around 1840 by British soldiers. |
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Such groups eagerly bandy about theories of government wrongdoing in Internet chat rooms. |
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Does this mean nothing to opponents of the Constitutional Treaty who bandy democratic slogans about so enthusiastically? |
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First, you have to recognize the extent to which violence becomes a very handy weapon for women to bandy around. |
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These words are not, as Mr Wiersma says, assumptions, because they bandy them around as if they were facts. |
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When we bandy that number about, it is important to consider that this is just security. |
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In the meantime, people in the Soviet Union were playing a game called bandy, in which players hit a ball with a curved stick. |
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The provinces and some hon. members bandy figures about but never divulge exactly how they arrive at their numbers. |
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With his peroxide head bowed, eyes closed, the old man feels his way forward, bandy legs shuffling, shoulders stooped, senses bat sharp, as keen as razor wire. |
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His hips and his bandy legs, which seem unusually long from knee to ankle, move with a stiffness which suggests that his joints are about to seize up. |
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His legs, bandy and stubby, propel him sheathed in black overalls. |
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Afraid it was Dan, back to bandy words once more, she whirled suddenly. |
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Wherever there is pictorial or literary evidence that a game of bandy was played on ice in early Canada, local enthusiasts claim to have discovered the birthplace of ice hockey. |
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People probably do not know it, but hockey is a combination of bandy, originally from England, shinty, originally from Scotland, hurley, originally from Ireland, and, of course, lacrosse, a native Indian sport. |
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There was old Tommy with his back to the dining-room door, his Glengarry awry on his tousled head, and his bandy legs stretched firmly apart. |
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One of the first recorded team sports in Wales was bando, a variant of bandy. |
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Thereafter, golf, track and field, and the team sports of handball, floorball, basketball and bandy are the most popular. |
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Finland is also one of the most successful nations in bandy, being the only nation beside Russia and Sweden to win a Bandy World Championship. |
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In 2007 Kemerovo got Russia's first indoor arena specifically built for bandy. |
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Now Khabarovsk has the world's biggest indoor arena specifically built for bandy, Arena Yerofey. |
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The Olympic Stadium was the world's first indoor arena for bandy and hosted the Bandy World Championship twice. |
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In bandy, one of the most successful clubs in the world is 20 times Russian League champions Dynamo Moscow. |
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Rickets also called vitamin D deficiency, is a disease of infancy and childhood characterized by defective bone growth and typified by bandy or bowed legs. |
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But to bandy about a figure like 12 percent, which doesn't seem to be based on anything, is unrealistic. |
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Does this exempt them from the right to bandy the word about? |
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If only a tiny proportion of such twitterers wish to bandy names from the north Wales of long ago, there's nothing realistic that the police, the libel bar or service providers can do: they're blown away. |
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And Mr. Cain's decision to bandy words rather than answer questions underscored how politicians have learned to ignore the mainstream media and use entertainment shows to direct their message. |
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If successful it will have the largest sheet of ice in the country with both a bandy pitch and a speed skating oval. |
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If you are a science writer, you occasionally have to bandy words that no ordinary human ever uses, like phenotype, mitochondrion, cosmic inflation, Gaussian distribution and isostasy. |
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Calasso likes to bandy words with his subjects. |
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But no, we would rather bandy about cheap terms that have little credence. |
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He cannot just bandy about gratuitous accusations. |
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It would also be an effective remedy to counteract the fears and all the prejudices which these fears underline or support and which some people bandy about to slow down the progress of European integration. |
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It is one thing to give out information to improve anti-seismic protection, for instance, and another thing to bandy about scientific information, albeit with good intentions, and to terrorise the population. |
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These included various stick and ball games similar to field hockey, bandy and other games where two teams push a ball or object back and forth with sticks. |
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Bandy Vereniging Nijmegen is the biggest bandy club in the country. |
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Russia's third most popular sport, bandy, is important in Siberia. |
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Another sport with common ancestry is bandy, which is played on ice. |
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