Up until then Callum had just been sitting quietly watching the bookworm, but now he spoke up. |
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She always has her nose in a book and so one of the guys I talked to called her bookworm and I thought it stuck. |
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After all, I appeared to be a bookworm sort of fellow trying to come across as tough. |
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He was also a bookworm who had a complex about his family's poverty and a fan of kung fu and violent movies. |
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I was slightly on the chubby side then, a complete bookworm and teacher's pet. |
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As a bookworm caught in a time warp I would have had greater chances at popularity if I'd come from another planet. |
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The bookworm, Benjamin noted, was a gentle creature, a benign agent of history. |
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While Jonze is fair-haired and pencil-thin, affecting a grungy skater-look, the 45-year-old Kaufman has the air of a bookworm. |
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From bookworm to jock, from giver to taker, from innocent to corrupted beyond redemption. |
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On the other hand, I am something of a bookworm, and nothing appeals to a bookworm more than the opportunity to show off your intellectual brilliance. |
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Just have a look at what has become the model student that you called a bookworm. |
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There stood a middle-aged woman, probably in her late thirties, with thick bookworm glasses, frizzled caramel-colored hair, and an outdated dress. |
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As an adolescent in Rialto, Calif., where her parents owned a drive-in theater, she was a devoted bookworm. |
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Aside from being a bookworm, Guardiola is also an avid cinema and theatre-goer and a dedicated follower of fashion. |
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But how does the bunny-butchering bookworm compare with other famous hunters and the backlashes caused by their beastie-slaying? |
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These dreams that every bookworm has can now become reality with the opening of 'Europeana', the European Digital Library. |
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A bookworm who spent most of her time studying pediatrics and doing night shifts practicing surgery, Suhani never thought she could fall in love. |
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Not only have I been a bookworm all my life, but working on a computer six days a week can cause some wear and tear on one's eyes. |
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And it's perfect reading for the bookworm to capture over a weekend. |
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The bookworm reminds the authors of the vulnerability of books, not only from voracious insects, but also from the acid in the paper that is destroying our books. |
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Wild Child was a phrase created to describe her beloved twin, but Callie's lips curved slightly as she realised that Stacie was right, bookworm would be a better tag. |
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Theo is a nine-year-old dreamer and bookworm who reads about magic and families to escape the drudgery of the wretched, impoverished existence she shares with her inattentive and irresponsible mom. |
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Surprisingly she was turning me also into a veritable bookworm. |
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Gray was a brilliant bookworm, a quiet, abstracted, dreaming scholar, often afraid of the shadows of his own fame. |
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Brought up by her Russian father, a civil servant, and her mother, a French saleswoman, Korin experienced a happy childhood and grew into a calm, easy-going teenager who was a passionate bookworm. |
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As well as being prime bookworm territory, Charing Cross Road is one of the main drags through the West End, flanked by theatres, clubs and rock venues. |
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Should you think that the other two are exceptions, the Bookworm is a good kind of reply. |
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In a poll conducted in 1995 by the BBC Radio 4 Bookworm programme to determine the nation's favourite poems, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud came fifth. |
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