A quick call to the Greenwich borough switchboard as I turned into Wellington Gardens, and I was put through to the police station. |
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After it has had two run-throughs, we meet Slava in the wings, ready to call our dancers. |
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That call has been picked up, in part, if not in whole, by some politicians, seeking to capitalize on that anger. |
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I glared at her and then reached for my phone to call my brother when a car pulled up beside us. |
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Most wheat products available in our supermarkets contain bleached flour or white flour, as we call it. |
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So do they list a number for you to call instead, rather than waiting for them to call you back? |
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I wouldn't call the new shelters ugly, but they certainly look out of place. |
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A garden outside our window may call to us silently by rippling-in-the-breeze lavender agapanthus or eye-high crape myrtle. |
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The German woman in the seat behind me objected loudly to me reclining my seat, going so far as to call over the male flight attendant. |
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It was when Alvar hit his head on a low branch that overhung the trail that they decided to call it a day. |
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These are kick-ass movies, but hardly what you would call great filmmaking. |
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Within hours of that rescue, a second emergency call came in about a window washer. |
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Circumstance, I said, is a factor which some might call chance, fate, luck, serendipity, or karma. |
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You know what, I'm going to call a tow truck and then we'll discuss the damages, all right? |
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A few times I tried to call my mind to what I was going to do, but my mind rebelled against the effort. |
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He did gave a heads up on a open casting call for traceurs at his official blog site. |
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The female call might simply indicate a readiness to mate, directed to a specific male. |
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This was no less than a call to the nations of the world to gather together and discuss a halt to the arms race, and kindred subjects. |
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Today's call for a weekly farmers' market in York is likely to attract widespread support. |
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In addition, most of the citizens, even though they may not call themselves Buddhists, maintain a Buddhist view of life and the afterworld. |
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It was painful enough last week that I had to call in a sick day as the pain kept me up most of the night. |
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After half a century of haircutting, an Amesbury salon owner has decided to hang up his scissors and call it a day. |
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A routine call to a domestic argument ended with a police constable staring down the barrel of a loaded gun in a deadly game of Russian roulette. |
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These, however, look like a rather larger mountain to climb than picture phones, which you could call the low-hanging fruit of privacy invasion. |
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At that point he activated the in-car audio recording system and decided to call for back up. |
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She said the wetlands, estuaries and forest streams that pateke call home were under threat. |
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A call to digital and cell phone number will consume one and five afghanis per minute respectively. |
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But we also have what we call towable products, travel trailers, fifth-wheel trailers. |
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And call it what you like, but we need positive discrimination, or affirmative action. |
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If the affiliates make a public call for an independent inquiry, I think they would have to act. |
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Yes, half the night was spent in agonised discussion of such minor stupidities, when all that was necessary was to call the whole thing off! |
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Then came the call of one of the local sailors who was fixing the tackle on the side of the ship. |
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But as the weeks went by, and no phone call came, Amy's mum Tracy admits she had lost hope. |
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The claimant would wish to call several witnesses, including Professor Keane, in rebuttal. |
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Our only birthday rule here is that whosever special day it is, they get to call the shots. |
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It is not the normal practice for the Secretary of State to call any witnesses in rebuttal of an appellant's evidence. |
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It's not a fun job, scanning negatives, and I decided to call it a day when I'd finished the first film. |
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So today I have had the phone call saying the cupboard is once more ready for collection. |
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I would especially call customs agents' attention to goods from Communist China, many of which are made in the laogai or Chinese gulag. |
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To be sure, he expressed opposition to privatizing many more state enterprises, but he did not call for renationalization. |
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As it happened, I got a phone call at work the next morning by a medical student who'd discovered my wallet and traced it back to me. |
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My own closest call came when we were going over open ground when a whizz-bang burst behind me. |
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When individual animals seem unable to reproduce, keepers can call in physiologists to diagnose possible biological problems. |
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A slight breeze rustles the long grass and the only other movement is supplied by the thousands of cattle that call the Pampas home. |
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They call for an additional million health workers to be trained in the next decade. |
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Wikipedians, as they call themselves, have removed or restricted information in the past. |
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Some of these people I call friends and indeed we still are friends after a fashion. |
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He was named after his uncle, but his mother preferred to call him Campbell. |
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I was taught that it's not proper for a young woman to either call a young man on the phone or ask him for a date. |
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There is going to be an enormous call on the Africans, but it may well require other people. |
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And at 60 for two, with 13 overs of play still scheduled, both sides agreed to call it a day. |
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The most amusing parts were when they'd call for audience participation, and there'd be dead silence. |
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She has spent over forty years looking after the people of Kildavin and decided to call it a day. |
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A call option is the opposite to a put, and gives a right to buy at a preset price. |
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With the wind increasing, the heavy rain being blown in my face I decided to call it a day. |
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If someone does not believe in all of this, can they call themselves a Lubavitcher? |
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He is throwing the ball accurately and showing good game management skills, especially with his ability to call audibles. |
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The astrochemical laboratory is the hyper-rarefied, mostly weightless, extreme-temperature environment people colloquially call outer space. |
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Although we had enough airtime on our mobile phones, it was impossible to call for a rescue bus because the area had no mobile phone network. |
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But what is certain is that when these two great champions do decide to call it a day, the game of tennis will be all the poorer for it. |
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He told me he was a young tough from the streets of Chicago who heard God's call to be a soldier of Christ. |
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That is what we call jurisprudence, it is the philosophy and decision-making that underlies our legal system. |
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A Yorkshire teacher will today call on his union to break ranks with the rest of the profession and back city academies. |
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It is this island that most people, including most Tanzanians, call Zanzibar. |
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The great call of the female agile gibbon is somewhat similar to that of the female lar gibbon. |
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The tool I most often carry with me to group rituals is a knife, what most people would call an athame. |
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What's the use of having such a juicy and appetizing prospect-list if you can't call on them? |
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With a future that includes a little recording, a lot of touring, upcoming nuptials and hopefully an abode to call his own, all seems well. |
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It's just that none of those yes-men that you call advisors will ever tell you what you need to hear. |
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And then you've got the smaller kinds, the riots in the US, what they call the lynch mobs. |
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For one thing, they require you to think on your feet and call on all your resources to get past them, reaffirming your commitment. |
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The shopkeepers also downed their shutters and the other establishments also decided to call it a day. |
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If he is able to explore his options, don't be surprised if at least 10 teams make an initial call to his agent on Spikes' behalf. |
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After being served our desert we had to call a waiter to clear all the dead glasses away. |
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We had to program in assembly code and call a play routine every vertical blank. |
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Now that's what I call real thoughtfulness, and of course I accepted the suggestion with alacrity. |
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The weans of today already call the shots, as any observer of a family outing to Safeway well knows. |
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The ship that was heading for the most logical port of call in Indonesia was forcibly routed to Australia. |
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Some people call them journals, or diaries, but to Dylan, they were neither. |
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I toss opportunities like coins, and call tails when I've already caught a glimpse of the queen's crown. |
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If the call takes a sudden emotional or personal turn, get up quietly and signal that you are going out to the waiting room. |
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Donations of items to sell can be taken along, or if they are too large call in to arrange collection. |
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This other drug legalization movement is an example of what theorists call legal avoision. |
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Not for nothing do they call Munich the most northerly Italian town, all brio, baroque and bragadoccio. |
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The call goes to Birkenshaw who have files on all the area and can direct a fire crew to me at once. |
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They have chosen asymmetrical warfare as their military method, what we call terrorism. |
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If you like to mingle and air kiss your way through the crowd then you have a found a place to call home. |
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The plan is to call for a vote on the deal in May and pay the dividends shortly afterward. |
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For one thing, there are a lot of games that are geared towards what we would call female interests, like building things and whatnot. |
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Day in and day out the men in khaki lay down their lives for the call of duty. |
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Such a state is what the Scriptures call lukewarmness, which to God is revolting. |
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It is inaccurate to call the tsunami an act of God, because God did not intervene to provoke the disaster. |
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I gave credit for that to chance, luck or anything that you might want to call it. |
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This power of legal language is that to which we refer when we call upon the state to effect the regulation of offensive speech. |
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Unlike the call centre, this computerised system will offer real-time data. |
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Very soon the umpires' only duties could be to count the deliveries and call no balls and wides! |
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The authors call for strengthening responses for victims of violence and promoting adherence to international treaties. |
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We might call it a neo-Berkeleian argument, but I think it is close enough to Berkeley's intentions to just call it plain vanilla Berkeleianism. |
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The first time I got the nerve to call a guy, when he picked up I was so nervous that I squeaked into the phone. |
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He can opt for methods such as an attachment of earnings order or a charging order but the most common recourse is to call in the bailiffs. |
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Residents are being warned that they may get a call out of the blue asking for security and pin numbers enabling thieves to clone bank cards. |
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They also help civilian parachuting groups who are on call for military purposes and provide tandem jumps for search and rescue operations. |
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His rambunctious, charismatic appeal does call to mind the scrappy sort of life force so present in American folklore. |
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The female continued to give the high-pitched call and quiver her wings for another 20 seconds. |
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They call for field research and action research that introduces, observes, and records the outcomes of interventions over time. |
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You can use the airtime in your bundle to call any UK network you like, at any time you choose! |
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The morning went by pretty busily until about lunchtime when I got a call from the people publishing my book. |
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I was in the supermarket and I got this cellphone call and I just went completely to pieces. |
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At this point, late in the afternoon, I decided to call it a day and head back to camp. |
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Several other local fishing boats working in the area offered to assist after hearing the rebroadcast emergency call from the coastguards. |
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Worn out by years of struggling for proper financing, she decided to call it a day. |
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However, at 52 he has decided to call it a day and let his colleagues carry on the work. |
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An hour or so of being battered by wind and rain, with only one small fish each, we decided to call it a day. |
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But poorish health and frustration with the constant squabbling at the academy made him decide to call it a day. |
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Okay, well why don't you call them and tell them to take a hike, and I'm going to go back to bed. |
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We decided to call it a day and wend our way back to York by as many country lanes as possible. |
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An hour or so later, Kelley and Eben had decided to call it a day and get to bed. |
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If we have a two-story house for instance, the windows and side walls will call for a squeegee with a long handle. |
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The industry has changed out of all recognition and I think the time has come to call it a day. |
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It was passed through history by the Shaking Quakers, the Shakers, and that particular song is a call to simplicity, which is very interesting. |
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Neither of these would be what we call fun but then, you know, it's not a fun situation. |
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Evil shamans involve spirits and have what we would call supernatural powers. |
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So when some police officers do that, my voice will be lifted primarily to find out why they would do such a thing, not to call for their heads. |
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I must return, perhaps in the spring when whaups and laverocks call on a warm wind. |
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Anyone who can identify vandals responsible for these tags can call the council's 24-hour graffiti hotline. |
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We want to enjoy a reciprocal co-operation when we need to call on players to face France. |
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We want the Minister to take a call to put our minds at ease that this amount has not been paid out. |
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But our work has been noble and necessary, and we can't call a halt to it in midstream. |
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Some people call themselves a priest or priestess because they want a title expressing their spiritual calling. |
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Bettors deposit money in advance with the OTB and then call when they want to bet on a horse race. |
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So, in Denis Santry's salad days, when he was a young wild man living on his own, what did they call his little flat? |
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Unlike Northampton they couldn't call even better players off the bench to help out. |
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Are we not offering our children enough opportunities to learn the true nature of the boring, disappointing sham we call real life? |
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The ban on what opponents call partial birth abortion is likely to pass by a wide margin when it comes up for a vote scheduled in the Senate. |
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I am more entitled to call myself a fox expert than some so-called experts. |
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The president had an aide call the senator over to him to talk privately with him. |
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Recipes from regions where tough meat is the norm often call for a marinade made with fruit or juice. |
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The Upper Arlington Fire Division placed a call for a NAS-T Fire Investigation response. |
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Women are more adaptable, compliant and possess the communication skills required by the call centre service economy. |
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Winds blowing in different directions, or at different speeds create what meteorologists call wind shear. |
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There must be a time when you have to call it a day, and I don't think I would like to spend the last few matches on the bench. |
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A moving particle will carry with it the energy of its motion, which the physicists call kinetic energy. |
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That evening she was due to go out and as time wore on Jane began to call round friends and family to try and track her down. |
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I'd probably call chaos magic a western magic because it was developed by westerners, and tantra eastern because it was developed by easterners. |
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I suppose some would call it a woman's book which always sounds a bit derogatory to me. |
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To call the steward dishonest, shameful, unjust, unrighteous, or wicked is too harsh. |
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We were going to wait and see whether they responded to the call to yield up the people responsible. |
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It was an even bigger surprise that he actually had the audacity to call security. |
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We call on you to immediately withdraw your cruel and defamatory statements made against our client. |
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If you doubt it, think of Chelsea, the favourites to win what admen call the Premiership. |
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Glock fans would be tempted to compare it to the thingy that sticks out of the Glock trigger that they call a trigger safety. |
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Fortunately, she was able to call her mother Carol, who turned midwife to help deliver baby Abigail on the kitchen floor. |
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She said the move, however, attracted call boys who began shouting and touching her body instead of helping her. |
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This is actually the fourth call this week from someone who has found a kindle of kittens abandoned somewhere. |
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The next day, I found out my crush was too shy to call and had gotten his kid brother to do it for him. |
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Drastic cuts call for drastic counter-measures, not weak-kneed objections and compromises. |
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The call was made in a statement at the end of the two-day meeting in a luxury resort on Florida's Atlantic coast. |
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Fallows does not expect any other teams to withdraw from the competition as a result of Army or RAF call ups. |
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Now not everybody is a candidate for what we call breast conservation, that is just doing a lumpectomy and radiation. |
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Instead the worst nationalist rabble-rousers can be found among those who first endorsed the call for the demonstration. |
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Dr Jarvis says that perhaps we need to call time on the culture of wine o'clock. |
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However, the 55 staff at the call centre have been assured by the company they will be redeployed in other positions. |
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The barn owl's call is distinguished by a screech that has shades of a wheeze. |
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In retrospect, I wish I'd got someone at the other end of the room to call me when he set off. |
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To rely on a phone call from California when so many lives are at stake is not enough. |
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Officers obtained a replica from the supplier and have asked the public to call them if they know of its whereabouts. |
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But Bohras and Khojas have their own respective leaders they call Imams and give religious value to them. |
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It's kinda hard to really decide whether or not to call Argento on the misogyny front. |
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For instance, take the other day when I call Pebbles in Spain and her mom picks up the phone. |
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After getting it to his satisfaction, he directed me to sound that call for Taps thereafter in place of the regulation call. |
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Whenever he does call you a bad name or threatens to whip you or anything else, tell your mom ASAP and have her talk to him and again. |
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Well, nobody should call anyone by their middle names when there are perfectly good first names. |
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What should you say to the webmaster in the email or phone call that'll increase your chances of them linking their site to yours? |
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When I focused my breath in my center, the place Taoists call the 'Sea of Chi,' I became grounded and strong. |
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My poor father picked up the call literally falling off the bed, and I sprang up in perfect state of lucidness. |
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In the blogosphere, as we call the community of webloggers, weblogs are divided in different groups. |
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Three days after seeing his father, Mr Craven received a call that he had been admitted to Airedale Hospital with pneumonia. |
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The man gets a surprise call and has to take an unexpected flight and then face some 36 hours of astoundingly dangerous adventures. |
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He got into difficulties in the late afternoon and an emergency call was made to the air-sea rescue services. |
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His call only worked because a lot of people saw the sense in voting tactically. |
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He described the male call as a high-pitched whistle repeating a long, drawn-out KI-WI sound about 30 times. |
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I whistled loudly and a moving van obediently heeded my call and pulled up right next to me. |
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So i arrive at the call and get to work, and what do you know there's a 40 gig hard drive, clean as a whistle. |
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In the face of this growing terror, it may seem to be whistling in the wind to call for confidence. |
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Stronger signals, reduction in congestion and lowering the drop call rate are on the agenda. |
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Part of that process is to recognize that the universe, that which we affectionately call Mother Nature, loves us regardless. |
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While Lucien Bouchard preached his call to sovereignist arms, the 70 made a rush for the conference room. |
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Empty tummies don't make for a productive workforce so call in your mother or a friend to act as catering manager and do a spread rather than forking out at the chip shop. |
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For whosoever shall call upon The Name of the Lord shall be saved. |
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To call the Canadian publisher harlequin a monopoly in the romance genre might be an overstatement, but not by much. |
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Mrs Saldanha, 46, answered the call and transferred it to a colleague, who gave details of the duchess's condition. |
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In recognition of his disabilities, Mr. Dury had originally wanted to call it Live at Lourdes. |
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It is stirring to see these veterans, many aged, some infirm, answering the call of duty one last time, to defend their honor and that of their fallen comrades. |
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Karen said they realised the seven-seater Shogun was gone on Tuesday morning and then received a phone call from the police to say it had been used in a ram raid. |
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Prosecutor will reportedly call eight rebuttal witnesses tomorrow. |
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But some Democrats are exploiting the craziness as a fundraising call to arms. |
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Wasinger has even gone so far as to call on Comstock to drop out and run as a Democrat instead. |
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The pensioners sent them packing with a threat to call the police. |
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After a few more takes Stanley wisely decided to call it a day. |
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He even foreshadowed his plans for a shake-up during a conference call with media reporters back in November. |
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Later that day he made a call from the row of phones in the yard and reached his wife for the first time in six months. |
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A quick call over our squadron common frequency let our wingman know he had the mission, and the aircrew in the turning backup would be his wingman. |
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I made an interphone call to the aft station and got a weary reply from one of the weapons system officers saying it looked like we were falling out of position. |
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During my first two weeks as an aircraftman with the Airfield Defence Guards in Vietnam, there was a call for volunteers to train as helicopter gunners. |
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This is deeply insulting to our members, skilled and dedicated professionals who have worked above and beyond the call of duty to keep services afloat through difficult times. |
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They call it flannel backed lining but that is what kasha is anyway. |
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I believe that there are evil acts, and I grapple with the idea of whether you can call people evil. |
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In this sense and others, Greenberg's is a call for a return to the groupthink and hawkish conformity of the Bush era. |
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Since then, I have heard Destiny call us evil, abnormal and immoral. |
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White-bread ISIS recruits, culled from the wastelands of Web 2.0, call that tidy division into terrible question. |
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Transmitted to Washington by the British, the Zimmermann telegram helped buttress President Woodrow Wilson's decision to call for a declaration of war against Germany. |
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Carnatica has initiated a voice management course for people who use their voice professionally, such as singers, musicians, radio jockeys and call centre executives. |
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The one-time Silicon Valley highflier, which makes software companies use to manage salespeople and call centers, has been in a tailspin for three years. |
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When you took your curtain call the other night there was such a look of innocence and gratitude on your face. |
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The city authorities had to call for help from the truck owners to give them a hand in pouring sand and salting the frozen and slippery avenues of Tehran. |
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But I think we have shown that we have the capacity to reach a long way to find the perpetrators of this crime and to bring them to justice and call them to account. |
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Please hold and your call will be answered as soon as possible. |
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So would you call it two 8-syllable rhymes or four 4-syllable rhymes? |
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Its call is a series of clear, hollow whistles, all on one pitch. |
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Claus is an artist, though he does not like to call himself one, and a scholar. As such, he personifies the polyhistor, a species rarely found today. |
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The medication may upset your stomach but if you experience acute abdominal pain call your doctor. |
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This conference call is being webcast live at our Web site, and it will be available for replay approximately two hours after the conclusion of this call. |
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He recommends this process, which estheticians call exfoliation. |
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The woman was later taken by ambulance to Bradford Royal Infirmary after a call was made to the emergency services by a relative from an address in the Leeds Road area. |
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Though many people call her a liberal, it is not a designation she uses herself. |
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Why call a taxi when you can hail a Lyft to pick up visiting family and friends? |
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It would be misleading to call this local sextet an orchestral pop band, despite their occasionally clean melodies and prominent trumpet and cello. |
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What do you call a long-winded member of Congress whose opinions infuriate you? |
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Our call is to serve God in whichever way he has equipped us to do so. |
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I call it purple, but I have been told, firmly, that it's aubergine. |
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Some people call it jogging, but I don't hold with these Americanisms. |
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We should both call on all our supporters to prepare themselves to close ranks as Americans and unite the country behind the winner as soon as this process is complete. |
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The spokeswoman also suggested that online users call a customer service land line if they are not happy with the onscreen quotations they are receiving. |
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I heard there was a close call on the set of Lone Survivor where your head was almost blown off? |
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We are open for business Monday to Friday, 9.30 am to 5pm and if you would like to call in the team there will be more than delighted to make you welcome. |
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They're here to strengthen ties with the U.S., talk a little politics, wine and dine with dignitaries, and test out Camilla's popularity in a nation some call Diana country. |
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Perhaps he has matured amazingly since telling the media he would call a spade a spade, and, if necessary, whack his opponents over the head with it. |
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In the call and response form of landay, in spite of its reliance on repeated phrases, Griswold has a little more room to play. |
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But I have also known a huntsman call off hounds that seemed certain to kill, and raise his hat in tribute to the stag that had given us a run to remember. |
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The comedian was right to call out Bill Cosby, but his material is littered with jokes about rape. |
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I'm supposed to call him when I'm back in the big city to make arrangements, which is a plus because I won't be sitting around agonizing over when or if he's going to call. |
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If the employer and works council fail to agree on a reconcilement of interests, they may call on the Director of the Land Employment Office to mediate. |
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Jesus did not call upon people to repent, or fast, or observe the sabbath. |
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It was entirely appropriate for the chairman of that committee to call the sergeant-at-arms and the Capitol Police so order in the committee could be maintained. |
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And both were a wake-up call to a mighty power to stir itself to action. |
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It seems that because burrowing can cause landslips in quarries, residents of Portland instead call the creatures underground mutton or furry things. |
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Allow some leeway on return times since trips often take longer than expected, but having someone ready to call for help if your group is overdue is a wise precaution. |
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Will I knuckle under and write nothing about the Treasurer that isn't positive, or will a threatening call to my boss's boss be needed to bring me to heel? |
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After two years of getting up at 6am he decided to call it a day. |
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We spoke almost every day, we shared our writing, wrote together, drew attention, caused havoc on the town and she even ventured to call us kindred spirits. |
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It refers to what Americans call eau-de-vie, though Austrians have been tinkering with and perfecting the drink for centuries. |
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The teenager is said to have had a confrontational phone call the night before he allegedly went on his rampage. |
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They argue that the problem does not exist, or has been grossly exaggerated, and they call the reformers alarmists, fanatics, scaremongers, prophets of doom and so on. |
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Time spent blocking in a system call does not count against the process, because the scheduler is free to schedule other processes during this time. |
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He can force ministers and virtually anyone to bend to his will, and if they are recalcitrant he could call their bluff and take the case to the people. |
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So why not throw caution to the wind and call an early vote? |
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In a statement issued here, the DUTA executive has announced that while it will call off the impending agitation, it will maintain a strict watch over the developments. |
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The mayor-elect turned serious when asked how the appointment jibed with his call for the curtailment of stop-and-frisk. |
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The push to restrict people's opportunities to buy and sell based on region is an attempt to bring about what economists call autarky, or economic self-sufficiency. |
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At the edge of the woods, a few birds had started to call out and flutter between the trees, vague shapes moving through the mist beyond the half-open bathroom window. |
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White House officials outlined the details of the request on a conference call with members of the media Tuesday morning. |
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Publicans in Dublin bump up the price of a phone call by 200 per cent and add 17p to a pack of cigs. |
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For more information on VaserSmooth or to schedule an interview, please call Chuck Aurin at 855-352-9347 Ext. |
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Visible nature is all plasticity and indifference, a multiverse, as one might call it, and not a universe. |
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The extent of that revolution is hotly debated, but the influence of what some call neurolaw is clearly growing. |
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Tenders are invited for Supply cement for cement concreate road work 2 call at. |
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The increase in men allowed the prince to call on and field a far more substantial army. |
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My mother was wont to call me your Nestle-cock, and I love you as well as she did. |
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Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. |
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The cabinet discussed Disraeli's proposal to position Indian troops at Malta for possible transit to the Balkans and call out reserves. |
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Emos, or neogoths, or whatever they were calling themselves these days. Up to no good is likely what the townsfolk of Tangawarra would call them. |
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After riding high for two decades, the company that makes the hulky bikes that devoted riders affectionately call Hogs is sputtering. |
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Both recipes are distinct in that they typically call for flavourings of cinnamon and lemon juice to be added and differ in texture, not taste. |
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Some might call it religious hondeling, but Rabbi Rosenbaum finds himself doing just that, and more often than he cares to admit. |
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I'd been charged 42p every time I'd redialled so the call must have connected. |
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Her cell phone dropped the 911 call and when she redialed she frantically sought help from another dispatcher. |
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An ambulance worker who found the mobile in the wreckage used the redial function to call the man's brother and break the bad news. |
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Railway signalmen now to strike and Corus ex-employees to enlist the help of other unions in a call for widespread strike action. |
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With a multistatement procedure, one call might suffice and as we shall see shortly, a multistatement procedure may contain conditional logic. |
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Cases and you might call heteronymies, case being heteronymy in the special sense and case polyonymy. |
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James and Valentina Sbarra fit the last description, and they are relieved to be able to call themselves successful lowballers. |
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Whenever I meet the twins, I always muddle up their names. I call John Jim, and Jim John. |
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Bankers call this a hell-or-high-water deal because it protects the buyer from the directors and offers from other bidders. |
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It's red, to use the term loosely, sort of brown and sort of orange, let's call it reddish. |
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So I then moved that we supported the TUC call for a general strike and this was also carried nem con. |
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However, they call them Artotyrites because they set bread and cheese on the altar in their mysteries and celebrate their mysteries with them. |
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Danny lennon better call the company who made Paul McGowan's bulletproof shinnies to ask if they sell Kevlar flak jackets too. |
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Rail can be adjusted to tune the call for higher or raspier pitch, or be locked for quiet carry. |
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After the middle sister's call from a friend's house, her slice of cake was fair game. |
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A call to its customer service line led to a full voicemail box. |
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The Dutch people rallied to the French call and started the Batavian Revolution. |
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Hereward's apparent ability to call on Danish support may also support this theory. |
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The message invariably tells you your call is being dealt with and then you get some cacky muzak which goes on longer than your average symphony. |
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Snobs feel it's hard to call it wine with a straight face when the cork is made of plastic. |
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Many other colleges hold smaller events during the year that they call summer balls or parties. |
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Other areas of employment include call centres, the City Council, universities and hospitals. |
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No, not what you'd call your standard laugh-a-thons. But not too grim, I hope. |
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The Greeks call this member clitoris, from which the obscene word clitorize is derived. |
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Laura was saying something. A mellifluous name, he thought. I wish she were far away, so I could call her. |
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A leaked memo from Downing Street reports that the Prime Minister is planning to call a general election next week. |
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