Since you owed the pot 15 cents for calling and 25 for your raise, you would put 40 cents into the pot. |
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But now the rednecks are calling the shots, and the neocons are telling them how. |
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There are a lot of wealthy people who work in Leeds and Bradford and live in Craven and we are calling on them to help. |
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I ate 20 nuggets and a chicken sandwich meal and Rob kept on throwing things at me and calling me a fat pig. |
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While Nicholson found his calling in the pulpit, he also continued to put his woodworking to work for his congregation. |
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When a white colleague died, an Afro-Caribbean asked their mutual white friend to join him in calling on the widow. |
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When the mudthrowing and name calling becomes nasty, then you know a raw nerve has been prodded. |
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And who are the cheerful white-clad staff, calling us by our first names and acquiescing to our every whim, if not surrogate parents? |
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While in the US, however, people rarely needed me to repeat my name, calling out to me without inhibitions or jeering me. |
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We were rewarded with the sound of calling Whooping Cranes piercing the quiet of the early morning, then a close fly over. |
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My parents had an American woodcock calling and displaying on their back lawn. |
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Black manages to compress a good deal into a limited space, calling on his thorough acquaintance with a vast array of primary sources. |
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Central to the idea of Mother Teresa is this idea of womanhood, of the feminine, of selflessness, calling and sacrifice. |
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At one exciting moment, several kiwis were calling loudly only a few feet above us on a hillside, but they never came into view. |
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Routinely calling each raise from the blind may cost you quite a bit of money. |
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Many of those are incompletely preserved, and some are decidedly tubular in appearance, calling into question their affinity to the Hyolitha. |
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He also enraged the Marquise by referring to her as Petticoat III and by calling the wolfhound who slept in his bed his Pompadour. |
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But in general, men historically seem to have a calling towards protector roles and I honor them for that. |
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The whooping and calling from an enthusiastic audience was reminiscent of a Chippendales' performance on a good night. |
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The campaign is being led by a teacher who has raised a petition calling on highway chiefs to take action. |
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She listened to the soft calling of the birds and the wind whispering through the trees. |
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Mr Young, a trained first aider, felt a faint pulse and gave his wife the kiss of life after calling for an ambulance. |
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He constantly calls and whines to me about my not calling him and including him in my life. |
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We were just in the process of proceeding to a party vote when points of order were raised about the calling of the voice vote. |
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I skipped the skillet step, and I guess what I made could be considered a crustless quiche, but calling it a frittata is much more fun. |
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Workers reacted quickly, calling the fire brigade, although the fire was quenched using extinguishers, before the fire officers arrived. |
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You could not run away from the sound of their calling even if you wanted to. |
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Moves often result in the use of new technologies and equipment, calling for adjustments in the ways people access and process information. |
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Campaigners are calling for volunteers to start an action group for pensioners in Witham. |
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But instead of calling up a drawn map, the site uses pictures taken from satellites and aircraft to give an aerial view of a territory. |
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Sometimes, it's also useful to bait the enemies, sending the team forward to recon, and then calling it back. |
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Public Enemy's Chuck D is constantly calling on rappers to live up to their potential rather than down to expectations. |
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He struck me as a latter-day Socrates who had missed out on his true calling in the agora of Periclean Athens by some 2,500 years. |
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Delicate cornhusk wrappings and innovative flavor combinations are the calling cards of this Southern California company. |
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A union is calling for a national day of action to protest at plans to increase the retirement age for civil servants. |
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You can do so by calling your county's property records office, consulting your local realtors, querying sellers, and asking your neighbors. |
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Wily lookouts kept watch for German guards, calling out codewords as a warning. |
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Simply calling the big blind would make no sense if hands indeed ran close together in value. |
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Or maybe we do and that's why we're contemplating calling Bob a weenie, because he reminds us too much of cousin Eddie. |
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It seemed the wheelsman on the icebreaker had spent the majority of another tortured night calling ship-to-shore on the radio. |
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All read-outs were checked for accurate base calling and assembled using a reliable system. |
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The young couple are calling for more information about meningitis to be made more readily available. |
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We've been talking recently about the social mores of calling people from your mobile whilst on the loo, pooing. |
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He's essentially calling in an air strike on his own position in hopes of killing the enemy. |
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Nor could he offer any reason why the US military had responded by calling for a massive air strike. |
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They insisted on calling her Chaelia and sending her to a private academy for schooling. |
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He is calling on industry to take advantage of the benefits of the third-party program. |
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I'm sure they know they are not windsurfers but by calling them so, they avoid insurance claims against aviation equipment. |
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Having your phone at the ready or tapping away constantly gives rise to what experts are calling infomania. |
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Unions say it puts the brakes on a 20-year trend towards casual labour, but employer groups are calling it a disappointing and costly precedent. |
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He attacks the critics of postmodernism by calling them sociological reductionists. |
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I tried calling some shops and was told by some that a 1.5-or 2-ton jack would be enough, since the jack won't be lifting the whole truck. |
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We do not say that there is anything about calling up special reasons, generally, in the abstract, as being a vice in legislation. |
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Some were simple employees who worked for the excellent wages the calling offered. |
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And Minnesotans seem adjusted to the taxes, calling their state high tax, high service. |
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Republicans are reserving judgment at this time, but they are calling for congressional hearings. |
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One way I justify my wanderlust is by calling it a form of travel sickness. |
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Whatever the calling or the profession, the 2003 Essence Awards winners have taken language and given it shape and magic. |
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Astonishingly, the telephonist did not ask who was calling and simply put us through to the head of regional targets. |
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Pohl recognizes that we cannot address that eclipse by calling for a wholesale, indiscriminate recovery of an ancient and pre-modern practice. |
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Believing that the artistic calling was the highest one, he despised workaday employment. |
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To be an alchemist at this time was a precarious profession, a calling that required great political skill. |
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Scientists believe they have spotted a continent, which they're calling Xanadu. |
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Drew and Seigi dashed out and hurried towards their fathers, calling and laughing as they ran. |
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A plumber by profession, Tom was exceptionally gifted at his calling and his expertise was widely sought. |
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Viewed as a calling or a vocation, scholarship has an inevitably vexed relation to institutional life. |
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These companies provide the long distance calling networks, selling wholesale and retail minutes of use to residential and business customers. |
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The calling to a hermit's life became strong again and in 1989, Frances moved back to Whitby and set up her second hermitage. |
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The Ministry of Environment and Forests is calling students to play an active role in environment protection. |
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By calling him a celebrity you almost make us feel that we need to do wrong in order to be recognised. |
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We are to walk worthy of the calling, but we first must know what that calling is. |
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To your first question in regards to calling time, that is up to the umpire s judgement whether to call time or not. |
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But instead of name calling and personal attacks, the weapons of choice are logic, wordplay and witty repartee. |
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It's an upbringing she remembers fondly, even though she can't begin to place where her calling towards music came from. |
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She also enjoyed reading the newspapers and neighbours calling in for a cup of tea and chatting about old times. |
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Bernal has every tick of repression down as Amaro, tortured by the conflict between his calling and his own desire. |
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I know it must be disturbing but I shouldn't worry about these wallies who send you abusive emails calling you un-Australian. |
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Jefferson County, Alabama is calling time on fraudulent overtime claims by making non-salaried employees clock in with their fingerprints. |
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But calling them evil and justly honoring the courage of the men and women who gave their lives is not a political analysis. |
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I hurried towards her calling out every so often so that she could stop walking and we could talk. |
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The abrupt about-face followed mounting public opposition, protests calling for her resignation and growing pressure from her own allies. |
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Any gathering on this scale calling for peace and social justice would have been exciting. |
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The farmers are calling on the Government to pay compensation and make up for the so-called BSE tax. |
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You could just open up the white pages and start calling people at random and offering to sell them Herbalife. |
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He even went to Wall Street to wag his finger at corporate wrongdoers, calling for legislative reform. |
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I thought about calling Matt to see if he'd heard anything about this, then changed my mind when my stomach knotted up at the thought. |
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We want to see another reformation in the church and so we are calling the church back to the Word of God, starting with the very first verse. |
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If someone raises your big blind and everyone folds, you're getting 3.5 to 1 on calling the raise. |
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I think in this particular community there's still a lot of work to be done and I don't feel a strong calling to be other than here at the moment. |
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This calling or vocation is what I have tried to ground theologically. |
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It is calling me to him, every night his calling grows stronger. |
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My sisters opened a beauty parlor in their bedroom, curling hair with crisscrossed bobby pins and calling it a perm. |
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In general, we want to think people will respond to that, not calling someone a crybaby. |
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As part of our calling to family practice, we like to encourage our patients to be planters as well as reapers of the harvest that grows in each community. |
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There, he said, cocking his ear, don't you hear someone calling you? |
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Six poets Gumilyov, Akhmatova, Osip Mandelshtam, Sergey Gorodetsky, Vladimir Narbut and Mikhail Zenkevich joined forces, calling themselves the Acmeists. |
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There are supportive African clergy calling for coexistence rather than violence. |
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Ogimura waved his hand in the air, calling a temporary stop to play, unable to think in the clamor. |
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Before you go about calling me a reactionary, it could be that future generations will view the horror of the music culture in the same light as the crack epidemic. |
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Long before my countrymen went to the streets in a peaceful protest calling for freedom. |
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Another supposed group, calling itself the New Romantic Cyber Army, also claimed credit. |
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All DIY projects should be reducible to an A4 sized flowchart detailing a handful of easy steps, available by calling a 1900 number after the show. |
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But perhaps we shouldn't start calling in the men in white coats just yet. |
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Queen Anne's commissioners were seriously concerned about foundations in Millbank's quicksands, calling repeatedly for reports from architects, surveyors and master tradesmen. |
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The wind whispered through the trees, calling out to her in words. |
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Recent election losses have led to open rebellion among some party members, who are calling for a complete change of leadership. |
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After the company announced plans to reduce benefits, the union threatened to retaliate by calling for a strike. |
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When an account executive scores a client engagement, consulting managers waste no time calling around to find out who's qualified and who's available for the job. |
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This is now so apparent that even international financiers and large capitalists are calling for concerted intervention to reflate the world economy. |
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The Ghost of Christmas Passed came calling today, sending pinecones packing and stockings slinking into the Rubbermaid bins from whence they came. |
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Papa-Yankee-Quebec 843, calling Zulu-Victor-Quebec 317, Over. |
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Of course, calling Descartes the first nerd grossly ignores his personal refinement, elegant prose style, sly wit, even his surprising career as a soldier of fortune. |
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So as Lisa was choosing a shirt for Megan to wear for pre-contest warm-ups Megan was calling Charlie to see what time he was going to be at the practice run-throughs. |
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Look for us calling in once we get back into radio range in a few days. |
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But since his election defeat in 1997 he has apparently undergone a personal conversion, calling for his party to be more inclusive since his re-entry into Parliament. |
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There, he says, the cost of calling you or attaching a note to the bottle was low, hence the supplier's failure to secure your consent absolves you of all obligation to pay. |
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I survived about thirty-five years of it myself without calling in sick or making colossal mistakes or going postal whenever it was that time of the month. |
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Grab some sangria and sunblock and head to Spain, where a relaxing getaway with an exciting culinary scene is calling your name. |
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At the edge of the wallow, a young brown and white steer was standing knee deep in the muck, calling to his mother, and she was moaning back at him. |
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In a situation like the Bahamas, huge multi-nationals with headquarters elsewhere are walking off with our monetary resources, while calling it a gain for us. |
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He and three of his colleagues, calling themselves the Almanac Singers, were on a cross-country jalopy tour singing and creating songs for the industrial unions aborning. |
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Think for a second before you start calling this guy a wet blanket. |
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Accounts of the prison have come from women who managed to hide their cellular phones, calling relatives to describe their plight. |
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A company president would be way out of line in calling a sales rep with low figures by that name. |
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Thousands of union workers are canvassing door-to-door, calling voters and campaigning against the candidate online. |
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It seems to happen often enough that knee-jerk reactions that involving banning things tend to have the opposite effect of what those calling for the ban expect. |
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I mean, calling it that is probably why people are expecting it to be salacious and along the lines of what the book was. |
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On the other end of the phone was my Grandma Rose, a can-do matriarch calling from her home on Avenue U, six blocks away. |
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Following the release of Nine Types of Light, TV on the Radio thought long and hard about calling it quits. |
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If you want to claim Bain Capital as your calling card to the White House, then defend what happened to Bain Capital. |
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Quick-thinking Ryan, who was just ten at the time, put his mum in the recovery position before calling an ambulance when she collapsed in February. |
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It should come as a surprise to no one that his calling card is reforming entitlements. |
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This could be the next chapter in the story of a business career that was his calling card, but has become a political liability. |
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Malik responded through the bullhorn, calling for the immediate indictment of Darren Wilson, the cop who shot and killed Brown. |
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The classical iconographic representation of the Buddha's realization shows him touching the earth with his right hand, and calling the earth to witness his attainment. |
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The U.S. administration would gush over Fayyad, just stopping short of calling him their boo. |
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Well I really should not be calling you a witch when I am a witch doctor. |
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Breman kept calling doctors and academics, but there were no answers to be found. |
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And if you go through enough of it, this accumulation comes to be your calling card of wisdom. |
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I'm all for calling the wreckers and getting them to take it away. |
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The kettle was adamantly calling the pot black as Netanyahu accused Iran of doing all sorts of shady things with nuclear power. |
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He might even stand up for these rookies he was now calling children of God. |
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DeCrow would come to lead a movement against this practice, suing the Hotel Syracuse in 1969 and calling for protests and sit-ins. |
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Refuting critics who say he is anti-contraception, Gardner is calling for over-the-counter sale of birth control pills. |
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In the way of Aeneas, Bugs was possessed by a revelatory calling to found a great city. |
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Then, days before the election, aff ran an ad with the same false claim, this time calling for Heinrich to be voted out. |
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The calling card of a late-night talk show is supposed to be unpredictability and danger. |
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I can understand the ref calling it off because he was abused. |
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She had similar fears when 2010 biennial curators Bonami and Gary Carrion-Murayari came calling last year. |
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This alternative alliance is precisely what Labor's Isaac Herzog and Livni's partner, Amram Mitzne, have been calling for. |
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The addition of this appropriation prompted Sen. John McCain to rage, calling it disgusting. |
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Immediately, there was a national groundswell of voices calling for Arizona Governor Jan Brewer to veto the bill. |
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Restaurants have a soft opening and weeks of tweaking before critics come calling to bestow stars. |
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When I tried to persuade him to drop the title The Short Night, I proposed calling the picture Pursuit. |
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But calling your sister-in-law, who babysat seven of your kids all day, and complaining? |
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Now instead of calling at Adelaide, they rail goods across from Melbourne. |
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Over 10,000 miners held a demonstration, carrying a banner denouncing the government and calling for the arrest and public trial of the mine bureau directors. |
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Clearly, some of the nurses are in the noble calling for the money. |
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Listeners kept calling and sending text messages to the radio jockey from all parts of Mumbai, telling him about the rains in their neighbourhood. |
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Ramona was the apple of his eye, no ship or captain or crew could have pulled him away from her, not even the insistent calling of the ocean herself. |
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Waving to her friend, she rose, carefully gathered up the hem of her pale Wedgwood blue dress trimmed in white lining, and trudged off lazily to meet the calling voice. |
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Because a vocation is a calling to serve others, caring is necessary. |
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Unless you are testing the job queue itself, break out the logic that would be executed when calling the run method, and test that logic separately. |
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In a cofounding exchange, he rebutted by also calling her fake, with Snooki following suit, saying that Pauly D and Vinny agreed. |
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Abd Allah crossed over to Valencia first in 796, calling on the allegiance of the same Berber garrison that sheltered Sulayman years earlier. |
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Charles Powell was negative in his criticism of Eliot, calling his poems incomprehensible. |
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Funny sort of name. Who would think of calling a little newborn baby Muriel? |
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He favours calling things by their true names and constantly argues about what is wrong and what is right. |
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The Saudi state discourages calling attention to or complaining about poverty. |
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Fans paid tribute to Micky Jones online, calling Man the greatest Welsh band of all time. |
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Division bells sound around Leinster House and in some of its adjoining buildings calling Deputies to the chamber to vote. |
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Some will risk their whole tournament by calling an all-in with them and others will fold them first to act. |
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A TAMWORTH shop is calling for World War Two items as it turns the clock back to mark the 75th anniversary of the start of the conict. |
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We are in the habit of calling those bodies of men anarchal which are in a state of effervescence. |
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That is to say, if I do not take care, I shall go on calling my darling 'Baba' till she is as old as her mamma, and has a dozen Babas of her own. |
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People are calling it Broken Britain, so there's obviously a problem. The rise of the BNP is also a problem. |
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Not just dealers but every scumbag and gunrunner calling nonstop, every Bubba and Bubbette that ever wanted a gun. |
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Free and slightly funky chamber music is the calling card of this festival. |
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Many experts now advise consumers to use a prepaid calling card to save money on long distance calls while staying in a hotel. |
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It was not a way of calling a Black person outta they name but used simply as a way of referring to a person who was racially Black. |
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Let them consider howe Epiminedes the Greeke spake unto the Candians, calling them cruell and abhominable beastes, braynelesse lyars. |
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The U.S. Congress passed a resolution calling for intervention and President William McKinley was quick to comply. |
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I wish merely to caution you against the whole tone of L'Etoile's suggestion, by calling your attention to its ex parte character at the outset. |
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Far away, on the stony garrigues by the fading light of the harvest moon one could hear the musical calling of wolves. |
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Traditionally, the presiding officer alternates between calling Members from the Government and Opposition. |
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The Whigs primarily advocated the supremacy of Parliament, while calling for the toleration for Protestant dissenters. |
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At length Nelson dispatched a letter to the Danish commander, Crown Prince Frederick, calling for a truce, which the Prince accepted. |
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Officials are calling the woman a hero for keeping her head and finding the only way out amid the panic of the smoke and flames. |
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Any plans that Churchill may have had to create a Constitutionalist Party were shelved with the calling of another general election. |
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The government has no plans to establish an English parliament or assembly although several pressure groups are calling for one. |
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There also are groups calling for devolution or full independence for Occitania, Alsace, and Brittany. |
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This led to the calling of the Convention Parliament which was dominated by royalists. |
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He also supported a motion brought by the SNP and Plaid Cymru in 2006 calling for an inquiry into the government's conduct of the Iraq war. |
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The success of the JET led Ashton Carter calling for more such teams for other poorly performing projects. |
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If we're calling for revolutionary change, we shouldn't do this light-mindedly. |
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Northern Rail also operates an hourly service calling at all stations from Liverpool Lime Street to Manchester Victoria. |
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The EE network also has recently released a WiFi calling feature available on the iPhone. |
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Currently, Pakistan maintains a policy of credible minimum deterrence, calling its program vital nuclear deterrence against foreign aggression. |
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The Ahmadis are particularly persecuted, especially since 1974 when they were banned from calling themselves Muslims. |
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India, Pakistan and Bangladesh signed tripartite agreement in 1973 calling for peace and stability in the subcontinent. |
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As of late 2013, activists were still calling on the Salvation Army to change its stance on LGBT issues, citing ongoing discrimination. |
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All we have to do is kill the mad-dog Nicaraguan who oppresses our people, calling himself a soldier. |
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The Census Alert campaign group also decided against calling for a boycott. |
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Modern archaeologists follow him in rejecting the name, calling it instead Cadbury Castle hill fort. |
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The foreign powers largely distanced themselves from the plotters, calling them atheists and Protestant heretics. |
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In 1747, Hannah Glasse's The Art of Cookery gave a recipe for 'pigeon in a hole', calling for pigeon rather than the contemporary sausages. |
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Isabella Beeton in 1861 gives a recipe calling for rump steak and lamb's kidney. |
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Apicius, in Book II of De re coquinaria, includes a recipe calling for quince cider. |
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The performance garnered other major accolades as well, some critics echoing McKellen in calling it the definitive Hamlet performance. |
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Thirdly, Mill's position, by calling mathematics merely another species of inductive inference, misapprehends mathematics. |
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Rowling has described Jane Austen as her favourite author, calling Emma her favourite book in O, The Oprah Magazine. |
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In August 2014, he added his name to a letter to British broadcasters calling for better representation of ethnic minorities. |
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In abolishing slavery, you abolish that calling of the men-stealer, and in abolishing that calling you abolish slavery. |
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In some tournaments, line judges who would be calling the serve, were assisted by electronic sensors that beeped to indicate the serve was out. |
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Because Klitschko had fought so bravely against Lewis, boxing fans soon began calling for a rematch. |
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During the press conference announcing the fight, Shannon Briggs confronted Haye calling him out. |
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The SSP has led republican protests and authored the Declaration of Calton Hill, calling for an independent republic. |
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When I looked out at the empty auditorium, I could see it filled up with a millionty people, cheering and clapping and calling my name. |
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I had taken all this with a mineful of salt and had not been calling Violet more often. |
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It is usually used when calling for federal spending to correct a perceived failure of the private sector. |
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The Peace People organised large demonstrations calling for an end to paramilitary violence. |
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After visiting the Queen, calling other world leaders, and making one final Commons speech, she left Downing Street in tears. |
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As a major port in the United Kingdom, Aberdeen receives many visiting seafarers from ships calling the port. |
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The Prime Minister became responsible for calling meetings, presiding, taking notes, and reporting to the Sovereign. |
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Politically, Salmond is one of the foremost proponents of Scottish independence, repeatedly calling for a referendum on the issue. |
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It also required the calling of triennial Parliaments, with each sitting for at least five months. |
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Several doctrinal disputes from the 4th century onwards led to the calling of Ecumenical councils. |
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Sze and other delegates lobbied and a declaration passed calling for an international conference on health. |
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Although Meaden tried to promote the single, it failed to reach the top 50 and the band reverted to calling themselves the Who. |
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The Adam Smith Institute has published a report calling for the BBC to give up the licence fee. |
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Out of the insurgency came a highly destructive group calling itself ISIL, which took large parts of the north and west. |
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The conference ended with a signed agreement calling for the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops in exchange for the cessation of armed confrontation. |
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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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Despite some MEPs calling for the report to be published, Parliamentary authorities had refused until an MEP broke confidentiality and leaked it. |
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Angered by his attitude, Margaret drew closer to the Albany faction and joined others in calling for his return from France. |
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In order to defend these men, Knox sent out letters calling the nobles to convene. |
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During this period Knox thundered against her in his sermons, even to the point of calling for her death. |
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After calling at Madeira and the West Indies, the fleet made landfall off the coast of Darien on 2 November. |
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However some joined the United Presbyterian Church in calling for the Disestablishment of the Church of Scotland. |
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Corbyn announced on the day that he would attend the debate in Cambridge, calling on May to do the same. |
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The gig was hailed as a success by fans and critics many calling it one of the best concerts Runrig have ever staged. |
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The skip may communicate the weight, turn, line, and other tactics by calling or tapping a broom on the ice. |
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Much of the yelling that goes on during a curling game is the skip calling the line of the shot and the sweepers calling the weight. |
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There is also an hourly service from London Euston to Northampton calling at Leighton Buzzard, Bletchley, Milton Keynes Central and Wolverton. |
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Additional items found on the CD include calling nonjava libraries from Java, and using the security API and developing JavaBeans components. |
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Another aspect is amod or contract, usually made by the two parties calling amodwyr who are witnesses to prove the terms agreed by the parties. |
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Court was convened on the land itself, with both claimants calling witnesses to support their claims. |
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While in the role, Wood campaigned on green issues, including calling for more land to be made available for growing food. |
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Typically, there is an hourly service from Manchester Piccadilly to Cardiff Central, Carmarthen, Milford Haven, calling at principal stations. |
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The sick person expresses his or her faith by calling for the elders of the church who pray over and anoint the sick with olive oil. |
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He famously moved a motion in Westminster calling for a tunnel to be constructed between County Antrim and the Scottish coast. |
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The fashion press regarded her red-carpet attire with derision, calling it orchidaceous and overly designed. |
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Initially the only calling points would be Rotterdam on the way to Amsterdam, and Cologne on the way to Frankfurt. |
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The Spanish government thus imposed direct rule on the region, calling for a new election. |
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This can also be used by the gateway to enforce restrictions on geographically bound calling plans. |
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Paying no attention to Lizzy, Mrs. Gibson began calling out our names in alphabetical order. |
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Innocent immediately turned against Philip, calling upon him to reject plans to invade England and to sue for peace. |
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Howls used for calling pack mates to a kill are long, smooth sounds similar to the beginning of the cry of a horned owl. |
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Males take up nesting sites before the breeding season, by frequently calling beside them. |
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Scientists are now calling on government authorities to revisit this decision before eradication is too difficult and costly to consider. |
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Different country calling codes and currencies are used for different settlements, depending on the administrating country. |
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Names are fascinating, aren't they? I love mine. I think my parents had very good taste calling us Peter and Paula and Melinda. |
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These facilities proved valuable in supporting the steamships that were soon calling at the harbour in increasing numbers. |
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A campaign has been initiated by United Students Against Sweatshops calling for universities to cut contracts with Adidas. |
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In 1348, the Black Death reached England via merchant vessels calling at Southampton. |
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The Route of Emperors and Kings is an international touristic route leading from Regensburg to Budapest, calling in Passau, Linz and Vienna. |
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Applied to the Church, it implies a calling to spread the faith throughout the whole world and to all ages. |
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At what point do we start calling this back-and-forth a feud? |
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The Liberal Radical Party embodied these democratic forces calling for a new federal constitution. |
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However, their admonitions did little to stop Europeans from calling the King of Ethiopia Prester John. |
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Legislation was often passed calling for military garrisons at the fort but their de facto purpose was a trading post. |
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I think it's a case of the pot calling the kettle black when she says he is obsessive. |
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In the aftermath, on April 2, 1943, Tydings introduced a bill in Congress calling for independence for Puerto Rico. |
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In 1770 another decree, calling for the elimination of the indigenous languages, did away with Classical Nahuatl as a literary language. |
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After four long expeditions, Pizarro established the first Spanish settlement in northern Peru, calling it San Miguel de Piura. |
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A delegation of Norman gentry boldly requesting in 1771 the calling of the Normandy estates was despatched prestissimo to the Bastille. |
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This would be the equivalent of calling all the Kings of ancient Rome by the title of Caesar. |
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Every calling has its private language, clear and precise to insiders but pure babble to others. |
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I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. |
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The argument in favour of calling Middle English a creole comes from the extreme reduction in inflected forms from Old English to Middle English. |
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Regardless of the punishing heat and physicality, restaurant cooking is a calling many Chinese chefs cannot deny. |
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The United Nations introduced a resolution during the General Assembly's 62nd sessions in 2007 calling for a universal ban. |
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Antony had occupied the high offices of questor and tribune, the first calling for literary ability, the second for skill as an orator. |
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Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich won ovations calling for a federal ban on sharia law. |
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Next, they note the date for Parliament's calling and the reason for its calling. |
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The division bell sounds around Leinster House and the adjoining Oireachtas buildings, calling TDs to the chamber to vote. |
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One instance of such an eliminated redundancy involves the calling of members in the House of Commons. |
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It issued the Charter of Quaregnon in 1894 calling for an end to capitalism and a thorough reorganization of society. |
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Boats from the piers in Bowness sail around the lake, many calling at Ambleside or at Lakeside where there is a restored railway. |
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In 2006, a group calling itself 'Translink' proposed reopening the tunnel and the route for rail freight. |
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The mayor of the little town rolled out the red carpet for new businesses by calling on them personally. |
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He also once wrote an article calling for the abolishment of soccer. |
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My own lips are slobbery suckers, the bane of my life, the subject of teasing by Peggy Gordon, who has recently taken to calling me Lubra Lips. |
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Smelling blood in the economic meltdown, the lower house of parliament, or Duma, took the offensive, calling for Yeltsin to resign. |
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The accountant thought it was me and was calling to tell me to go easy. |
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She moved lightly, springily, as one does who finds in it the joy of calling upon abundant strength. |
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Whenever I was in deep thought in the stillth of a night in longing for the mainland, it seemed that a voice was calling in the dark. |
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As soon as I straighten out which of the twins is which, I'll start calling them by their names. |
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Even though the stub is a dummy, it allows us to determine whether the procedure is called at the right time by the program or calling procedure. |
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The newspaper started a telemarketing campaign to boost its subscriptions by calling non-subscribers. |
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