It's a buzzword, a catchphrase, and I simultaneously wince and stifle laughter whenever I hear it. |
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Before the afternoon was out, a class of tinies had a new and uproarious catchphrase. |
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The catchphrase was delivered with a look of saucer-eyed amazement which slayed the studio audience every time. |
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Each has a catchphrase or way of saying things that gets used a dozen or so times each adventure. |
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The council has also been criticised by many for repeatedly chorusing its catchphrase of making Hull a Top Ten city. |
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Although the five a day catchphrase might be appropriate for adults, it could be a disincentive for children. |
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Described with the catchphrase Tupamaros, these urban partisans were really a collection of groups and factions rather than a single force, as the name would suggest. |
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The pitch, intonation, and speed of his voice are all over the map and make every bit of dialogue and catchphrase either hilarious or an assault on your eardrums. |
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Conservatives are offering real solutions to helping Canada's Pacific gateway move from being a Liberal catchphrase to a Canadian reality. |
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Organizations don't have standing before the government, and that's the catchphrase. |
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Each catchphrase and satirical swipe is met with evangelical enthusiasm, and while the hootenanny lasts, the spell of The Simpsons is absolutely transportive. |
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Try as they might to jazz it up with a dance routine or a catchphrase or a performance by Bruno Mars, The X Factor was a sinking ship. |
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Tim Gunn came back from being a catchphrase robot to a thoughtful mentor offering informed critiques of work in progress. |
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Tarby went through all of his without coining a single catchphrase. |
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It may well be the sound of the suburbs, drawing on a cacophony of influences born out of a misspent youth, but to paraphrase that great 80s catchphrase, where's the beef? |
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The music-hall song was a mass-produced article, with a select few numbers achieving immortality by virtue of an inspired tune or a good catchphrase. |
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Meanwhile, our new advertising slogan is fast becoming a catchphrase. |
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The mother of five frantically jumps from one argument to the next as if playing a high stakes game of catchphrase. |
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However, I do object to bacon as catchphrase, as fad, as arena for testosterone-fueled competition. |
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Employees play a major role in this regard: Under the catchphrase of behavioural branding, the brand will be given a sharper image in their daily work and dealings with clients. |
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Corporate governance has quickly become a catchphrase. |
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But to rather disloyally invoke the catchphrase of another TV star, there aren't many second-spot comics for whom opportunity has knocked as loudly. |
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This catchphrase could be the manifesto for modern urban China. |
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The chilling catchphrase embodied her government's scorched earth onslaught on Britain's mining communities – and gave the green light for the entire state to treat the miners' union as outlaws. |
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Now that northern sovereignty has become a catchphrase, people talk about Canada from coast to coast to coast and it is incumbent upon the federal government to develop the same infrastructure to the last coast. |
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After all, is it not an illusion to repeat endlessly the catchphrase of subsidiarity while the welfare state, which is often unnecessarily over-bloated, is close to bankruptcy? |
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Corporate social responsibility is not just a catchphrase. |
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In conclusion, we would like to reiterate Thailand's conviction that human rights learning is much more than lessons at school, a theme for a day or simply a catchphrase. |
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Corporate social responsibility is the catchphrase to describe such efforts, which typically provide needed goods and expertise in developing countries. |
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It is only fitting that the first disc in this collection focus on the poet who both captured the spirit of his generation with a dramatic catchphrase and also served as its emblematic incarnation through his life and work. |
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Every wrestler needs a gimmick, and now Blassie had a catchphrase. |
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Dixon, who was finally promoted to sergeant in 1964, policed his 'Dock Green' manor until May 1976 and 'Evening, all' had become a national catchphrase. |
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It's one of several shows marking the occasion, including Catchphrase and the Tesco Mum Of The Year Awards, hosted by girl of the moment Emma Willis. |
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Contenders for Best Prime Time Game Show are ITV's Strike It Rich, Catchphrase, Family Fortunes, Wheel Of Fortune and Big Break. |
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So while Catchphrase star Roy Walker schmoozed with the Krankies at the top table, she and I chewed over the thornier issues. |
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