Lord Dull of Ditchwater's coming in at three bells and anchor's aweigh, and I really think that you need to put that chap back on the floor. |
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Eventually, I talked to a chap who promised to sort things out and he asked me to fax the bill through. |
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I met a chap in the hospital who had four years under his belt, and remember another who had his first chemo with me and died a fortnight later. |
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The 28 year old chap decided his mother and sister had to go as well in case they shopped him to the police. |
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You do not say why this chap mistrusts you, but if there is no reason you can think of, then you need a new best friend, and he needs a shrink. |
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One chap slammed the door in his face but not before he told him he already had enough double-glazing. |
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They have a good reputation locally, and the chap says that they get asked to do this sort of thing fairly frequently. |
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A chap by the improbable name of Monty Nebinger emails to offer his services. |
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Amidst all the hubbub about politician's perks last week, one chap escaped everyone's notice until it came up in Senate estimates this week. |
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One time, we went to a cabin by the frozen Yukon river that you could only get to by sled dog and the chap there served us cups of tea. |
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I'd driven the poor chap over the edge of biographical desperation with my stark boringness. |
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I am still facing totally vindictive charges relating to that little incident with that chap who invaded my doorstep peddling household goods. |
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For some reason, the editor has started to greet me with a growl, which can be a little on the disconcerting side for an equable chap like me. |
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A smartly dressed chap in crisp whites stopped us and asked dad if we had anything dutiable, anything electronic? |
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A former gynaecologist, the old chap helped to deliver his son's first three sprogs. |
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I did, and the intensity of his reply served as ample proof that this chap has a fierce patriotism coursing beneath the quiet exterior. |
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There's Irene at the wedding of a handsome chap and spunky blonde who we now call the mayor and mayoress. |
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He was a breath of fresh air after the chap I'd had before who died, an old-time Oxford don. |
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There was a chap at the door with a carving knife, he had a hood up and a scarf over his mouth and nose. |
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We decided to take all three hamsters, on the grounds that it wasn't fair to leave one chap on his ownsome. |
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Apologies to the chap I trod on and everything, but I'm having 860 points for that hurdling clinic. |
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Not content with bag searches and scans with hand-held metal detectors, this chap insists on a proper pat-down search. |
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I rang a chap who has agreed to help me move it on Sunday for a not inconsiderable amount of money. |
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My friends would hunt me down with sharp jewelry and chap sticks if no pitchforks were available. |
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Dressed in my daggy jeans and Panjabi MC tour tee shirt, I waited for the set to finish, and chatted with a random American chap out the front. |
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In between phone calls she would drape herself over the chap and cackle uncontrollably whenever he made a sound. |
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Then the other day I see her at this fancy bar and she's chatting animatedly to a handsome chap in a dark green suit. |
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While he seemed to have an unpracticed grace, the chap was still clumsy to almost a point of impossibility. |
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Presumably he also believes in the Immaculate Conception and the unquestionable infallibility of that elderly Polish chap in the Vatican. |
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Boonlua is an excellent chap and a rich fund of information on crime in Pattaya in whose company I spent many amusing hours over the last month. |
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So if the chap in Gravesend is so negative, all he will see is the negative in others. |
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Being an aesthete with high standards of evidence and argumentation, these intrusions chap him. |
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The other day you gave advice to some poor chap who had loaned money to a bargirl and more or less said that he was foolish. |
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I quickly hid behind a wall to witness the pantomime, as this poor chap had to get his toolbox out and mend the gear linkage. |
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He was a nice old chap who tried desperately to make up for the uselessness of his subordinates. |
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I think it's a well-designed site, and there s absolutely no doubt that the chap that writes it is articulate, eloquent and well-read. |
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He was, by all accounts, a crude chap who, when he cursed, did so to effect. |
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The fellow who nearly chinned me is a big chap and he's very passionate, as we all are. |
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When this chap seated himself, with his long out-stretched legs, I realized that his gams were quite close in proximity, to yours truly. |
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There was this chap I used to work with many years ago, who used to talk the most incomprehensible gibberish with tremendous enthusiasm. |
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If we're going to get this little chap Permission To Remain from our Head Mopple and do our bit at Full Muster we need to get a wiggle on. |
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In the few seconds before my lucidity gave way to blind panic, I felt no little sympathy for the poor chap as he faced this calamity. |
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I remember a story about some chap called Robin Hood who was slightly miffed about another chap called the Sheriff of Nottingham. |
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Just the name conjures up images of leather-bound books, mahogany desks and some old chap mulling over life in the comfort of his wing chair. |
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The chap ignored them completely, reading a tab with a headline something like Terror Wife Found Hanging. |
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This chap was a quiz-show fanatic who had won a national quiz competition when he was a child. |
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I have had the privilege of meeting Brendan, and he is a really nice chap, a splendid fellow. |
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The handsome chap in the top photo is me first thing on Christmas Day, wide awake and full of the joys of spring. |
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There is a companion series of videos to cover holster making, knife sheaths, chap and saddle construction. |
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The no-more-bowing decision was credited to His Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, an amiable, faintly woebegone chap who is a cousin of the queen. |
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He's an amiable enough chap who wombles through life doing no one any harm. |
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Now he is penning plays, musicals and literary works, and his new audience requires a different kind of chap altogether. |
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Outside in my alfresco office, the chap in the crisp white shirt launched into his sales pitch. |
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Yes I know this must come as a shock to you since I am normally such a gay and carefree chap, brimming with chuckles and mirth. |
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He's an arrogant sort of chap and he's going a bit bald but, my, isn't he beautifully proportioned. |
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For a while I also shared a yard with a British chap named Roy who worked as a foreman on the project. |
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He disappeared off Iceland in the storms of the autumn equinox of 1942, poor chap. |
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And I couldn't help but pity the poor chap who finds himself grappling with one of these after a night out on the sauce with his hot date. |
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The foreground music irritated us just that little bit to the point it makes a calm chap feel tetchy. |
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Today, you'll be pleased to hear that Amelia has got married to a lovely chap and they're now trying for a baby. |
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Two police officers took a bald-headed chap out of the house in handcuffs and put him in the van. |
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He just seemed to be a nice chap who wanted to lend his racquet to a fellow tennis player in need. |
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You can read what can only be described as the completely nonsensical ravings of this chap here. |
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They have their read-outs and their strategies and they can see that their man is gaining on the chap in front as each lap slides by. |
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It seemed unbelievable rudeness for the keyholder to have forgotten the appointment to let this young chap in. |
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You are handing the baton on to somebody else, and you hope the chap you are giving it to is going to run twice as fast. |
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I'm generally a free-spirited and broad-minded chap who fully realises that it takes all sorts to make a world. |
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He was a big, beardy chap who looked like nothing so much as the leader of a doomsday cult. |
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Eric, a thoroughly good chap from the other side of the pond, has directed a question at me. |
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But few who applaud true sportsmanship would begrudge this genial chap every prize available. |
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One Princeton educated chap was quite shocked to hear that we had our own currency and that we didn't use the almighty Green Back! |
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He is a likeable chap and as much a well-loved local icon as Inverness Castle and the nearby firth's dolphins. |
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After ten minutes or so, when the poor little puffed-out chap was having a breather, a smaller bird appeared and took over. |
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One of the many pettifogging annoyances of being a chap is the complete inability to explain how one would like one's hair cut. |
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I'm sure he is a very, very, very nice chap in real life, but onstage, he is truly dreadful. |
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By the way, I used to work for a chap who was tremendously careful with his money. |
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One of these gentlemen just happens to be the madwoman's father, a charming chap who seems unfazed by most things in this day and age. |
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With a mutter or two the chap retreated into a sulk and decided to get on with his reading material. |
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I'm sure makes sense to the chap in the corner with the red hot pokers on his feet. |
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A chap from the HMRI came to talk to me and a supervisor about detrainments yesterday. |
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What about the chap who insists his bank use his thumbprint to identify him if he applies for credit? |
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Winter air can chap the skin of children and adults, which can lead to winter itch. |
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Britain's most famous survival expert is clearly not the sort of chap to indulge himself with superfluous gadgets. |
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This tall, dark and lithe chap hoovers up food and never gains an ounce, whilst I weep for my waistline. |
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Eventually I received a tap on the shoulder by an official looking older chap who wanted to know why I was taking photos. |
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A cute picture of the kids tells a man's colleagues that he's a well-rounded chap who loves his family. |
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The best male singer was a chap called Stanley who the audience showed wild appreciation for. |
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After another twenty minutes on hold, I finally spoke to a friendly chap who told me they had six staff to take calls from their entire network of customers. |
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It's unfair to suggest that he deliberately provokes dressing room conflict, but he's not the ideal chap to apply soothing balm when it breaks out. |
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And his batman was a splendid chap and produced tea, you see, with a lovely silver teapot out of the house, and every thing else, in the middle of the battle. |
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The chap sat next to us had black glasses on and was smoking weed. |
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I mean, your heart just bleeds for the chap in the photograph, doesn't it? |
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She smoked my eyes with black eyeliner and some glittery black eye shadow, highlighted my checks with a soft natural glow, and glossed my lips with chap stick. |
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Mary admits her youngest son was a scrawny little chap who became a beanpole youngster, so gangly he needed elastic in his school trousers to make sure they stayed up. |
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But we didn't have to drag anymore logs, as UBSS also supplied a large workforce of freshers that carried the bite-sized logs the chap with the chainsaw supplied. |
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Apparently, this well-heeled, green-fingered chap is so proud of the vastness of the garden at his country pad that he has applied for an EU grant to help to develop it. |
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A middlingly good-looking late-twenties chap like myself can't fail. |
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Now the mirror gives back this balding chap with a quizzical expression. |
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His aide, an implausibly smooth chap who probably has a double first in the novels of John Grisham and Raymond Chandler, says he's hiding and asks me to come to his suite. |
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The Porter on duty was a big, solid chap with a strong, creased face. |
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The little chap is also a dead cert for This Morning with Fern Britton and Phillip Schofield because, according to The Sun, his people discovered a rather radical diet regime. |
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When a vicar asks a young chap why he does not like where he lives, he replies the people are unfriendly and the town is a dirty and unwelcoming place. |
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He's a champion little chap and his mother seems a decent sort as well. |
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A gawky chap with a ponytail, rarely ever seen in a suit, he wanted to be different from those tough guys at the big anonymous corporate conglomerations. |
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People with eczema and allergies tend to have lips that chap easily. |
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I would almost suggest this young chap take up writing instead of drawing, but one look at this penmanship and I know that would be just as futile a pursuit. |
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I fished next to Milo Colombo, the chap that makes the Milo pole floats. |
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Can you believe it, some chap with a beard stole my clothes at gunpoint? |
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This chap was going out with one of my best friends at university. |
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You hire a bouncer because you want to keep people out, whereas a restaurant is the sort of place where a chap wants to feel that they want him to come in. |
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One particularly irritated chap emailed us, presumably to vent his spleen. |
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He was a laid-back and friendly chap who loved a beer and his sport. |
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He was a chap who was getting on for 50, I should think, a lieutenant quartermaster, not a fighting man at all, and yet he'd brought up all these rations. |
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The chap who does the garden said he wanted to hear some of my music. |
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Well begod and begorra, sure I'd love to buy that chap Tom Reeves a pint. |
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Needless to say he came of worse and, in fact, nobody else was injured apart from the hapless chap who was quickly dispatched to the afterlife in a hail of well-aimed bullets. |
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And that's why you date the guy who takes you out for dinner, and just become backslapping buddies with the chap that makes you pay for his pizza. |
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Just minutes earler, a chap wearing a Prince William mask tried to gain entry to the hospital via the main entrance. |
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The old chap who had just come off the look-out, had returned forrard again, and I was alone on that part of the deck. |
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Skates that are not quite a fit, my dear Smith, May flabberghast even a chap of your pith. |
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Padraic, with his para-military equipment bristling out of his shoulder harness, is an endearing chap but as nutty as a fruitcake. |
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An unshaven chap wearing a sleeveless vest, cut-down jeans and old plimsoles stood next to the owners' and trainers' stand. |
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The old chap did not look as though he could push his way out of a paper bag. |
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L Piggott is the name of the chap stationed in the Trunks, Bags and Suitcases, as fine a man as ever punched a timeclock. |
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The hall's organ was built by a chap called Peter Collins and the programme will include Bach's Trio Sonata Number One. |
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In this post-feminist era,isn't the verbal image of the cheeky chap pinching the bottom of the po-faced women's libber a little passe? |
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Shaheen seemed a very ordinary, conservatively dressed, polite young chap. |
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He was a big chap with a corporation already, and a flat face rather like Dora's, and he had a thin black moustache. |
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Even the ricketiest old chap can be terribly offended if offered a seat by a 40-year-old woman. |
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The difference of the chap I dealt with from the box-ticking simpleton I had earlier encountered could not have been more different. |
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Not while you are the tubbiest chap in the video, Peter, but you'll rarely have a better incentive to diet. |
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Sure, you may call this petty, but it really does chap my hide! |
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When Mussolini was a young chap, he dabbled with socialism, imagining it to be an open sesame to a better society. |
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Are any women really surprised by the survey showing three in four of us prefer a chubbier chap rather than a buff Greek god? |
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A chap called Charles happens to be at the head of that particular queue. |
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I'll never forget the look on the judges' faces when one chap pulled off his boilersuit to rock the joint in a mankini and hard hat. |
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Could he have some elderly idea of wanting a youngster for a wife? Occasionally an old chap did. Serve him right if some young chap took the wind out of his sails. |
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It concerns a chap who regularly attends concerts at London's Royal Festival Hall and becomes increasingly obsessed with coughers in the audience. |
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Couldn't the chap who puts toothpaste on the royal toothbrush extend his duties to becoming unpacker of the royal suitcases and carrier of Camilla's bling? |
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I've known the chap since he was a squit at Eton and was waiting each Sunday for his doting sibling to turn up at college to take him out to lunch. |
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Ronnie was not really the kind of chap to do compering, but he put a lot of work into it, booked the guest artists and travelled to other accordion clubs to visit them. |
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Do you think it was a ladyish, afternoon call, another-cup-of-tea-please apparition that visits your Professor Cranks and that journalist chap you are always talking about? |
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Better say naething about the laird, my man, and tell me instead, what sort of a chap ye are that are sae ready to cleik in with an auld gaberlunzie fiddler? |
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We need to know more about this new chap. Why don't you go to his home town and ferret around a bit? See what you can come up with. |
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