This will make clipping the edges much less of a chore for the rest of the season. |
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Also, the surtitles appear to the extreme left of the stage, making a chore of following the action and understanding the dialogue. |
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But at the time, a dozen years ago, cloning a gene was not the routine chore it is today. |
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Too many of them were standing around as though fielding were merely a tedious chore to be undertaken before you got your turn at bat. |
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Look at the way you skip from chore to chore, always doing everything with a lick and a promise. |
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As a woman I find its application the most tedious chore and will go to any lengths to avoid the process. |
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I looked up from the tedious chore of wrapping the improved clinch knot and saw Frazier playing a keeper speckled trout. |
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The conception of cornhusking as a sport rather than a chore sprang from the fertile brain of Henry Agard Wallace. |
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She couldn't stand it, the way he continue to invade her space and kiss her in such a way that it was more of a chore than meaning. |
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Podding the peas on Christmas morning was usually a shared chore for the family. |
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Today, vocationally oriented students and careerist colleagues make it a chore. |
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Making their job a real chore is the fact that he keeps showing up in Trish's shadow, so smitten is he. |
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The chore of stenography, however, was open to both men and women in the beginning. |
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A particularly hated weekend chore involved the counting and rolling of all the change taken from the machines at the three laundromats he owned. |
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For many, the chore of turning back the clocks this weekend to mark the end of British summer time is one easily forgotten. |
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This chore goes fast and is followed by light pruning for the pheasantwood and rosewood plantings. |
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In my book, a Sunday afternoon jaunt to report on a game at the westerly outpost could only ever be described as a treat, not a chore. |
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It also saved her family the daily washing machine wear and tear, increased water use and the chore of washing and drying nappies regularly. |
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While backing up data may be a minor chore for many, backing up vast quantities of data is a major operation. |
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Measuring the relief of the ocean floor, expressed as the varying depth below sea level, is the chore known as bathymetry. |
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This chore was a bazillion times better than kitchen patrol and each of us coveted it. |
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Even choosing something as mundane as flossing your teeth four times per week can be a real chore if you hate to floss. |
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I'm being spared the chore of unpacking my suitcase this morning, as it's still in transit. |
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Taking some time out from a boring monotonous chore is truly worth all the hard work. |
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He looked forward to a gentle decline into an eccentric and amiable dotage, his twilit years untroubled by chore or challenge. |
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An elderly man who had been mopping around the counter looked up from his tedious chore and smiled at whoever had walked in. |
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But when the filter is in the attic or somewhere else that is fairly inaccessible, this becomes an odious chore that is often left undone. |
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The mundane chore of security by interdiction is morphing into the more difficult task of security by imagination. |
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Huge clusters of thorn bushes, fungus, tree roots and a carpet of dead leaves and pine needles made walking a chore. |
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Naming a brand or a product should not be a chore that produces something dull and average. |
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Laboriously rolling each case on a lube pad was a chore to be avoided but today we can use any of several excellent aerosol case lubes. |
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For many pupils, the school's annual speech day is a chore they would do anything to miss. |
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But relationships with other units and organizations are treated more like a chore. |
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Keeping an administration is a boring chore, but it can be a very useful tool when you work with cats. |
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After breakfast, there are readings of scripture and meditation and after that each embarks on the chore which he has been given responsibility for. |
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Then there is the stuff of workaday journalism, rather like an ordinary meal one has to plough through, a chore worthwhile only for whatever nutritional value there may be. |
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With a party anchored in a strong foundation, the next chore would be to sell Government programmes and what the New Deal has achieved in the past. |
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She took up the miserable chore of attending dodgy networking events, but out of that morass came the character of Tallah. |
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I don't wish for much, and expect less, but as a journalist the most difficult chore in the year is to have to listen to countless colourless and uninformative speeches. |
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It's a chore and a bore and it makes me sore not to mention poor! |
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In the fall, he makes a daily chore out of selecting the best ears to plant the following season and feeding the culled ears to his gestating sows on pasture. |
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For me, it's so much more of a chore or a necessity than a pleasure. |
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Not for her the weekly chore of dividing herself between all her grandchildren, babysitting on Saturday nights and setting up the ironing board while she pays a quick visit. |
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There are stretches where one of his characters speaks or thinks so digressively and apparently irrelevantly that it can be a chore to keep reading. |
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As kids we were drilled constantly in the chore of passing skills. |
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His main chore is checking in on a pair of Japanese restaurants he has invested in. |
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I find clothes shopping the most tedious chore in the world nowadays because you can't find suitable teen work clothes. |
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The doing of the math project should show that this subject does not have to be tedious and a hard chore. |
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Instead of a chore, choose something you love so you absolutely look forward to it. |
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But for it to double its user base from the current level will be quite a chore, and may take several years. |
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Such vehicles, Crawford says, leave us nothing to do, making driving a chore and ultimately yielding a kind of purposelessness. |
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The microvan clearly isn't a chore to drive, exhibiting sharp turn-in and good reflexes on the open road. |
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It was a chore basically and I'm sure all teenagers are the same, she didn't want to do a chore. |
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Like most people, I find shopping in our soulless malls and tatty clone high streets an increasingly tedious chore. |
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High performance, tough-built chore equipment make for a gorgeous, well maintained lawn the whole year through. |
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Therefore, it is essential that your injections do not become a chore, but that they become an integral part of your daily routine. |
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Set priorities for after-school activities, job and chore hours, homework and leisure time. |
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So unless you can retroactively produce babies, which I think is a bit of a scientific chore, the enrolment is going to go down. |
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On a deeper level, it is an important aspect of Yoga not to regard work as a chore, but rather as a tool to increase sensitivity and awareness. |
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The programme had a huge impact on the lives of rural women and girls, who were usually assigned the chore of carrying water for the family. |
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Traditional wells also have no pumps, so women must haul water up by hand in a demanding and time-consuming chore. |
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It is important that students are encouraged to see this as 'their' work and not a chore to be done because the teacher says so. |
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Yet, on virtually all arms, adjusting VTA for the listener is a real chore. |
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It might seem like a chore, but it will definitely pay off in the long run. |
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The chore of fetching water falls chiefly to young girls, which further hinders their education and their development. |
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Researchers must consider it an honour rather than a chore to evaluate an initiative like the EDTCP programme. |
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Others hate cleaning their ovens with a passion reserved for little else, and put this chore off as long as possible, even when they own self-cleaning ovens. |
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I could tell there was a certain vexation that had overcome him, as though talking to me was some sort of obtuse chore and not a pleasant experience. |
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Adam also didn't mind sharing the horse-breaking chore one bit and openly encouraged, coerced and cajoled his younger brother into attempting to outride him. |
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You see my dad retired and... when we got married... and from there on, why, I have kept the records ever since... it's got to be a sort of a family thing, and it's just, it's just a chore that you do every day. |
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Don't let meal planning be a chore for you. |
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He felt put upon if she asked him to do the slightest household chore or to conform to any schedule of meals and sleep. |
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Don't let us spoil the Xmas holidays by a chore as colossal as it is disagreeable, and as disagreeable as it is unnecessary. |
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Shortages of learning materials, inadequate teaching and learning environments, and household chore requirements affect learning conditions, especially for girls from some ethnic groups. |
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Simple tasks such as helping to carry something also became a chore. |
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These gestures, performed with the nonchalance of a daily chore, appeared and disappeared arrhythmically, weaving an intricate texture. |
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In fact, what it has basically said is that it will give this whole chore over to the CRTC and let it decide how it is going to be operated and what it may do. |
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In order to be consistent and continue the physical activity you have selected, two key criteria must be met: you must have fun doing the activity, and it should not be a chore. |
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What might have been considered to be a gap was that both the federal proceeds and the provincial proceeds legislation are premised on proving the substantive offence, which can be a somewhat difficult chore. |
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Once inside the shops, air-conditioning makes the whole experience much more comfortable, but getting from shop to shop can be a chore if you don't pace yourself. |
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Backing up your data is no longer the chore that it once was. |
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Make the chore a lot more fun with a super cute toothbrush holder. |
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With FIE, attorneys are relieved of the time-consuming escrow chore, for which they generally are uncompensated. |
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But things are changing, as the auto industry undergoes radical transformation, fear of terrorism makes air travel a chore, and uncertain energy supplies destabilize the world. |
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Similarly, I learned that studying was a choice, not a chore. |
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Our goal is to provide diary farmers and beef producers with innovative and reliable equipment to mechanize and automate the chore of processing and distributing feed to their herds. |
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The search for an available parking space in downtown areas and parking garages is a nerve-wracking and time-consuming daily chore for drivers. |
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On a daily basis, they are for them, for their kidnappers, for the guerrillas, a tiresome chore, they do not provide any immediate return, and they are an easy target for their irritation. |
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There's never enough money to do it all, and your brilliant idea often sustains so many cuts, it transforms into some craptacular make-do version that's a chore to implement. |
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Excel add-ins speed the chore of finding and deleting Excel links. |
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In my chautauqua days, happily long since passed, I used frequently to misgrace the public platform and it was frequently my pleasant chore to introduce John Mason Brown. |
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Maybe you'll land a part-time position at the snowcone stand, pick up some daytime babysitting jobs or earn dough for your extra around-the-house chore load. |
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One chore for the Bruins will be the hectic schedule, even if UCLA does the expected and begins the tournament with a blowout of the Silverswords. |
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Between meal prep and setting up shop, packing the perfect picnic basket may seem like a chore, but it can be a walk in the park with a few quick tips. |
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Finding a station that pumps CNG can be a chore, especially when the gauge reads zero pressure! |
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When exercise feels like a dreaded chore, our bodies release stress hormones that counteract many of its positive effects. |
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Covert gestures of kindness saved me from trouble, or explained the punctilio of some futile but unavoidable chore. |
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Rowling later said that writing the book was a chore, that it could have been shorter, and that she ran out of time and energy as she tried to finish it. |
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