We are going there to get a result but we will really have to dig deep to come away from there with a victory. |
|
Sure, Lewis is a bit narky during the interview, but I come away feeling quite sorry for her. |
|
Efforts to ascertain concrete information are met with bland replies and you come away none the wiser. |
|
This is a twenty some mile trip, it isn't cheap, but I'll eat my sombrero if you manage to do it and then come away unamazed and undelighted. |
|
Despite his ability for discernment and honesty, you still come away thinking he is stuck in a life of cliched fixations. |
|
The Gazette is also sure that such an observer would come away with the impression that some sort of solution is needed. |
|
In gem shops I am revealed as a total tyre-kicker in the consumption race and I come away empty-handed. |
|
Racegoers attending this years Galway festival could come away winning or sharing in one of the big Tote Jackpot pools. |
|
The standard of golf was generally very high, so to come away with fifth is not a disgrace. |
|
You come away from the recording of these two complete suites with great respect for the young Frenchman's musicality and technical facility. |
|
The other impression I have come away with is that the Dutch are generally physically imposing. |
|
They've come away on a windy day with a result, but we should be larruping people like that. |
|
They come away with an appreciation of their planet and the complex systems on Earth that support human habitability. |
|
This will be a tough grand prix, but we'll do our best to come away with another positive result for the team. |
|
It is also a good time to send a note and other items of need with the book, you could come away with a pen pal. |
|
If you come away with a glimpse of the goal for better airmanship, Davisson feels like he's done his job. |
|
You will come away energized and motivated and networked and connected and ready to push your company to places it wouldn't go before. |
|
There are areas in the house that have had no wiring in the wall and they've just come away, the gib's come away from the frame. |
|
All the guys that have flown the aeroplane come away with the same impression. |
|
They will come away, as I did, with a pretty good idea of what the field of forensic geology is all about. |
|
|
Maybe if she'd rung a bell I could have stepped out of her way and come away with just a close call instead. |
|
She was hanging on to my arm, but one of the teachers got her to come away by persuading her to go and read a book. |
|
We've had three tough games on the bounce but only come away with a point, which just isn't good enough. |
|
The careless, the casual, the thoughtless reader will come away from them no wiser than he was before. |
|
We know, too, how often we have come away from their meetings with a feeling of incompletion, of non-participation. |
|
Both wings had come away from the fuselage, and other parts of the aircraft were heavily damaged by the impact with the trees and the ground. |
|
As a result, Canadians come away from a visit to Canada's Capital feeling more connected to other Canadians. |
|
But when you're in the room with him, I believe that any trying to be objective person would come away with the impression, one, this is not a dumb person. |
|
Having shown good pace all weekend, the speedy young Malaysian was understandably disappointed to come away from Thruxton with just a brace of 11 th place finishes. |
|
Surprisingly light in texture, and the flakes come away in one piece. |
|
Secondly, the lower eyelid has rounded and come away from the eyeball. |
|
What image are you hoping people who pick up this book and read it, come away with? |
|
Did you come away liking him or less after everything you learned and after all your dealings with him? |
|
He had just interviewed the Prime Minister and had come away from Number 10 Downing Street convinced that the Labour leader was just about kaput politically. |
|
I acknowledge, at the very least, that the hon. member for Durham has visited Prince Rupert and has come away with some good points. |
|
Anyone who had spent any time with Bert would come away with a far better understanding of agriculture, most especially the cattle business. |
|
Anyone examining the issue in any detail would come away with fairly negative results. |
|
This was the time to share our knowledge, our successes, our failures, we come away with new working methods that we exchange with others. |
|
Participants learn how to work with specific interactive software and come away with their own fully licensed copy. |
|
Then keep notes at the meeting so that you come away with an accurate account of what was decided. |
|
|
Additionally it shows that Atlantic Canadian companies can enter one of the world's most sought after markets and come away with deals. |
|
And all this leads me to believe very firmly that we can make the most of change and come away with a healthier environment and a strong economy. |
|
If they do, then there's every chance we'll come away with a win-win result for all concerned. |
|
We knew that the game against Spain would be very important, and we wanted to come away with three points. |
|
You will come away from this session rethinking much of what you do in human resources management. |
|
You'll learn more about our products and come away with oodles of ideas, each as delicious as the next! |
|
But we come away from the experience convinced that MWC's decision to send us to be with the Zimbabwe church during those days was a good one. |
|
It develops partnerships in such a way that both parties come away having gained something. |
|
We will come away from the Barcelona Congress with stronger definition of our respective roles, responsibilities and expectations. |
|
That is why the EU has come away virtually empty-handed from the negotiations on designations and services. |
|
Moreover, in store rooms and sales outlets a label can come away and get lost, and sometimes be reapplied to a different tyre. |
|
It is because it is a package that there is hope to come away successfully from the upcoming confrontation. |
|
The four engines, complete with propellers, were still attached to the plane but had come away from their mounting to rest on the undulating reef. |
|
And I come away from our conversations feeling far more energised and enthused than I do when talking to pretty young things who should, in theory, be more enticing. |
|
What people will be able to come away with is how do I feel about somebody I painted. |
|
Pick it up, flip through it, dip into the story at any point and you will come away better informed and surprisingly entertained by his sharp mind and punk sense of humour. |
|
Of the ones sitting down the middle man was bald as a coot, his whole head shining with a sweat I thought would come away on my hand like coconut oil. |
|
It is a position where all parties come away with their own victories and do not see the other party putting the boot in and taking all the profit themselves at their expense. |
|
Many of your stories are very visual, and readers come away with a surrealist image. |
|
It was so disappointing to lose the way we did because we worked as hard as we possibly can and when we come away with nothing it really does bite. |
|
|
You were forced to come away from the drama and conclude that while detention works for some, it only makes others into hardened career criminals. |
|
If the person answering the phone sounds like they're falling asleep or are having a bad day, then the customer may come away with a negative feeling about your dealership. |
|
They will come away, if that happens, with nothing at all. |
|
This is the second year I have this experience at ATSA and like last year I come away with the feeling of having been with a family with all its foibles, all the grumpiness, the jokes, the love, the merriment. |
|
What do you hope readers will come away with after they finish The Remedy? |
|
And is that what you want readers of your book to come away with? |
|
Whitechapel, he considered, had been much belied, and many of his fellow countrymen had come away from it with preposterous stories of murder and misery. |
|
The meeting worked hard to clarify what flagships are, what it means to coordinate them and gave opportunity for participants to come away with better knowledge of each one. |
|
Good sentences bump against bad ones and come away unbruised. |
|
Students who read this text should come away with a clear idea of many of the tasks they will be expected to perform as paralegals. |
|
That these men have withstood sexual contact with women and have come away unfeminized solidifies their masculinity. |
|
The result is that someone who had not watched the debates would have come away from watching the post-debate coverage thinking that these women were perhaps a little bit too much on the attack. |
|
The granting of loans is the most interesting part of my profession: we research, analyze, gather together and handle customer information to come away with our decisions based on all of this research. |
|
I was proud of the effort and there were lots of positives but to come away with nothing is an absolute ballbreaker. |
|
When you look at the ratio of throw-ins, corners and attempts on goal we had, we should have come away from Cheltenham 4-1 or 5-1,'' added Legg. |
|
We come away from these experiences exhilarated. |
|
While northern parks receive fewer visitors than parks with road access, those that are able to spend time in these parks come away with extraordinary and memorable experiences. |
|
Any stranger who travels the highways of Canada this summer might well come away with the impression that, beneath their stolid exterior, Canadians actually form a vast tribe of footloose nomads. |
|
I'm confident it will build on last year's success and participants will again come away with enhanced knowledge, improved capacity and stronger partnerships that will lead to prosperous communities. |
|
We hope visitors to the cottage will come away with a clearer understanding of the aspects of Lincoln's leadership that shaped his decision making. |
|
|
In Thailand he had come away from his meeting with the Minister of Foreign Affairs convinced that it was only a matter of time before the Government of Thailand decided to accede to the Statute. |
|
We come away from reading each stanzaic block of sonorous words and phrases feeling that her sound-play is a near equivalent to perfect pitch in music. |
|
You'll be hard pushed to find him, but after wandering for several hours through the forest floor, you'll come away addictively whistling his call. |
|
And if they come away with some sort of injury from aggressive dancing or crowd surfing, that only improves their overall concertgoing experience. |
|
He goes to the park to come away from the hustle and bustle of the city. |
|
Think of the people who come away dissatisfied with the consultation but shy away from returning for another for fear of looking like a fool or a pesterer. |
|