And one will find that there is no conflict because they all come down to the same thing. |
|
The women's legs go up into big battements, and come down just as straight and deliberately. |
|
Powerful and successful presentations or speeches basically come down to the person doing the presenting or speaking. |
|
The convent building was originally a merchant bank and had come down through their family. |
|
Finally, she was joined by an old bearded tinker who had come down to the shore with his heavy canvas bag of tradesman's tools. |
|
It's only a walk, but couples come down to the water, toeing shells through the sand, the surf through the sound underneath. |
|
We got him out in the 20s with a mistimed shot, but if he had middled the ball, it would have come down in Rawtenstall! |
|
He was a great driver of the ball, but with his irons he didn't come down on a steep enough plane, and he hit these sweeping draws. |
|
It was a little more difficult for the minority leader in the House not to come down hard, but he really didn't have any choice. |
|
Guards on the ground shone a torch in the man's face and eventually persuaded him to come down. |
|
All I can say is the city is on a power trip and they need to come down to earth and see the simpler stuff in life. |
|
For Kierkegaard, the god torn to pieces is Christ, a transcendent God who has come down into the world. |
|
But the adventurous moggy did not want to come down, and proceeded to play a game of cat and mouse with its pursuer. |
|
The side windows in the front come down far enough so I can see my dozer and what is in front of my front wheels. |
|
The Delhi zoo had about 4-5 pairs of black swans, but now their numbers has come down to one male and two females. |
|
Without warning rain began to come down in sheets, blanketing the world in a bleak fog. |
|
My philosophy is normal orthodox philosophy, such as has come down from the Indians through the Greeks, to Spinoza. |
|
I have learned tabla and mridangam from a teacher who had come down to Durban not very long ago. |
|
It is also an opportunity for boaties to come down and see for themselves the abundance of life currently calling Lismore Lake home. |
|
Earnings estimates still have to come down and as a result we are underweight in technology stocks. |
|
|
In the mythologies that have come down to us, many cultures express this as a sexual union. |
|
If he were a batsman, you could bowl him a succession of bouncers and he'd be unlikely to come down the pitch angrily pointing his bat at you. |
|
I see a kid get the ball out of bounds, come down the court going between his legs and behind his back repeatedly without reason. |
|
In this game of snakes and ladders, it is possible to come down a ladder and climb to triumph on the venom of a snake. |
|
Most of our summer visitors are, of course, really nice, sometimes even when they come down from London in a socking big car. |
|
You break pieces off, and one or two of the more co-operative chimps would come down. |
|
Ana and Yu Ching Li sat in the little glassed-in solarium which housed Chin's winter quarters and watched the snow come down. |
|
These people were responsible for spreading a distinctive language, which has come down to us as Breton, and Gaelic. |
|
Firstly, I would just like to say that I had these documents couriered to me yesterday as we were about to leave to come down here. |
|
The cars come down this road very quickly and we have seen quite a few accidents. |
|
This is a series that was expected to come down to the respective bullpens. |
|
It may come down to semantics and splitting hairs, but it doesn't actually say anywhere in the constitution that Japan can't have an army. |
|
In most sports, the difference between success and failure can often come down to an explosive burst of power. |
|
All you are talking about changing is in the region of five to ten votes per ballot box and that's what it will come down to. |
|
We have tea every afternoon and we come down for a bacon butty or something. |
|
On Saturday, my sister, her husband and the sprogs will come down from Cheshire and we'll do lunch again and assorted other stuff. |
|
Magistrates will come down on the side of the tenant for the most spurious reasons. |
|
The fence must come down in the interests of the commonage rights of local farmers and in the interests of the local environment. |
|
I used to stand outside in the dead of winter, waiting for the mailman to come down the block. |
|
So I had to go find a telephone and call the director so that she would come down and escort me in. |
|
|
The mast will not come down until something else has broken because as long as all the stays and such are in place, the mast will stay. |
|
Hey, I'd be the first one to come down off the stage and throw a punch if that were to happen. |
|
Victory will be earned the hard way, and in the end it may come down to the survival of the fittest. |
|
I think when a movement happens, oftentimes it usually doesn't come down to one person. |
|
About 4.30am a truck crashed into a stobie pole, causing power lines to come down. |
|
I don't think the title race will come down to head-to-heads such as yesterday's or the Old Firm encounters. |
|
The next thing I know, the experienced sand casters are begging me to come down to the art room at recess to make another sand casting! |
|
By His precious blood a road was made from Heaven to earth, by which God could come down to man. |
|
If you fancy trying your hand at street hockey then come down and give it a go. |
|
There are huge Douglas firs, cedars, and hemlocks behind us, and cougars come down to the lake to drink. |
|
It may come down to whether he is overawed by both the presence of Woods and the whole Masters occasion. |
|
She knew soon Jose Marcel would come down to the pit and check in with his dealers and meet the high rollers. |
|
So before people throw out their Chelsea boots they should come down and be part of the revival. |
|
Television prices have come down rapidly owing to keen competition in the industry. |
|
The patrol called for backup, entered the campus and hollered for the fellow to come down. |
|
I come down here wrapped in scarves, gloves and winter apparel, wheezing chestily and barely able to speak. |
|
On Fridays the cashier used to come down into the room with a tray holding the wages all packeted up. |
|
Everyone should come down here for a summer holiday to help me ease the homesickness. |
|
On that day, anyone on the housetop who has belongings in the house must not come down to take them away. |
|
Dollarization at current parity would eliminate the currency risk on Argentina's debt so rates could come down. |
|
|
They include those who come down from University with no other qualification than a pass degree and perhaps a Blue, and no prospects whatsoever. |
|
I want names buster or I am going to come down there and personally clean your clock. |
|
A power line had also come down, but the road clearers were able to secure it round a tree. |
|
He wanted to come down to Kent to be nearer his close family and it was a shock when he died so soon afterwards. |
|
There's another myth that Zhao was so lazy and idle that he would only come down to the world on the fifth day of the Chinese Lunar New Year. |
|
There was a fair wind blowing now and the snow was starting to come down again. |
|
I will explain how this came about, since I still cannot believe that I was so incautious as to assent when the Lord asked me to come down. |
|
They succeeded in knocking a hole in one wall, but still the building wouldn't come down. |
|
The old Victorian buildings have since come down amid plans for a business park which would create 1,200 office jobs, and a new sports centre. |
|
And the fact that one brick or two bricks are unconstitutional doesn't mean the entire structure ought to come down. |
|
There are still a few old industrial buildings to come down, but eventually the area will be a blend of residential and recreational facilities. |
|
It happened this morning, and now officials are worried more of that building could come down. |
|
Never in my wildest imagination did I think these buildings were going to come down. |
|
This exercise could no doubt produce different answers but, for my own part, I come down decisively on the side of the plaintiff. |
|
I have come down in favour of passing the bill, and I have advised the Progressives to come down in favour of passing it. |
|
This film's characters don't develop and, in a crystal meth haze, they never quite come down from their high. |
|
Has the country come down from its collective trip down memory lane after last weekend's outdoor hockey extravaganza in Edmonton? |
|
New pillowtop mattresses, fleece blankets and moldable pillows await after you come down from your caffeine high. |
|
I did come down pretty hard on her illegal drug use, so I can evaluate her response to that in order to gauge the rest. |
|
One kind of crime the former drugs squad officer is determined to come down on heavily, he warned, is the pushing of illegal drugs. |
|
|
In my view the outcome will come down to who wants the victory most, and I feel we do. |
|
Given the soft ground, in the end it will come down to which horse is fittest and wants it most. |
|
We had been told that in the last part of the race it would come down to who wanted it more. |
|
Still, some experts say prices will have to come down before in-flight Web use becomes widespread. |
|
By Friday night Lucy had come down with a terrible illness that kept her feverishly in bed on Saturday, Sunday and Monday. |
|
The earliest collections of Aesopian fables which have come down to us, though, date from the first centuries of the Common Era. |
|
Rain is continuing to come down across the region, with reports of hail the size of 20 cent pieces. |
|
I don't mean to come down too hard, because they still know how to deliver a good piledriving riff. |
|
I spoke to a few of the lads that I knew at Dewsbury and they encouraged me to come down. |
|
But when the Goddess was invoked by the priestess, I felt what I had always experienced as the Holy Spirit come down. |
|
The insitutor of it was the great prophet Elias, who three times made fire come down from heaven to punish the Idolaters. |
|
Heavy bars, however, may come down and conk you in the head so keep your hand on the bar to be safe. |
|
Mayor Frank knew the bloke was a plonko come down to the river bank to avoid the authorities. |
|
In this area, we quickly come down to moral intuitions and visceral reactions. |
|
It's always very interesting to see how the ranch air invigorates people when they come down from Washington. |
|
Because the issues of censorship are so convoluted and complicated I find it difficult to come down completely on one side or the other. |
|
Then we would come down behind the net, making a noise and splashing the water to move the flounder. |
|
But when we come down to driving the business and pushing performance, we bring everybody into the fold. |
|
On balance, I think I would have to come down on the side of mercy and forgiveness. |
|
But the debate format has forced both men to come down from their pedestals. |
|
|
Normally, the hospital beds for infants are big cribs, but the sides come down so you can examine the baby and take care of them. |
|
Will you please go tell Mara and that foxy chick you're with to come down for dinner? |
|
It's going to come down to how your behind looks when you pour yourself into them. |
|
She explains that the animals instinctively know when the tide is ebbing, and thus when to come down to the shore to graze. |
|
They all went down to the quay to greet the boat and the first person to come down the gangplank was a Corkman. |
|
The point of attaching the parachute bridle to the carabineer is that then you can dangle from the hang glider as you come down under chute. |
|
At the press of a button the user can ascend the rope and then come down just as quickly. |
|
I'll be jokin' it up at THE SOCIAL tonight with a great lineup so why not come down? |
|
But in default of any further explanation this would come down to saying merely that he did know them, but not by any ordinary means. |
|
I waited for a few girls to come down the stairs, smiled distractedly at their approving glances, and then hurried upstairs. |
|
Just five or ten years ago, the potato men would have come down this street in a wooden wagon pulled by a horse. |
|
Falling trees don't come down slow and graceful but crash very fast, and there's no time to jump out of the way. |
|
So I think with some reluctance, with some diffidence, I come down on the positive side of the question. |
|
If we were in too much of a hurry to come down, we would greet you with a friendly dip of the wing. |
|
Similarly, oxygen level had come down substantially in the lake also due to discharge of contaminated water into it. |
|
Feeder streams come down from the low surrounds of heather, and are nicely ducted under the track. |
|
But the market has come down so much that even a double dip may be discounted. |
|
Helping the poor and the downtrodden is a precept that has come down as a tradition well-remembered on Baisakhi day. |
|
Past the flailing dramatics it will come down to a well-placed drop-step or well-timed tip-in. |
|
Much of our evidence for ancient philosophy has a similarly accidental quality, and has come down to us in fragments. |
|
|
Junkies die by injecting jellies into a vein, and they take it regularly as a come down from ecstasy or heroin. |
|
There, it was speed and ecstasy, followed by Valium and jellies to come down. |
|
The Berlin Wall had come down, the Sandinistas had lost power in Nicaragua. |
|
When a pregnant woman does come down with chickenpox, she can be treated with the oral antiviral drug acyclovir to help ease symptoms. |
|
You come down through the backwash, you stick your rail in the backwash and do the best you can. |
|
For goodness sake, give it a rest and come down off your moralistic and judgmental perch. |
|
She'd been in Delhi all these years, and had just recent come down to Mumbai for a visit to her folks. |
|
The word was that an order had come down from the White House that the Pentagon's contingency planning was to be shelved immediately. |
|
The office block will soon face a wrecking ball as it and a clump of other buildings between it and Lombard Street come down. |
|
We ordered them to come down from the mountains fearlessly and peacefully, reinhabit the country and rebuild their houses. |
|
At suitable sites, mist nets are strung up, and traps laid that harmlessly snare the birds as they come down to roost or rest. |
|
Does the Holy Spirit and fire ever need to come down in our houses of worship? |
|
The man eventually agreed to come down after more than 16 hours sitting aloft in freezing temperatures and rain. |
|
Growth had been expected to come down during the year, because of tougher year-on-year comparisons. |
|
He admitted that although overall crime levels had come down, the fear of crime had not. |
|
Councillors ruled last year that they were detrimental to visual amenity and had to come down. |
|
It was an ode to peace in English requesting Lord Krishna to come down to earth and resolve the conflicts of the world. |
|
Bhagiratha is the legendary king whose devotion made the Ganges consent to come down to the Earth. |
|
I said to the players after the game that it had come down to a lick of paint. |
|
The order to come down, however, never reached many of the men who had climbed the staircases of the North Tower. |
|
|
In the great Chaplin-versus-Keaton debate that's been roiling for decades among cinephiles, I come down firmly on the Chaplin side. |
|
Of course the house was still standing after Bruce's encore so it didn't literally come down. |
|
Are you two expecting room service or are you going to come down for dinner? |
|
Finally, Ms Earle says human rights lawyers must come down from their lofty perches. |
|
The Book of Kells is one of the great masterpieces that has come down to us from a period often referred to as the Dark Ages. |
|
No other work of Euripides has come down to us with so many distortions and has undergone so many atheteses as Iphigenia at Aulis. |
|
It will almost certainly come down to a choice between which of two groups of advisers you choose to believe. |
|
You think it's going to come down to procreating to ensure the future of saneness? |
|
I was just knocking it out with a sand wedge and hit a good shot, but lost the ball in mid-air and didn't see it come down. |
|
To all who have come down here today to witness this very, very important occasion, I say tena koutou. |
|
In the end, it will all come down to clever marketing of the brand extension. |
|
But researchers say costs will come down rapidly over the next decade or so as engineers perfect and mass-market the devices. |
|
From their accents, it was apparent that they'd come down from Scotland to take part in the event. |
|
I heard today that some of the men have come down with the measles and some have died from it. |
|
Well, lemme get my room first and then, I'll come down to meet everyone. |
|
He pointed out that fishermen may have to come down to a quay to check their boats and equipment in bad weather, but may not travel in a vehicle transporting goods. |
|
Very often when this happens I'll come down with a heavy cold or something a few days later but sometimes it just can't be pinned on anything in particular. |
|
In a fight full of trash-talking and taunting, Jones appeared tired early, and said having to lose weight to come down from heavyweight took its toll. |
|
We did not come down in the last shower like that junior member did. |
|
I may look young for my age, but I didn't come down in the last shower. |
|
|
It didn't come down, but everything in the room was disarranged. |
|
This is, more or less, the position of political conservatives, who have come down firmly on the side of the fracking industry. |
|
We've been there and looked through the window when a pair of bright parrots, never seen before in the garden, come down to the bird bath to drink and splash. |
|
Otherwise, they might be stationed at sites where they would come down with a case of anthrax or botulism before encountering an American daisy-cutter. |
|
In the break they'd come down bright-eyed and smiling to view our work. |
|
With the technology that's come down, it is driving us crazy. |
|
Browser preference might come down to how many times you want to slip your headset on and off. |
|
Their regional rivals are the nomadic Missiriya tribe, who come down from the north into Abyei so their cattle can graze. |
|
In his situation, many a man has come down with the trembles. |
|
With their wet, bare feet, swimmers are more likely to come down with athlete's foot than other athletes, especially during the hot, summer months. |
|
Shadows offered only meagre protection, but it was protection I was thankful for as I listened to her footsteps come down the hall toward me, the steps slow and measured. |
|
With the areas marked blue signifying the safe areas to train and red marking the no-go areas, the map looked like it had come down with a bad rash. |
|
All of this intelligence had come down to us through the grapevine. |
|
Orders to the units would come down in English, but they still needed to be translated into Spanish, Tagalog, or any of the other dialects used by commonwealth troops. |
|
Every now and then, a talent scout from one of the galleries in NYC would come down and see if they could find their next celebrity for the art world. |
|
It was really good fun and to come down to a photo finish is amazing. |
|
One of the most respected analysts in his field, he has predicted that the housing market is due to come down to the ground with a bump and, more than once, he has been wrong. |
|
The large food retailers are going global, and as barriers to trade come down, the economics ate determining where the investment and trade take place. |
|
He climbed back onto his horse, feeling the sleet come down on him again. |
|
Just as the two lady golfers teed off at the tenth hole, they heard a loud bang and saw the helicopter come down over the beach and fall on the rocks. |
|
|
Yet for all the hullabaloo about outside groups, the race may simply come down to old-fashioned retail politics. |
|
The Environment Agency has given them a new permit to carry on burning tyres at the site, but has said emissions of noxious gases from the giant chimney must come down. |
|
She is a staunch lady who didn't come down in the last shower. |
|
Rose would scold her about ruining her frock, Bethamy would be in a fluster about how unsafe it was and Elizabeth would want her to come down before they had a fight about it. |
|
It is acknowledged, that in the end, in Web page design, decisions can come down to a compromise between the aesthetics and search engine visibility. |
|
They received a letter of reply saying their help was very welcome, and to come down and pay them a visit. |
|
It is also thought that she mistook barrage balloons for ones marking the City of London and decided to bail out thinking she would come down on dry land. |
|
The record of the passion of St. Perpetua, St. Felicity and their companions is one of the greatest hagiological treasures that have come down to us. |
|
The BCA's and Cochran's positions basically come down to pressuring college administrators into allowing more African Americans to lead their teams on the gridiron. |
|
I was living there then, and he had come down to run a Buddhist service in Clearwater. |
|
If we see any trouble at all, we'll radio you, or come down to help you. |
|
All in all, the night was nearly impossible to come down from. |
|
They come down to the river to see me, all wearing their finely plaited split-bamboo hats, which afford them excellent protection from the sun and rain. |
|
She was thankful Anne had come down with a head ache and had declined to go to dinner or else she was sure her aunt would be having conniptions at her behavior. |
|
In the US, stallion fees for new sires have come down significantly. |
|
Electrolux says prices could come down as production is ramped up. |
|
There is a cartoon on the reception desk which depicts Santa, having come down the chimney, looking at a plate of food which has been left out for him. |
|
He had come down and explained to the select committee that New Zealand was on the verge of developing a massive export market in manuka and kanuka products. |
|
The fence itself took less than three minutes to come down as people attacked what was widely perceived to be an affront to freedom of assembly and speech. |
|
The episode of Alexander's interview with the gymnosophists has come down to us in several versions, among which the one in Plutarch's Vita Alexandri is the most renowned. |
|
|
To that end, and perhaps to curry favor with sitting leaders, Kadyrov has come down harshly against the Arab Spring. |
|
In our submission, that is not obvious from a reading of the various decisions of the High Court which have come down in favour of not disturbing such verdicts. |
|
On the Web, those kinds of one-way relationships come down a notch. |
|
Today Maddow concedes that occasionally she must come down off her trapeze and strut in the sawdust with the rest of the circus. |
|
Apparently the building is full of dry rot and has to come down. |
|
Cochran had come down with some nasty throat bug and his voice was low and scratchy, but that only made it better. |
|
Their collective failings come down to message discipline, candidate selection, and voter targeting. |
|
A local recently told the Heritage Trust that she saw the aircraft come down in the sea, and later saw the pilot sitting on the wing waiting to be rescued. |
|
They come down to flat ground and just implode, or smash into a tree. |
|
The police were overhead in a helicopter trying to persuade the young man to come down. |
|
Although across the industry the price has come down, composites still cost about 15 percent to 20 percent more than treated Southern yellow pine, according to Bizzarri. |
|
We got the bottle of vodka, come down the creek and let's get smashed! |
|
As winter's storm windows come down, it's time to let the outdoor air in. |
|
The level of hard work and commitment put in over the past few months had come down to the crunch and true to form, both communities lived up to their full potential. |
|
But why do you come down to our mere mortal plain in this weather, angel? |
|
As more come down with the flu, I suspect the reassurance will become more challenging. |
|
Stockton Council can now come down harder when tackling problems such as fly-tipping, fly-posting, graffiti and dumped vehicles. |
|
The damage sustained in the fire is so great that the whole building will have to come down. |
|
Wait for the temperature to come down to a reasonable level before touching the lid. |
|
Yes sir, at one minute after midnight, that holiday was over, donezo, finished, and it was time for the tree to come down. |
|
|
Should it come down to the final hole, as two of the three playoff tournaments have, that could very well stop some channel surfers in midclick. |
|
The Marine Corps colonel in the area saw the Saddam statue as a target of opportunity and decided that the statue must come down. |
|
And I am determined that the use of stop and search must come down, become more targeted and lead to more arrests. |
|
The stick may also be used to block and to tackle, although a player may not come down on an opponent's stick, a practice called hacking. |
|
After 18 April he did not come down to the ground floor but still came out of bed to lie on the sofa. |
|
After the War it was learned that a third bomber had come down in the Netherlands as a result of damage inflicted during the raid. |
|
It will make long detours rather than come down to the ground and expose itself to danger. |
|
I'm on the pat and mick at the mo. Only went to town to see my mother off on the train, as she'd come down for the weekend to cheer me up. |
|
Completely normal men who develop prostatitis will suddenly come down with urinary paruresis as one of their symptoms. |
|
However, some Inuit believed that the lights were more sinister and if you whistled at them, they would come down and cut off your head. |
|
Schouten has got the credit for it, and thus the voyage has come down to us under his name. |
|
Note also that many of the words have come down to Modern English in their unmetathesized forms. |
|
In theory, high unemployment should temper inflation, as consumers pull the reins in on spending and prices come down. |
|
When I saw him, he was wired to the moon. He didn't come down for two days. |
|
Take the latest bill to come down the pike, a proposal to anesthetize fetuses before they are aborted. |
|
And if the plane does come down unexpectedly on an ice floe north of Greenland, they are the ones who are supposed to save us. |
|
And he has no plans to kick up a fuss if Roberto Di Matteo decides to come down hard on him. |
|
Ultimately though it could all come down to who turns sponge, caramel, choux pastry and petits fours into a real showstopper. |
|
Prices of some of the made-up products have come down by as much as 20 to 22 percent. |
|
But it would all come down to a 47-yard field goal attempt by Norwood. |
|
|
If they agree to launch their own BOGOF to Hunger schemes, I will personally come down and work on the checkouts for them. |
|
Those who try to think and act politically and, thereby think and act invitationally, come down on the side of greatness, courage, and autonomy. |
|
We asked John if he wanted to come down the pub with us, but he couldn't be arsed. |
|
They even come down to Shelburne at our peak holidays to dress and pack teddy bears for shipment. |
|
Kannada actor Nenapirali Prem has come down heavily upon Jnanpith awardee Chandrashekar Kambar for supporting dubbing in films. |
|
The Justice Secretary was full of his usual bluster yesterday, yet we urge him to come down from his ivory tower. |
|
Morgay is sad when it is time to come down from the mountain, but he believes some part of his spirit will remain on top of the mountain forever. |
|
Prices have come down on all the essential items in your dream home theater. |
|
He was almost done with the paper, but tomorrow's due date meant it would come down to the wire. |
|
He needs to come down from his ivory tower and listen to people. |
|
It helped create a niche which allowed a small tree shrew to come down to the ground and evolve into the human race. |
|
Then I got a bad lie and was trying to just come down as steep as I could and ended up hitting it right out of the hosel. |
|
The biggest change to come down the pike in recent years has been the single car-pool lane on the southbound I-405 through the Sepulveda Pass. |
|
We have noted the rejection of the Diatessaron by the early church in favour of the multiple traditions that have come down to us in the four canonical gospels. |
|
No one has come down but on the other hand no one was invited, none of these people grown so distant from him and Martha in the tightly circumvallated world. |
|
There was a conveyer belt and when all the reporters finished filing their stories, their tapes would come down the belt and I would have to demagnetize them all. |
|
Alfred Stieglitz was the best photographer ever to come down the pike. |
|
Some day, when you are tired of London, come down to Treadley, and expound to me your philosophy of pleasure over some admirable Burgundy I am fortunate enough to possess. |
|
Back in the day we'd get elocution classes where senior Radio Four presenters would come down from London and give us in-house training in how to annunciate properly. |
|
With which intolerable pains if the party shriek or cry out, they roar out as loud to him to confess the truth, or else he shall come down with a vengeance. |
|
|
False love, I bego, I bego. Ere something still worse come down. |
|
So we just phoned Dave up and said 'Look, come down, let's see how this works out', and everyone loved what we were doing, so we decided to stay with him. |
|
Perhaps it will come down to a difference of say ten votes, or maybe less. |
|
Huntingdonshire District Council for example said that the time taken to search for information attached to addresses has come down from 10 minutes to 1 minute. |
|
Georgia's not a very good correspondent, which is perfectly reasonable at her age, but she didn't come down for half term and then she didn't come for Easter either. |
|
Venerable men! you have come down to us from a former generation. |
|
That is a carom-shot criticism of the administration, which has come down with a case of the diplomatic flu known as international conference-itis. |
|
The crews for different movies would all come down to the bar at night. |
|
Al Ghais says wild caracals live in mountain caves and only come down when snakes, lizards, rats and other typical prey became scarce in their habitat. |
|
There is some confusion about this work since the original has disappeared, and scholars have assumed that what has come down to us is not by Mozart. |
|
This compilation of animated short subjects proves the point, particularly apropos as we come down the stretch of the latest race for the White House. |
|
Again if he ruffs he is endplayed, if he throws his last heart he is thrown in with a trump and so he has to come down to the singleton king of clubs. |
|