Very occasionally the mood changes and suddenly it come over all delicate, with an almost feathery touch. |
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If anyone wants to come over to my house in a cute nursey outfit and tend to me, I would be most appreciative. |
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One rainy day, she asked Ryan to come over and they sat in the garden, under the shelter of a gazebo. |
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I wouldn't be without my Sky Plus, but I do occasionally come over all nostalgic when I think about old-time television. |
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How long she was enthralled in the mental haze that had come over her, she couldn't say. |
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I just thought of her that way whilst writing that and have come over all strange and nauseous. |
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Please, I swear on my honor that if you come over I won't do anything to hurt you. |
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He wants the horse doctor to hurry up and come over so that he can pilfer some horse tranquilizers. |
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He kept asking me to come over to his dorm for hot passion and the time of my life. |
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So whenever people come over here to hunt buffalo, they can have our hunting grounds. |
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He waved at me as if he knew me already and coaxed me to come over and talk to him for while. |
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We are watching for the colder air to come over the warmer waters of the Great Lakes. |
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Well, how about I come over, and coincidently arrive the same time he does to give you your shoes or something? |
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A drowning sensation began to come over me, purely as a result of the way my throat began choking up, and my eyes became glazed over with liquid. |
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She winced slightly and glanced regretfully down at the soda in her hand as a familiar feeling began to come over her. |
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Rebecca jotted it down and agreed to come over to Mark's house in about fifteen minutes. |
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He apologised for putting me off so long but asked if I could come over to Manchester the next day. |
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For example, if he noticed that I had dressed carelessly or improperly, he would come over and rearrange my shirt, adjust my robe and so on. |
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She asked me to come over and join her, and I looked into flights and visas and everything. |
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And then he'd come over, and she'd reddened, feeling as if he'd been able to see where her thoughts had been to. |
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If you want to ditch school and come over to hang out with me, they why should I stop you? |
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I had this calm sense come over me as I was getting up to walk towards the alley, towards, towards the foul line. |
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Still, it's remarkable how far dubs of Asian films have come over the past few years. |
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So what I meant was you should come over to ma crib so we can have us a party dis Friday. |
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I occasionally come over all gushy at the sight of the London traffic report. |
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What that means in layman's terms is that clouds of vapor could come over the edge of the crater, roll down the sides of the volcano. |
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She motioned for two women, one with frosted hair and the other wearing a leotard that had a lightning bolt sewn across the front, to come over. |
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The Professor had come over and whispered discreetly that he'd like to see me in his office once I was done for the day. |
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Bronze, pewter and antiqued gold are all in the fashion frame, too, and will come over as breathtakingly sophisticated at any age. |
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Some find such festivals an opportunity for judges to go on an ego trip, and to be frank, some judges sometimes come over that way. |
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I suppose he was wanting to come over all ridgy-didge but, strike me pink, instead he ends up looking a right galah. |
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I ran up the stairs at full speed and knocked on his door, remembering the last time that I'd come over unannounced like this. |
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The other two, by contrast, sometimes come over as the Don Kings of rugby, such is their desire to hog the limelight. |
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They lived in military housing, and his stepfather invited a lot of the single sailors to come over for cookouts and parties. |
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Your photos and commentary makes me wish I could just hop on a plane and come over to take a look-see for myself. |
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One day little sister called and asked me to come over to check the wedding invitations. |
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One night, my parents ask Grandpa to come over and babysit while they go see Chuck Berry at the Westbury Music Fair. |
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But when the wind is backed slightly towards the northwest the winds come over a longer stretch of the North Sea bringing more cloud. |
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I eventually gave up and called a priest to come over and exorcise the demonic spirits. |
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I love it when my friends come over to my house and they bring their baseball gloves. |
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And after catching the vicar's eye once again, he relented and beckoned to him to come over and join them, which he did with alacrity. |
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Upon its completion in 1885 an invitation was extended to the neighbouring Davos tobogganers to come over for a race. |
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Some distant bell tolled the hour of Vespers, causing an expression of immense relief to come over Stephen's face. |
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The woman is over here from Ireland for the wake, she explains, and she just had to come over and talk. |
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He says a cable guy buddy of his just got done with a job and is going to come over and help him. |
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We regret to interrupt your daily information consumption, but terrible news has come over the wire. |
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People are quite shocked when they realise I'm a little old biddy with quite a lot of ill health, because I don't come over like that. |
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Occasionally my friend Sarah would come over, but she lived a while away and couldn't drive, so that was never too often. |
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The old trout has decided to come over for a few days in Singapore, which she still believes is a British colony. |
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I want to call her and tell her to come over, but I wonder what she would do if she found out I had pulled a sickie. |
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Crucially, all four members get a chance to address the crowd on their own, and they come over as decent blokes for the most part. |
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Strangely though, this doesn't come over as frosty or nihilistic, but harmless and complaisant. |
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And with this revelation she felt a new feeling come over her, a surprising tenderness that sprung from old memories unforgotten. |
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At one point, during a picnic in the garden, we had a fox come over and beg for scraps. |
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Even my parents have come over to the plastic side, with their fibre optic tree and tasteful glow-in-the-dark cherub ornaments. |
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I feel the coldness once again come over me, then I feel the pain from the countless bruises over my body, and the bleeding from my head. |
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I was dossing around in London and someone at the hostel mentioned this bloke who had just come over from the States and could really play the guitar. |
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The results reflected the change that has come over Indian morale and training since the grim days of 1962, when the Chinese walked all over them. |
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I subsequently had a look and there were about 60 slugs from an air gun, all over the place on my property, the trajectory of which had obviously come over the kindergarten. |
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Later, after dirk refuses to service Christine, she calls up every man in her phone until someone will come over and pleasure her. |
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He called up his mother, the dowager countess, and asked her to come over and look after the children. |
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Actually, I'd been woken from my second sleep, having got up before light to do a bit of writing, come over all tired and weary, and slipped back for a bit of a zizz. |
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Costley, however, does not come over as any rheumy romantic. |
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The river had come over its banks several times more since the big flood, and was up again today, and heavy rainfall lay on the surface rather than draining away. |
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Olwyn had come over from Paris in September 1963 to help with the children until Ted sorted things out. |
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Eventually he did and was foolish enough to come over for a tickle. |
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An uneasy feeling began to come over him as he sat up straight in his bed. |
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Scots may want to come over all Runrig bestriding mighty crags, but they are really Arab Straps, moaning about damp and impotence in provincial housing schemes. |
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Then why did you come over here to Georgia and start acting so biggity? |
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She began to tremble violently as she felt an odd sensation come over her. |
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Mistress smiled kindly and coaxingly asked me to come over to her. |
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She fell back onto the floor, and began to let darkness come over her. |
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The same cannot be said for many of the other joke-tellers who suddenly come over all authorial and decide it's time to express themselves artistically. |
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Improbably, they even got one Republican to come over to their side. |
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I thought that they did not take it as seriously as rumor said they did, or else that they would see the justice of our cause and come over to our side at once. |
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The waiting forces are awed by his majesty and come over to his side. |
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Over there, in the snugs that line the wall, they will be sipping cosmopolitans, waiting for someone interesting to come over and start a conversation. |
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One of the great changes that have come over Australia in the last six months is that people do feel able to speak a little more freely and openly about how they feel. |
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Happily, Monsieur Maspero was on his dahabeah at Luxor, and, as soon as I reached mine, I wrote him a note asking him to come over and see something worth looking at. |
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I felt my anger ebb away and a feeling of shame come over me. |
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An unearthly calm seemed to come over him then, and there was a feeling of deadly malice, of hate and violence radiating from him that made her flinch from his stare. |
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Ursula was in for news again so we had a good gossip before the show and during the travel news, and sorted out a weekend for her to come over for dinner. |
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He'd come over to confront Stan and Tiny and to tell them exactly what he thought of their effrontery, but held back the accusation for want of proof. |
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She grounded me, and told me I had to come over and apologise. |
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He does admit that some dogs might be a little pickier than others and says that other companies often add sugar, garlic, and salt to their dog food to get Rover to come over. |
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It is late at night, and Bill has come over for chow mein and chop suey. |
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While we were talking, one of the chows, the rusty one, had come over to me and I was absently petting him. |
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When her friends come over, she lets them hold her rosy boa to help them overcome any fears they might have, she said. |
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Many found work in the mills and factories and encouraged other family members to come over as there were jobs waiting for them. |
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When foreigners come over here, we don't Japanize, Germanize or otherize for their benefit. |
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Why don't we ask him and his ladies to come over in a family way and dine with some other plain country gentlefolks? |
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If you want a one-on-one pregnancy class, you can just come over to the crib, talk it over with my mom, tell you wassup. |
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And that person who house-sits for employees the day the cable guy is supposed to come over? |
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Polar bears occasionally come over from Greenland, but they are just visitors, and no Icelandic populations exist. |
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She likes a bit of bling and the thought of all those yards of tulle and handsewn sequins makes her come over all peculiar. |
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For those, who are come over to the royal party, are consequently supposed to be out of gunshot. |
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He signaled for me to come over, but I was no cockblocker or third party, so I didn't move. |
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At the second night, the relatives who have been notified would come over to eat rice with Doufu, and accompany the dead for the whole night. |
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Deleting her will come over as a deliberate diss so I can understand his reticence. |
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In Hope of Liberty reminds us how far we have come over the past thirty-eight years in fleshing out this complex narrative. |
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The court heard the mother of three had come to the UK in 1980, having come over as a Vietnamese boat person. |
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In 1647, Hobbes took up a position as mathematical instructor to the young Charles, Prince of Wales, who had come over from Jersey around July. |
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In any trouble, such as was this about the necklace, there would come over his face a look of weakness which betrayed the want of real inner strength. |
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I don't mean to come over all horribly sizeist and judgemental here and I know it is not like me to get too serious, but this is a terrifying trend which needs addressing. |
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