By this offer, I hope it will clearly appear where the guilt will lie, if innocent persons should come to suffer with the nocent. |
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Rembrandt's chef-d'oeuvre in modern times has come to epitomise Dutch national pride. |
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Only now, when we were able to talk frankly and at length, did I come to realize how profoundly it had affected him. |
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She has come to be regarded as an avatar of charity and concern for the poor. |
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You've got to come to Chicago to meet Duell, and see Wilson, who's going to angel the show. |
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The report recommended a covenant for the Anglican Communion, an idea that did not come to fruition. |
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I'm telling you our arrival time on the assumption that you will check to see whether or not our flight is on time before you come to the airport. |
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Yet one must be careful not to come to the conclusion that Akiva used only esoteric ways of interpreting the Torah. |
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They on the hill, which were not yet come to blows, perceiving the fewness of their enemies, came down amain. |
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He is said to have received a message from Bedford that he had come to drink with him and prayed for an early meeting. |
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Douglas replied that having failed to find the duke in England he had come to seek him in France. |
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The crown had come to his family through a woman, and would be lost from his family through a woman. |
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Some men were sent ashore to rebuild the huts, which caused others to complain that they had come to join a settlement, not build one. |
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It is estimated that over half a million Polish people have come to work in the United Kingdom from Poland. |
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The Annual Tartan Week celebrations come to life every April with the largest celebration taking place in New York City. |
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Nevertheless, the centre has come to enjoy cordial relationships with the local community. |
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Vallenato, which emerged in the early twentieth century in a city known as Valledupar, has come to symbolize the folk music of Colombia. |
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Recently, seals have come to light in South Arabia datable to the Himyarite age. |
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Llywelyn and Owain were able to come to agreement and the reduced territory of Gwynedd were divided between them. |
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Once a case came to court, the method used to come to a decision was usually by compurgation. |
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Llywelyn was forced to come to terms, and by the advice of his council sent his wife Joan to negotiate with the king, her father. |
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Temporarily, at least, Edward and the barons appeared to have come to a successful compromise. |
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Big Hand, Erddig, Sandstone, Axiom, Wrexham Lager and Wrexham Lager Beer breweries have all come to prominence in the last few years. |
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After the end of the war, many military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians who had originally come to work decided to stay. |
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Norks just kept coming, running out of the smoke and fire like demons, come to drag all us sinners to hell. |
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The fish stay in deep sea water during the day and come to shallower depths during the night. |
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Since the 1980s, however, most scholars have come to regard it as a normal, natural product of bilingual and multilingual language use. |
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It is also undesirable to come to the mosque after eating something that smells, such as garlic. |
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Men are supposed to come to the mosque wearing loose and clean clothes that do not reveal the shape of the body. |
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He was a religious cleric and judge who was invited to come to Saada from Medina to arbitrate tribal disputes. |
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When you are striping gears and come to a nuthead run right over it, with fine lines on its edges, or around the nut, as may be preferred. |
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As stories spread to other cultures or as faiths change, myths can come to be considered folktales. |
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Finally humans come to realize nature follows natural laws, and they discover their true nature through science. |
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And men come to measure the grave and find it sometimes six feet in length, sometimes nine, sometimes twelve, sometimes fifteen. |
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About once a week Dylan would come to Vernon's parents' house, situated on the very top of the cliffs of the beautiful Gower peninsula. |
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Skinner's friendship with his nutty pals seemed to have come to a sudden end. |
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So, next time they come to me of a morning and ask the same question, what do you think my answer might be? |
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The opportunity, however, did not offer till next morning, for Phoebe did not come to bed till long after I was gone to sleep. |
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After being contacted by the band to come to audition in Cardiff for the role, Pat learned their whole setlist in 7 days for the audition. |
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Within a day, the diatoms will come to the top in a scum and can be isolated. |
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Solitary mature males are known to interfere and come to the aid of vulnerable groups nearby. |
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Matholwch has come to ask for the hand of Bendigeidfran's sister Branwen in marriage. |
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Many Italian freestyle surfers come to Porto Pollo for training and 2007 saw the finale of the freestyle pro kids Europe 2007 contest. |
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The unlucky protagonist of this episode was Sampiero di Bastelica, who would later come to be considered a hero of the island. |
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Arsenio da Silva, who had emigrated with the exiles from Madeira, to arrange to resettle those who wanted to come to the United States. |
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In the eastern part of the church, it took much of the fifth century also to come to agreement, but in the end it was accomplished. |
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When asked to come to the king's manor to pay a trading tax on their goods, they murdered the official. |
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The island has a population of 60, roughly half of whom are descended from native islanders, and new islanders who have come to live there. |
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The disintegration of Roman economic power weakened groups that had come to depend on Roman gifts for the maintenance of their own power. |
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The presence of the community attracts many visitors and pilgrims who come to join in the various liturgical celebrations. |
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To come to the point at once, I beg to say that I have not the least belief in the Noble Savage. |
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The plan did not come to fruition, with government officials concluding that the organisation lacked the experience necessary to be viable. |
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Over the last decade, television has clearly come to surpass newspapers as Japan's main information and entertainment medium. |
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Many rural inhabitants come to the city to seek their fortune and alter their social position. |
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Tame badgers can be affectionate pets, and can be trained to come to their owners when their names are called. |
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So, for instance, a good deal of the Greek language literature can be read as an attempt to come to terms with Hellenistic culture. |
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In the English language as well as many others, the word odyssey has come to refer to an epic voyage. |
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With relief, she recognizes her dog, Max, who in a parentlike role has come to guide her home. |
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The Dutch called Hottentots, a term that has now come to be regarded as pejorative. |
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And yf this come to the rulers eares, we wyll pease him, and make you safe. |
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Several navies have Rescue Salvage vessels which are to support their fleet and to come to the aid of vessels in distress. |
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Caesar's informants advised him that whichever tribe Caesar attacked first, the others would come to their defence. |
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She had come to Blunderstone at his birth, only to depart in ire upon learning that he was not a girl. |
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They can observe and use patterns of prey behaviour, such as when prey come to the river to drink at the same time each day. |
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By the Jurassic, the dinosaurs had come to dominate the large terrestrial herbivore niches as well. |
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Day trippers still come to the coastal towns but on a more local scale than during the 19th century. |
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Had this plan come to fruition, the territory of the present Lower Saxony would have consisted of three states of roughly equal size. |
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Ariovistus sent ambassadors to Caesar agreeing, because Caesar had come to him, to a conference. |
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So too the Swedes could come to Gotland with no ban on the import of corn, or any other restrictions. |
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Large groups would be noticed, they could destroy one or several towers, but this also would come to the attention of the Romans. |
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The first Dutch people to come to Canada were Dutch Americans among the United Empire Loyalists. |
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Cultural assimilation is the process by which a person's or group's culture come to resemble those of another group. |
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Sometimes two separate branches of the same family have even come to blows, or worse, over some dispute. |
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Sverre had come to Norway from the Faroe Islands and claimed to have recently discovered that he was in fact the son of King Sigurd Munn. |
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Willibald's vita describes how a visitor on horseback come to the site of the martyrdom, and a hoof of his horse got stuck in the mire. |
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Since Olsen's survey, however, archaeological evidence of temple buildings has come to light in Scandinavia. |
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In the event that a European state declared war on one of their members, they all would come to the defense of the attacked state. |
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By the end of the 20th century, women had the same legal rights as men in many parts of the world, and racism had come to be seen as abhorrent. |
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Jehuda Cresques, a noted cartographer, has been said to have accepted an invitation to come to Portugal to make maps for the infante. |
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It would come to comprise many trading ships, warships, and support vessels. |
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As Western Europe entered the 16th century, the age of Crusading began to come to an end. |
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When the Orsini offered to admit the French to their castles, Alexander had no choice but to come to terms with Charles. |
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But a promise of French help quickly forced the confederates to come to terms. |
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Isabella was aghast and prayed to God that the marriage would not come to pass. |
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Radio Seville opposed the uprising and called for the peasants to come to the city for arms, while workers' groups established barricades. |
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Seville is also home to many international schools and colleges that cater to American students who come to study abroad. |
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Several organized tours from Germany, France, and other European countries come to Iran annually to visit archaeological sites and monuments. |
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The Beja people would also come to rule within Massawa during the Beja Kingdom of Eritrea from AD 740 to the 14th century. |
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Initially, the missionaries hoped to create a large body of Amerindian priests, but this did not come to be. |
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The vast majority of tourists come to Mexico from the United States and Canada followed by Europe and Asia. |
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It has come to be the first Sunday after the ecclesiastical full moon that occurs on or soonest after 21 March, but calculations vary. |
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Cultural ties between the two countries are strong, and many Panamanians come to the United States for higher education and advanced training. |
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Things have come to a pretty pass when a highly regarded City law firm does not know whether it is employing its own staff legally. |
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Maurice also provided diplomatic support, pressing both the Protestant German princes and James I to come to Frederick's aid. |
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This issue dominates the future revenue of rural counties, which have come to rely on the payments in providing essential services. |
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We have processed the data using our proven techniques, and have come to the following conclusions. |
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More than one of these dangerous proclaimings of loyalty to him rather than to the King had come to his ears. |
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Without this system in place, it is unlikely such an arrangement would have come to fruition. |
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Kurbat Ivanov himself safely returned to Verkholensky ostrog by the same way he had come to Baikal. |
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Those who come to live in the state arrive from Jalisco, Aguacalientes and nearby northern states. |
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At the same time, linguists have begun to come to the realization that creole languages are in no way inferior to other languages. |
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The spoken standard has come to be seen as a mark of good education and social prestige. |
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For example, the words prince and prints have come to be homophones or nearly so. |
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The term missa has come to imply a 'mission', because at the end of the Mass the congregation are sent out to serve Christ. |
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Robert Bellarmine in the early 17th century, but it did not come to widespread acceptance until the 19th century and the First Vatican Council. |
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Having put the brakes on credit expansion by raising interest rates, Humphrey last week decided the time had come to step on the gas. |
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In the 20th century, with better access to historical documents, legal historians have come to a different conclusion. |
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How feebly and unlike themselves they reason when they come to the quick of the difference! |
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The three documents had come to prominence after being revealed by author Martin Allen in his book Himmler's Secret War. |
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Some criminal codes criminalize association with a criminal venture or involvement in criminality that does not actually come to fruition. |
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Already, it had come to be the principal and only legislative body, and the dominant interest in it was that of the common law lawyers. |
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In Haiti, the Rada have come to represent the emotional stability and warmth of Africa, the hearth of the nation. |
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In 1956 the County Council made a proposal to demolish the bridge and replace it with a new one, but this plan did not come to fruition. |
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Meanwhile, back at Parkside the other seven trains had come to a halt following the accident. |
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Over time, however, the term has come to mean one opposed to industrialisation, automation, computerisation or new technologies in general. |
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The object of collective bargaining is for the employer and the union to come to an agreement over wages, benefits, and working conditions. |
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When Victor saw the creature come to life he fled the apartment, though the newborn creature approached him, as a child would a parent. |
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At this time of year, the sangha would retreat to monasteries, public parks or forests, where people would come to them. |
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His wife had come to Great Britain in 1920 as a representative of the Communist International. |
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Please come to the funeral service and pay your last respects to her grandmother. |
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Ye are not as yet come to the rest and to the inheritance which the Lord your God giveth you. |
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Through their interactions and their critiques of each other, Darcy and Elizabeth come to recognise their own faults and work to correct them. |
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After swimming for a while they eventually come to the conclusion they imagined the island. |
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After, he made an harlot, a ribald, come to him alone for to touch his members and his body, to move to lechery. |
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There have been proposals to bridge the river here, but these have come to nothing. |
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I went into my own version of Ali's rope-a-dope, ducking as many of the heavy blows as I could, and waiting for some kind of idea to come to me. |
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I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother. |
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She did not come to Court, but she must have been taken to Montagu's house, for the Clerkenwell house was all shut up and was to be sold. |
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How did this aberration come to pass and why has it persisted until now? |
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His rendezvous for his fleet, and for all slugs to come to, should be between Calais and Dover. |
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It's no use arguing with Mother Nature over such crass methods, for the history of spiderdom would long since have come to an end without them. |
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Danny Manning and Edwin Moses quickly come to mind for fans who want American athletes to strike gold this summer. |
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Investors have, once again, come to think of them as a supersafe, yet turbocharged, bank account. |
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She was at a loss for words when she saw the number of people who had come to grieve for her husband. |
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The results of self-induced and backstreet abortions come to our hospitals for the damage to be put right. |
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But I always come to this conclusion. No matter how bad off you are, there's always somebody in a worse boat. |
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Originally she had come to me, possessed but of one gown, and that a forlorn and ragged balzarine, with four draggled, torn flounces. |
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What I like is a certain ambiguity in a story, but I've come to understand over the years that that drives most people absolutely batcrap! |
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Alzheimer's disease and related dementias have come to be defined as biomedical in nature. |
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The seasons are come to a stagnant stop, the trees blench and wither, the wagons role in the mica ruts with slithering harplike thuds. |
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We bow things the contrary way, to make them come to their natural straightness. |
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He that puts all upon adventures doth oftentimes break, and come to poverty. |
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Weel I wot I wad be broken if I were to gie sic weight to the folk that come to buy our pepper and brimstone, and suchlike sweetmeats. |
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Thoreau, too, come to think of it, was, by way of being a prophet, a pioneer in this Emancipation of Man from Bothery. |
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The government thinks these stupid camel jockeys are going to come to America and take revenge. |
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The Bank of England's anti-inflation efforts will come to nothing if the US Federal Reserve refuse to join in the plan. |
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The Bank of England's anti-inflation efforts will come to nought if the U.S. Federal Reserve refuse to join in the plan. |
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When I shall have dispatched this weary pilgrimage, and from a traveller shall come to be a comprehensor, farewell faith and welcome vision. |
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The board has come to the conclusion that the proposed takeover would not be in the interest of our shareholders. |
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Now one had come to see these craftless rivers, empty stations and poverty instead of wealth. |
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He had come to town as a child with the old woman who had adopted him, a cronelike granny straight from a storybook. |
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It's possible we'll eventually have more books than available space for them, but we'll cross that bridge when we come to it. |
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Half by desipience, half by proclivity, he had come to live in a world where the only significant leisure activities were coupling and consuming. |
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When we come to occupative names, we are again confronted by crowds of diminutives. |
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Then disparate sense impressions come to disparate organs, as light to the eye, taste to the mouth, etc. |
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To come to a Gathering and not work, to be a Drainbow, is to miss the point of the Gathering. |
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Let's prove among ourselves our armes in jest, That when we come to earnest them with men, We may them better use. |
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But Prince has come to the state of East Virginia, where Ladonna owns additional real property. |
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For that clerk, in the eyes of the people who come to you for service, is not merely an employe. |
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A certain fleet.. through which little boats used to come to the aforesaid town. |
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The brakes on my bike failed, so I had to come to a Flintstonian stop, that is, by dragging my feet on the pavement. |
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It has come to be a mark of narrowness and fossilhood to be a devout believer in Christ and His Cross. |
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You can imagine what fairly free-spoken girls will ask when they come to the point of not caring what they say. |
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Nurse B, in contrast, frownfully wonders how such imbeciles could ever come to exist. |
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And he is both obsessed and repelled by all this fuckity-fuck stuff, as he has come to call it in his mind. |
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I've come to see she is a voiceless person in her world, and so I try to remember to stop and give her my full-faced attention when I see her. |
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I guess at this point we were supposed to feel elated she'd come to her senses and decided she hearts dogs after all. |
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Thus Paganism has come to be an umbrella term for a diverse spiritual network, which also includes modern Shamanism and Heathenry. |
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Since the Second World War, the service sector has come to account for the majority of jobs, a feature typifying most advanced economies. |
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New crops that had come to Asia from the Americas via the Spanish colonizers in the 16th century contributed to the Asia's population growth. |
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The first and third were called off due to revolts elsewhere in the empire, the second because the Britons seemed ready to come to terms. |
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Tacitus records that the Iceni were not conquered in the Claudian invasion of AD 43, but had come to a voluntary alliance with the Romans. |
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The African bishops could not come to terms and the Donatists asked Constantine to act as a judge in the dispute. |
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By the seventh century, he had already come to be revered as the patron saint of Ireland. |
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The Roman use of the term corn is not to be confused with maize, which did not come to Europe until the discovery of the New World. |
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Two men who had come to Britain with him in 601 were consecrated, Mellitus as Bishop of London and Justus as Bishop of Rochester. |
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The people of York promise to accept her as their overlord, but she dies before this could come to fruition. |
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The Historia Regum suggests that the threat of an independent Northumbrian king had come to an end in 952, when earls finally took over the helm. |
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Those stereotypes of you backwoods gun fondlers being incestuous inbreeders didn't come to be on account of me. |
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Modern historians have come to the conclusion that the New Forest depopulation was greatly exaggerated. |
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When dealing with values in the unit interval we expect the speed of incremence to slow down the closer we come to maximal belief. |
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Henry's father advised him to come to terms with Louis and peace was made between them in August 1151 after mediation by Bernard of Clairvaux. |
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Louis fell ill and withdrew from the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry. |
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Philip had come to power in 1180 and he rapidly demonstrated that he could be an assertive, calculating and manipulative political leader. |
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While Kennedy infought to trim outlays to match resources, critics claimed that the era of the big eleemosynaries had come to an end. |
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Even her own uncle, the Duke of Norfolk, had come to resent her attitude to her power. |
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The reality of political differences between Rome and England allowed growing theological disputes to come to the fore. |
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Elizabeth became queen at the age of 25, and declared her intentions to her Council and other peers who had come to Hatfield to swear allegiance. |
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The Italian Renaissance had come to an end under the weight of Spanish domination of the peninsula. |
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The Council of Officers at first attempted to come to some agreement with the leaders of Parliament. |
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Frequently the overseer would come to me and say a certain jackeroo was useless, and would never be any good, when the boy had only just started. |
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On 30 June 1688, a group of seven Protestant nobles invited the Prince of Orange to come to England with an army. |
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Forces of Cameronians as well as Clan Campbell Highlanders led by the Earl of Argyll had come to bolster William's support. |
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As the largest manufacturing unit in Europe this come to symbolise the emergence of the factory system. |
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I can't come to work next week as I am on jury duty and I can't get out of it. |
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The Corsican Buonapartes were descended from minor Italian nobility of Tuscan origin, who had come to Corsica from Liguria in the 16th century. |
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He thought that he could get him a regular salary if he would come to Packingtown and do as he was told, and keep his mouth shut. |
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His mother rarely visited him, and he wrote letters begging her either to come to the school or to allow him to come home. |
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In 1910, a number of coal miners in the Rhondda Valley began what has come to be known as the Tonypandy Riot. |
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You've got a huge ladder in your stockings. I've got a spare pair in my bag, come to the Ladies and you can change. |
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Color change in New England is the tourist time, when people come to see the leafage turn brilliant colors. |
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Dan won't be able to come to the party, since he broke his leg last week and is now on crutches. |
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He gave a presidential address the year of his death but did not come to any definite conclusions. |
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You didn't come to me in time. And by the time you came to me that fool of a doctor had bled and leeched the lifeblood out of Timmy. |
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Thou shalt come to thy grave in a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in in his season. |
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The Cabinet has come to be made up almost entirely of members of the House of Commons. |
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Alternatively, a ruling class of Beaker individuals may have made the migration and come to control the native population at some level. |
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A lot of Liverpudlians have some Irish ancestry, their Irish ancestors are most likely to have come to Liverpool in the 19th century. |
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The Irish have also come to be as much of a staple of Merseyside in general, as of Liverpool itself. |
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The two men could not come to any agreement due to their disputation over one key doctrine. |
|
Another Marine, who gets the Dear John letter, is being lush-rolled in a dive when the Marines come to the rescue and wreck the joint. |
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The central theme of his Gospel message was that Christ has come to teach his people himself. |
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Piran is the most famous of all the saints said to have come to Cornwall from Ireland. |
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There is also a common Wiccan belief that any Witches will come to be reincarnated as future Witches, an idea originally expressed by Gardner. |
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Over the years, numerous proposals for the former site of the palace have not come to fruition. |
|
He repeated his original story of how he had come to use the pseudonym Palmer, claiming that it was his mother's maiden name. |
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The mark of the artisan is found upon the most ancient fabrics that have come to light. |
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He encouraged Dutch mezzotinters to come to Britain to copy his work, laying the foundations for the English mezzotint tradition. |
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In a parallel plot line, Oberon, king of the fairies, and Titania, his queen, have come to the forest outside Athens. |
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As a right, we come to expect it, and that happens through the mass media, the massest of which, by far, is television. |
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Berkeley's approach to empiricism would later come to be called subjective idealism. |
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Milton had come to stand apart from all sects, though apparently finding the Quakers most congenial. |
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In 1666, he met Lord Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, who had come to Oxford seeking treatment for a liver infection. |
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These ideas would come to have profound influence on the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. |
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It attracted little attention at the time, but has now come to be recognised as his first major achievement. |
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Though it failed to arouse much interest at that time, it has since come to be widely recognised as his masterpiece. |
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There was also foreboding in the poems, a sense that all could yet come to naught. |
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There is a notable lack of historical references to anything like shanties, as they would come to be known, in the entirety of the 18th century. |
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The United States had come to the fore as a maritime leader, especially due to the nation's design of packet ships. |
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One manuscript of this recension is the Liber Regalis at Westminster Abbey which has come to be regarded as the definitive version. |
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Progress on the scheme was slow and in 1861 Prince Albert died, without having seen his ideas come to fruition. |
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A bowl may curve outside the rink boundary on its path, but must come to rest within the rink boundary to remain in play. |
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Many of the best horses come to these festivals, which are watched by a huge television audience worldwide. |
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The realist painters rejected Romanticism, which had come to dominate French literature and art, with roots in the late 18th century. |
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As the premiers did not come to an agreement on this question, the Parliamentary Council was supposed to address this issue. |
|
In reality, governments had long come to be chosen from parliament and to be answerable to it. |
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After Caesar's conquest of Gaul in the 50s BC, some Belgic people seem to have come to central southern Britain from the continent. |
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The Italian Renaissance had come to an end under the weight of foreign domination of the peninsula. |
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The Protestant position, however, would come to incorporate doctrinal changes such as sola scriptura and sola fide. |
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It would not be until decades later, culminating in the Parliament Act 1911, that Wellington's fears would come to pass. |
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Whereas earlier land had been enclosed in order to make it available for sheep farming, by 1650 the steep rise in wool prices had come to an end. |
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Another was sent to France, asking her not to support Russia if it were to come to the defence of Serbia. |
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The British announced they would come to the aid of Poland if it was attacked. |
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The Act continued to be used against nationalists long after the violence of this period had come to an end. |
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As Prime Minister, she implemented policies that have come to be known as Thatcherism. |
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And thus did it come to pass that the boy and the two mons, after a brief final discussion began the training. |
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In response, Austrian commander Leopold von Daun collected a force of 30,000 men to come to the relief of Prague. |
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Therefore action for an end is present in things which come to be and are by nature. |
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His experiment to measure the density of the Earth has come to be known as the Cavendish experiment. |
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In the popular mind the saints had come to fill a role that had been played by heroes and deities. |
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Nasmyth had come to know Burns and his fresh and appealing image has become the basis for almost all subsequent representations of the poet. |
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The first poems I knew were nursery rhymes and before I could read them for myself I had come to love the words of them. |
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Kasper had come to admire Pound during literature classes at university, and after he wrote to Pound in 1950 the two had become friends. |
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From the 1980s onwards, crossover artists such as Katherine Jenkins, Charlotte Church and Aled Jones began to come to the fore. |
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In Chapter IV, Bentham introduces a method of calculating the value of pleasures and pains, which has come to be known as the hedonic calculus. |
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Godwin had come to hear Paine, but Wollstonecraft assailed him all night long, disagreeing with him on nearly every subject. |
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It is, in fact, the music of the bagpipe which has come to symbolize music at the Games and, indeed, in Scotland itself. |
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They are played on national holidays and festivals, and have also come to be closely connected with sporting events. |
|
For the purpose of assessment of customs duty, products are given an identification code that has come to be known as the Harmonized System code. |
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Sho, now! come to t'ink o' Sambo, he didn't nebber like Mockers, a'ter one time he 'spicioned a Mocker tole tales on him. |
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Filmmakers have come to Prague to shoot scenery no longer found in Berlin, Paris and Vienna. |
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Although he asked the Dauphin to come to his deathbed, Louis refused, instead waiting at Avesnes, in Burgundy, for his father to die. |
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When we come to the complicated forms of antennae which we use in practice to-day, it becomes excessively difficult to work out the theory mathematically. |
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I feel securely fixed on the careering chair, and with the momentum gained I steer myself as on skis to the guard and come to a stop with a happy little flourish. |
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A jury that is unable to come to a verdict is referred to as a hung jury. |
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Let me tell you that what I call the manizers have come to town! Though I am not an expert on women, I have made many observations over the years. |
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The Historia Brittonum would come to be the basis on which later medieval authors such as Geoffrey of Monmouth would write the romantic histories of King Arthur. |
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With Benson's help, Walpole had come to terms with the loss of his faith. |
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Ultimately, at the end of the campaign, Owain was forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east. |
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Beowulf and his warriors come to fight the dragon, but Beowulf tells his men that he will fight the dragon alone and that they should wait on the barrow. |
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I swung the bat, barely bipped the ball, and sent it spinning off into a neighbor's yard. That was the closest I'd come to hitting that thing all day. |
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The initial problem the WHO team faced was inadequate reporting of smallpox cases, as many cases did not come to the attention of the authorities. |
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The lorry is blocking off the road, so traffic has come to a standstill. |
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What do guys think when they come to a party dipped in Axe perfumes? As if girls have nothing to do but behave like honey bees to suck their nectar. Bluh! |
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Unfortunately, their peaceful existence would soon be disturbed by a new villain. More evil and twice as despicable, Snowmageddon had come to town. |
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The former had come to mean all that was not exceptional or special. |
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It's not even a real bus stop, just a gas station where the bus drops off whoever's stupid enough to come to this shitbucket town and picks up whoever's smart enough to leave. |
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I had to come to the somewhat uncomfortable conclusion that even Andrew Bolt was becoming Indigenous because the bones of his ancestors are now becoming part of the territory. |
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At some point in this period the Marcomanni had come to be settled in the forested regions once inhabited by the Boii, in and around Bohemia, under his rule. |
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Mathur sighed that things had come to such a pass that no honest businessman could get even a challan form without first handing out a few rupees. |
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It was a drab, cheapjack little area, unambiguously removed from the public, and yet I had come to love it in a way I never could the rest of the monstruous edifice. |
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He asked Ras why the green christophine vegetables we bought from him didn't ripen into the creamy white color we have come to expect from christophine. |
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I can't come to your wedding as it clashes with a friend's funeral. |
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With a sword and shield he could have let his enemies come to very close quarters with perfect impunity to himself and then have run them through with infinite ease. |
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The flood had made, the wind was nearly calm, and being bound down the river, the only thing for it was to come to and wait for the turn of the tide. |
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Soviet Russia was at first happy to help these immigrants settle, because they believed they were victims of capitalism who had come to help the Soviet cause. |
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In 1822, Shelley arranged for Leigh Hunt, the British poet and editor who had been one of his chief supporters in England, to come to Italy with his family. |
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We hope someday she and her mother will come to terms on the matter. |
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The government invited French engineer Peter Blondeau who worked at the Paris mint to come to London in 1649 in hope of modernising the country's minting process. |
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Having come to doubt whether humanity can be combined with progress, most people, easily pleased, would have elected to abandon progress and remain with humanity. |
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In recent months, those tactics have come to include defensive maneuvers aimed at defusing the media counteroperations of the United States and its allies. |
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When I was come to the top, I saw the sea bordering upon Lancashire. |
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The employment issues made it unattractive for others to come to Leiden, and younger members had begun leaving to find employment and adventure elsewhere. |
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We believe and are thoroughly convinced that God's blessings come to his church in a cross-handed way, entirely different, in many instances, from the way we expect them. |
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While of the other tribes who had come to Italy along with the Boii, the Senones, Lingones and Cenomani are also attested in Gaul at the time of the Roman conquest. |
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The jury took eight hours to come to its deliberate verdict. |
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This phrase is commonplace for people with an RBF. They come to accept the natural state of their face as one that exudes feelings of anger, disgust or misery. |
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I'd come to the conclusion that Ben had one hundred per cent dickmatized me, and to break the trance I needed to start calling the shots again when it came to blokes. |
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Bridge was impressed with the boy, and after they had gone through some of Britten's compositions together he invited him to come to London to take lessons from him. |
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Ye shall not thynke that I am come to disanull the lawe, or the prophets. |
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