| There are protocols to master, computer programs to navigate, desk locations to commit to memory. |
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| It certainly would be easier not to have to commit to memory our PIN but, unfortunately, it is necessary in our less than perfect world. |
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| One of the 25 words whose definitions she had to commit to memory was ennui. |
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| The hands helped those of a religious mind to commit to memory a roster of those considered blessed. |
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| As a backpacker on a budget, the Turkish word you should immediately commit to memory is büfe. |
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| Mr Aldis counselled him not to learn his speeches, but to write out and commit to memory certain passages and the peroration. |
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| Taking that vocabulary, I made it something Itsik studies in his religious school and invented a schoolboy song about it, which I have Itsik's classmates commit to memory. |
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| She then had to commit to memory the policies specific to Boundary Bay, which encompasses the air space three miles north of the airport, three miles south, three miles west, six miles east and up to 1,500 feet. |
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| The stages of the Obihirobased rally were fast, narrow and difficult to commit to memory, and there was always a chance you could be caught out by one of the innumerable changes in grip. |
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| Because learning Burgundy is like trying to commit to memory the sequence of the human genome, while, as in a science fiction movie, it's mutating. |
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| However, he did encourage William in his reading, and in particular set him to commit to memory large portions of verse, including works by Milton, Shakespeare and Spenser. |
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