The stations could not be resupplied, so they had limited lifetimes in orbit. |
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Having skied in such an ermine-lined resort, a return to the brutal shoving of Europe's lift lines could prove a bruising experience. |
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You could put your feet up, close your eyes and simply enjoy doing nothing for half an hour or so. |
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The concern is that the gravitational tug of Jupiter could alter the orbit of the spacecraft and cause it to hit Europa or another moon. |
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But when the adrenaline is pumping to your brain, the hot, sticky blood coursing through your veins, who could resist? |
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We also organized a trip to a velodrome in London so that we could try something new. |
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They could also optionally list the high school that they attended, as well as their phone number, hometown, homepage and picture. |
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That was where Cole realized that he could also do fakie heelflips over spine ramps. |
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Before I could dodge him he reached out and grabbed me, pulling me off my feet and hefting me up over his shoulder. |
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Of course, height enhancers could speak out against heightism, while still relieving short children of the burden of growing up short. |
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As for me, I don't think I could survive without my brownies and chocolate chips. |
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Although that could be a symptom of the general laziness that was running through my veins today. |
|
Today the phenomenon could be more accurately described as cultural imperialism. |
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Although Ryouseika was smiling, she could tell that Nazuna's pride had been bruised by having to share her girlfriend. |
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The candidate could use a touch sensitive screen to choose from the following options. |
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Crutches became optional and people could be walking comfortably within a week. |
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For purposes of classification they could be divided into five broad categories. |
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I could do a 180 heelflip over a median, that's what I'd do in front of girls. |
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But at once he has just the same sense that the orang could be a human child. |
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Within the six weeks he grew so fast that he could no longer walk in and out of the house through the cat flap on the front door. |
|
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The best he could find was a place near the anchor's chains on the forecastle, near the cathead the crew uses as a privy. |
|
Besides the stalls, the streets are lined with every kind of shop you could imagine. |
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A classical physicist would have supposed that electrons encircling a nucleus could do so in orbits whose radii could take any value. |
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A Windermere man believes a bright light he saw burning across the Bowness sky on Monday night could have been an asteroid or space junk. |
|
This means that nuclear spaceships could travel twice as fast as our current chemical spacecraft. |
|
Big Brother was populated with thinly veiled, needy egos desperate to be noticed so that they could hide their distinct lack of character. |
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You once could spend a Saturday morning at work and turn out against a team from the next strath in the afternoon. |
|
Listeriosis, brucellosis, and rabies could account for the symptoms and all three ailments were endemic to the area. |
|
The justification for the slaughter was Montana's fear that the bison could infect its cattle with the bacterium brucellosis. |
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If I blocked out all the wealthy nobs around me I could see only one thing. |
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The sovereign body empowered kings, princes and optimates and could remove them. |
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He said that as head teacher he could not force youngsters to wear uniforms either but the school hoped parents saw it as a practical option. |
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Indeed, a strong case could be made that interest rates are categorically destabilizing. |
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He feels that Sanskrit could be introduced as one of the optional languages in schools and colleges. |
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Every day lost could mean a child dying because warnings have not been heeded. |
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She flipped her hair over her shoulder and he could smell the sweet scent of strawberries wafting up from it. |
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If it delivers half of what it promises it could be a legitimate category killer. |
|
Kiwis could do a lot worse than take heed of the manners of our overseas drivers. |
|
Trust and betrayal became a central nexus in radical opposition politics and the stakes could be very high. |
|
There could be a catfight on the cobbles between two of the north west's most feisty females for the right to call themselves mum of the year. |
|
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But before driving home from work, what harm could a quick pint, small glass of wine or harmless vodka and orange with a colleague cause? |
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He said the defendant decided to do away with her cousin when she could not repay the loan, and had her strangulated, by two close aides. |
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He could not be expected to respond to Hebrew music, but his comment on the Queens' service testifies to his attentive and critical ear. |
|
Still, with the thundering voice I'll bet he could certainly orate from the top of that tower. |
|
The cause of death was strangulation although the pathologist could not rule out a smothering by a pillow. |
|
He found that if the tube was placed within an electric or magnetic field, then the cathode rays could be deflected or moved. |
|
Animal spirits could be low, broken, oppressed, dejected, petulant, harassed or even ruffled beyond description. |
|
He could not force through his two demands in the face of stubborn opposition by the Optimates. |
|
The Sam Browne belt worn by the Army officers had been abandoned in 1937 because they could not be worn under a parachute harness. |
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I could smell daphne buds opening over a garden fence opposite the fruit and vege market. |
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He'd promised we could fetch the last bedroom unit for the spare bedroom he'd been fitting out. |
|
And some of my favourite meals could be shared by any of my veggie friends. |
|
In particular, they point out that the bright white spacesuits worn by the astronauts could have reflected light into regions of shadow. |
|
The growing national movement facilitated this, because the capitalist class could always veil their demands as national demands. |
|
The curate's study was an 18th century room that he could not afford to heat, so he would cocoon himself in a cassock and heavy cloak. |
|
If Sigmund Freud was alive today and could talk to cats, he'd have a field day. |
|
Or you could catch the January sale at Esslemont And Macintosh and browse through the second-hand selection at Bon Accord Books on The Spital. |
|
They felt they could have done without her presence, and revived their broiges with her in various media interviews. |
|
For once, we used good headwork by climbing off the route and squawking emergency when it was obvious we no longer could continue on the route. |
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He said the situation had become so bad that he could no longer find anyone else to work in the shop. |
|
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However, when I went two years ago, to a place near where I was working, the optician told me I could give up wearing glasses. |
|
Without such an advisor, of course, the bench could potentially become crowded with no-account Liberal hacks of no discernible talent or skill. |
|
She believes that the new measures could be valuable but said there was a risk that the benefits could be strangled by bureaucracy and costs. |
|
He could expect no heckles and received none for beginning his speech with what he probably thought was self-evident wisdom. |
|
Young officers like me could look forward to the future with confidence, hope and optimism. |
|
Many experts are cautiously optimistic that things will improve by the end of the year, although it could be a rollercoaster ride. |
|
Good headwork and crew coordination saved a situation that easily could have turned disastrous within a second or two. |
|
However in winter low stratus or fog could persist for days, or even weeks in extreme cases. |
|
Once, as we were strangers there, a local policeman asked us for identification, which my mother could not supply. |
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Maybe if you were in a different profession you could, so you leave your options open, which is what I do. |
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He could be talking to his opposite numbers in foreign governments, who then talk to American reporters, normally also on background. |
|
Of course, the whole sorry saga could have been avoided, if only we'd heeded the warnings. |
|
She was straw blonde, a colour which the girls of his nation could never imitate even with dye, and her eyes were big and blue. |
|
Ripening could also be controlled in strawberries and most citrus fruits, which do not respond to the chemical. |
|
He could return if he takes the veterans' minimum deal, his troublesome knee heals and there is a need after the club explores other options. |
|
Now I was trembling not only from the cold, but also from the pain and heartache that no one could repair. |
|
But the clubs might have to fund the first year without major income, and that could harm cash-strapped clubs in the short term. |
|
If the symptoms occur whilst at rest, or are not relieved by rest, they could indicate a heart attack. |
|
Roy says a poker room at the casino could possibly open as early as late summer. |
|
But strategic redistribution of resources in a way that promotes openness and collaboration could reinvigorate the organization. |
|
|
As part of the bid, the race track could have been turned into a gaming complex with a casino. |
|
He said a damaged cat's eye in the middle of the road could also have affected Mr Burnett's balance. |
|
He was an organizational technician of high competence with healthily modest notions of what a central party organization could achieve. |
|
If a child was doing it, it could encircle and strangulate part of the body and that would interfere with the blood supply. |
|
He could speak very little English and in desperation took a job as a head waiter with an Italian restaurant chain. |
|
You saw the one yesterday outside where all of the walls were down, and you could see it from the open air. |
|
As recently as three years ago some politicians could talk about the NHS as the finest health service in the world. |
|
Nevertheless, it could be better for the future of the party to be in opposition and have some time to regroup. |
|
You could then loll on a cool, marbled veranda until lunch at a shaded open-air restaurant overlooking the sparkling sea. |
|
I grabbed my jeans and put them on and then I undid my strapless bra so that I could put on my regular black one. |
|
Skaters could get their outdoor fun after all, despite York's first open-air ice rink closing over Christmas. |
|
I could give you hundreds of examples of local communities that have been just as oppressive and unjust as nation states. |
|
Leading architects fear the multi-million plans to revamp the historic heart of Winchester could spoil the cathedral city. |
|
Lincoln was a skilled orator, brilliant at fashioning American constitutionalism into a rhetorical sword that could save the Union. |
|
The stormy weather could spread as far as the British Midlands by this evening, he said, but temperatures would still be very warm. |
|
The US Department of Agriculture said Wednesday the border could be opened in March. |
|
Along with the big price tag came a belated recognition that a strapped U.S. could not bear the burdens alone. |
|
Not even Elizabeth could create such clever faces, like optical illusions that changed when you blinked. |
|
She was sitting on one of those round stools with casters on the legs so she could move around freely without getting up. |
|
In their spare time both slaves and peasants could specialise in craft activities like smithying and shoemaking. |
|
|
I could say more but, it being the season to be jolly, I will refrain from further castigating my friends in the legal profession. |
|
Her vision was blurry, but she could make out a group of people sitting around a table and some animal laying on the hearth. |
|
The privacy of hearth and home was precisely where a man could let his tyrannical inclinations run free. |
|
That could lead to lenses with parallel sides and no optical axis able to focus a point image. |
|
A letter was received from Lesley Wade asking if the Brownies could paint a mural inside the bus shelter on boards. |
|
She knew that a voice that annoying could come from none other than the preppy, straight-laced brown-noser. |
|
He taught there a while and he could have gone on teaching there forever if he'd wanted. |
|
In other words, if we were to launch a spaceship from Earth and fly in as straight a line as possible, we could find ourselves returning home. |
|
The horse stopped and beneath the veil of leaves, Legacy could see her brother's well worn leather boots. |
|
If I could use God's love to help me heal my own pain, maybe I would grow too. |
|
The open house was a no charge affair, so members of the public could attend and look at the aircraft and watch them fly. |
|
At the end of construction, the facility held an open house for the public and staff members so they could see the culmination of the project. |
|
Although cashiered military officers formed a Legitimate Command in September 1990, they could not create an effective fighting force in exile. |
|
During the big pauses between each of the short, sobbing phrases at the opening of the Tristan prelude, you could have heard a pin drop. |
|
And the niveous winter gleam, although polished, could never radiate the warmth of your smile. |
|
At a gloriously air-conditioned shop halfway up the main drag, I could have happily browsed for hours, because it was so blissfully cool. |
|
Peering north, deeper into town, Brian could see one flickering stop light at a right-angle intersection. |
|
A salesman asked if he could help me, but I said I was just having a browse. |
|
This could lead to relaxing the opening times of pubs and bars and allowing them to stay open longer. |
|
At this point I think Black could simply castle when once again I see nothing wrong with his position. |
|
|
Franck called in his graduate student, Wilhelm Hanle, who worked in physical optics, and asked if he could understand Wood's findings. |
|
Depending on who buys it, it could mean the public no longer has access to the house. |
|
One of them, Leslie Hill, warned in an open letter to the community newspaper that the situation could put the foundation's work at risk. |
|
The forum will give people the opportunity to find out more about what could be in store for the future. |
|
Thomas had followed his father's gaze and looking down he could see the number of swellings and bruises grazing his body. |
|
A wound had opened that could not heal, at least, not one that she could do anything about. |
|
If the terrace is too sunny, you could wheel away the tubs, with discreetly placed castors, to a shady corner to rest until the following spring. |
|
Arriving at the till the woman asked me to open my container so she could check what was inside it. |
|
The stranglehold placed on the regional economy by cuts to services together with delays to modernisation could be catastrophic. |
|
Credit card transactions were frozen, cashpoints failed and store cards could not be used in shops. |
|
I was sitting alone in my favorite restaurant when a short, stout man of middle age asked if he could join me. |
|
The only occasions on which it could be opened more generally to the public were open days when the children were not on the premises. |
|
Remember the proposal to allow the police to frogmarch drunks to cashpoints so that they could pay spot fines? |
|
I wouldn't say I necessarily knew it was going to come but I was certainly optimistic that we could achieve something. |
|
But if you put that same floorspace in a modern, open-plan office with bar coding and so-on, you could get massive throughput. |
|
All the patients in this study had hearts that could not pump blood properly. |
|
Arin felt a lump form in the back of his throat, a strangled gasp being all that could escape. |
|
Where the middling strata were thin on the ground, as in Spain or Hungary, liberalism could take on a strong aristocratic tinge. |
|
She had the uncomplicated confidence to believe she could walk the dead heart of Australia. |
|
Perhaps some other political, er, heavyweights could benefit from his example. |
|
|
She loved him and now that he loved her, she wasn't sure if she could give her heart to him. |
|
This could best be achieved by making the track two lanes, each heading in opposite directions. |
|
Some teachers could go on strike, take rolling strike stoppages, and not have their pay deducted for non-performance in the classroom. |
|
The cleric thinking he had done all he could do, was then caught off guard. |
|
Ben winced and Leo could tell his friend was hoping that the answer was going to be all hearts and flowers. |
|
As ringtones become part of our environment, they could push pop music toward new levels of concision, repetition, and catchiness. |
|
Though his voice was casual, Skye caught a flicker of trouble in his eyes, and she could hear his doubt. |
|
He moved quicker than he could trace, and caught him in the same stranglehold. |
|
Usually, food that was cooked over direct heat from a burning substance, or one that was smoked, could contain carcinogenic material. |
|
There are straws in the wind that could influence the outcomes in marginal urban and extra-urban constituencies. |
|
As a result the lovers had to suffer much heartache and humiliation before they could be together. |
|
Less experienced players could find the game a stop-start journey as they puzzle over what to do next. |
|
A prize portfolio could mean a head start in the race, but those overlooked or given poisoned chalices would be early casualties. |
|
My voice was an early casualty in the Change, all I could manage was a watery gurgle. |
|
The obstacles in the management of strabismic amblyopia could be social as well as medical factors. |
|
Peter is 45, and came so that he could reduce his risk of having a sudden heart attack. |
|
If a cat, mouse and dog could be made to live in harmony, and form a super-trio, well, mankind will have achieved the impossible. |
|
If you live in a cosy, centrally heated house, your red wine could be too warm if served at the prevailing heat. |
|
China's ascent could inflame an already heated debate in the U.S. about companies sending work abroad. |
|
Being a keen musician, Nagyvary set out to see if the properties of an original Stradivarius could be recreated in a new instrument. |
|
|
I could feel his breath against my neck and through my dress I could feel his heartbeat pulsating through my body as he pulled me closer. |
|
As far as he was concerned she could stay with her mother for ever and they could be two jealous, spiteful old cats together for all he cared. |
|
I'm fairly sure they were deliberately straggling so they could get the prize for coming last. |
|
She was told there was a designated flying area on the heath and by-laws could not be changed. |
|
He guessed Garnet had the kind of money that could make that charge go away in a heartbeat anyway. |
|
They could then make it clear that they are to cater for smokers only and make a packet by catering exclusively to that group. |
|
How could you allow this heathen to insult me so, in my own house, on this, the day of my birth? |
|
As the question was open-ended the participant could identify multiple sources. |
|
However, a quick wicket or two could set the cat among the pigeons and precipitate a collapse. |
|
It was a horrible storm cloud now, blocking out the sun, blocking out the blue of the sky, reaching almost as far as the eye could see. |
|
The sea became calm for as far as they could see, and the huge black storm cloud vanished from the sky. |
|
Rosemary asked him what the problem was but she could not get a straight answer from him. |
|
With a little bit of focussed and straight thinking, it could be more suitable for what is essentially a children's band on this channel. |
|
It is a subject familiar to us from screwball farces, and one from which a straight drama could also be drawn. |
|
He picked up his bit of paper but before he could read anything, looked straight at Mario, and was promptly overcome by a fit of the giggles. |
|
A terminally-ill teenager was left heartbroken when thieves ruined what could be her last Christmas. |
|
Some types of fibre may have a cholesterol-lowering effect that could help reduce risk of heart disease. |
|
Casey's eyes opened wide, her mouth spitting out words before she could think. |
|
Harry pulled the child's legs out straight and pushed his robes aside so that he could remove the dressings on his cut again. |
|
Heart tissue cells could be transplanted into a patient with heart disease. |
|
|
Inside a lead box was a casket that had contained his heart and entrails, ensuring that he could not rise from the dead. |
|
It is hardly believable that a human could continue to say the things he does with a straight face. |
|
They ruled that if defendants could show they were acting out of necessity or under duress the jury had the right to hear them out. |
|
In addition, normal cell growth could be restored by addition of catalase to the medium, breaking down the hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water. |
|
Its castellated brown walls and four towers stood guard over a dry moat that could be flooded from the cisterns in case of an attack. |
|
It could be open season for poachers at the region's beaches if a Ministry of Fisheries decision to halve policing is approved. |
|
When they would go into the cloud, you could see flashes like heat lightning. |
|
Guyanese overseas make sure they have some casareep come December so that they could prepare a pot of pepperpot to enjoy a taste of home. |
|
It was about half the size of a cruise ship, and as streamlined as the best money could buy. |
|
Dr Wilson said that had Mr Collins been treated by medical staff straightaway he could still be alive today. |
|
It is quite obvious that if he could get someone better, he would have dumped you straightaway. |
|
He disappeared down the straightaway stretch before I could realize what was happening. |
|
If she got going fast enough on the straightaway she could get air and pull a three-sixty when she landed. |
|
Staff and parents are concerned that the building could be unsafe, especially in stormy weather. |
|
Here are a few of the players that could just be joining the Catalonian in the Bundesliga next season. |
|
He heard her move, so he straightened up as quickly as he could to greet her. |
|
The organizers of Saturday's antiwar protests in the US could not have been very heartened by the turnouts at the biggest events. |
|
Clyde could sit there straight-faced and talk to you about anything, lying to you the entire time, and you'd believe it. |
|
If you could cup your ear you could hear Republicans all over the country heaving a sigh of relief. |
|
Her tears for me were more than I could bear, and I started to sob silently, my chest heaving, my shoulders shaking. |
|
|
But even I could make it no farther than the sixth house before my legs gave from under me and I collapsed on the ground, my stomach heaving. |
|
I was adorned with condolences and words of pity and sorrow, but no words could heal the pain in my heart. |
|
It was a big room with huge glasses, through which I could see three persons operating the monitoring system and watching the dashboard. |
|
In that process, because of cultural norms, it was assumed that only men could operate machines. |
|
The days when a single service could operate independently and do major things on the global playing field are over. |
|
Allah has created this world so that we could enter Heaven by following the path of truth. |
|
They could emote operatically and weep in the streets and threaten suicide. |
|
By His precious blood a road was made from Heaven to earth, by which God could come down to man. |
|
He could never know what she had wished for as the stars fell from the heavens to earth. |
|
She could feel her eyes slowly opening, and all she saw was red for a moment. |
|
One could, of course, record an audio-CD onto a cassette tape or similar analog technology at diminished quality and at performance speeds. |
|
Epidural anaesthesia could be delivered in the birthing room instead of the operating theatre, allowing the father to be present. |
|
He did not know what trouble this could bring, for people spoke of elves and imps and brownies living up in the hills. |
|
Tribals, incensed by the military operations, could reject the dominion of the federal government. |
|
The catamaran anchored off the Ancon Peninsula so holidaymakers could snorkel or swim, the inquest was told. |
|
On the other hand, prolonged cold storage could be used as a tool for affecting oxidative metabolism. |
|
But on bad days where we were all racing the clock, we could fall back on the storyboards and the shot lists and get it done. |
|
They could be relied upon to do it properly, often eschewing outright straight-line speed for a mesmeric blend of response, agility and feel. |
|
Claimants have a lot to prove if they are to be successful, but anyone with a cast-iron case could be looking at a substantial sum. |
|
According to the report, further space travel would be halted if missions could not safely enter orbit. |
|
|
The minimum flight velocity was so high that the aircraft could not be hand-launched but instead required a catapult. |
|
The sharp vocals and beat alone could have catapulted this song into some level of stardom. |
|
If that is done as a joint venture, they could well find themselves catapulted into the limelight on more than one front. |
|
The man ran well for his size, and just before the guards could reach out to him, catapulted around a lamppost and went off on a tangent. |
|
Straddling the Brazil-Argentina border is the Iguassu Falls, a range of cataracts that could be the most perfectly designed in the world. |
|
Do not be taken in by clever and smooth operators or you could get involved in illegal deals. |
|
Inside a group could gather, it would be comfortable for two and you could see the stars through the round opening in the roof. |
|
If we could absorb the significance and importance of every death we heard about in the news then we would be unable to function. |
|
Great Western Railways could have used this as a heaven-sent opportunity for promoting cheap and efficient rail travel. |
|
He stood, suddenly heavy with guilt and a kind of sorrow he could not express. |
|
I have never heard of this before and wondered whether it could help the problem. |
|
This movie could be a healer in that region, bringing the two sides together. |
|
Yet the opening to the West offered by the EU could bring huge economic benefits to Iran. |
|
A little bit of blue could be seen between the heavy gray clouds, which were indeed on their way south. |
|
It was thick and heavy and I could only guess it was a blanket or something like it. |
|
With her thick, straight hair and tanned skin, she really could be Olivia's sister. |
|
Last week's unprecedented events could have a far more profound effect on economic psychology than other catastrophes. |
|
They were so loud you could not even hear our rides, and we were unable to hear ourselves think, as if thinking is something we have to do! |
|
Tonight those winds are picking up in the Mexican resort town of Cancun, which could suffer catastrophic damage from this powerful storm. |
|
One Ethiopian study showed that heavy clay soils which could not be worked with wooden ploughs became fertile when steel was used. |
|
|
Soon, she was very near to Dave, and he could smell a heavy perfume from her. |
|
It felt as if I could run forever and nothing mattered except the heavy sky above me. |
|
I could remove all the CDs and tapes from my living room and store them away for good. |
|
The consecration of the building in Brighton Road also provided a new home for a cheder, or school where Sutton's children could learn Hebrew. |
|
For years scientists and engineers have warned that a major hurricane could inflict catastrophic damage on the city. |
|
The Great Depression went to show just how cold and heartless the government could be. |
|
No one person could claim harm, but the human world, most people would agree, would have been damaged catastrophically. |
|
They were warned that the space shuttle could fail catastrophically if debris hit the vulnerable underside of its wings during liftoff. |
|
What's more, she points out, thriftiness today could be catastrophically expensive tomorrow. |
|
Brown's insistence on commissioning a storytelling painting could hardly have been unique. |
|
He listened for breathing, but he could hear nothing over the pounding of his heart. |
|
Try as Emilion might, he could not teach me to throw and catch the pesky things properly. |
|
He quickly dropped the knife and caught the blood in his palm before it could drip onto the coverlet. |
|
Nearing Poer Head, Conor and Denise Phelan in Endeavour managed to catch them but could not pass clear ahead. |
|
I don't want us to be caught in that and by the looks of it I'd say we could be in for some snow. |
|
But there was always the danger that he would be caught in situations he could not easily explain. |
|
I swear if I could pass Gracie off as a hearing dog and get away with it I would. |
|
One couple from Malton said they could catch the train from home and that the bus simply did not offer enough comfort. |
|
This time she caught a glimpse of his slim figure but she still could not see his face. |
|
Agueda Yzquierdo, for instance, could recall the castration of Juan de Aleson, the full castrate who later married Maria de Legaria. |
|
|
Soccer and rugby fans could face difficulty catching matches in Bradford's pubs next season because Sky Sports has upped its subscriptions. |
|
At first she could see nothing, but then caught a glimpse of something black trying to hide from her behind a branch. |
|
So far 12 students have gone down with the virus and college staff say that unless all students are vaccinated more could catch the disease. |
|
They all allowed a high ball to bounce when they could have made the clean catch. |
|
There weren't any zippers, buttons or catches he could find, so it was just a matter of trial and error. |
|
The slide was flimsy, and if you had the help of a stout friend you could tip it over. |
|
They warned, however, that a heavy-handed police response could trigger mass protests. |
|
It was tall and stout, and a good support for him as he walked, for he could place it before him and so be sure of his next step. |
|
He could not help but stare in open-mouthed shock, unable to grasp what his eyes told him. |
|
So I started to cycle as fast as I could and soon began to catch up with the other cyclists. |
|
Any of us could have been in the shops on the street on Friday and been caught up in what happened. |
|
If the latter was the case, there could be a higher risk of winter flooding in a number of the region's river catchments. |
|
He could enjoy the rain and was never worried about catching a cold when wet. |
|
Unless the government is prepared to act and act soon, one of Scotland's biggest industries could soon be catching a cold. |
|
This could be pioneered in Scotland and patients' rights placed at the heart of the matter. |
|
That worked fine as long as prices held steady or even dropped but meant they could catch a cold if prices rose above expectations. |
|
One could conclude that foods rich in longer-chain catechin oligomers are most likely to provide bioavailable catechin. |
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The other side of this contract was a programme of social reforms that the country could ill afford in its straitened circumstances. |
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In Datura stramonium, no effect of inbreeding could be detected on resistance to two herbivores. |
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We could have stayed longer but we had some oppos waiting shoreside and they wanted to continue the dockyard tour. |
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Improved road design could mean fewer squashed hedgehogs and other mammal casualties, according to experts. |
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The Moran brothers, Ollie and Niall, will be on opposite sides and could find themselves marking each other in midfield. |
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Mr Clifford says because his sheep are stranded the number of lambs dying could increase dramatically. |
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Moreover, the railroads could not be insulated from the serious disruption of heavy industry, a primary customer sector. |
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The Senate majority leader, a heart surgeon, said the ban could save the lives of thousands of babies. |
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Now this could be an opportune time to have a look at our own railway lines and get a few facts or fallacies cleared up once and for all. |
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With so much bad weather, surely this is an opportune time to sit down and put something together, and who knows, you could be lucky. |
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For now, here is the heart-warming story of a love that could not be denied. |
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He said the market for mosquito catchers in Europe and Asia is huge, and could secure hundreds of Scottish jobs. |
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You could easily cover long journeys in the car and the surprisingly spacious trunk would provide plenty of stowage. |
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He spoke to the driver who made no response, and because of his concern that the car could catch fire he disconnected its battery. |
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I was afraid she might have heartworms and the SPCA said they would put her down if they could not treat her. |
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He stayed at my vets for about 3-4 weeks so he could continue to recover and to be treated for the heartworm that he had. |
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But when the lights went out, Cruise's friend and the heavyset man exchanged places so the actor could sit right next to his friend. |
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You could see that in the faces of the people there last night and they would obviously oppose any attempt to remove him. |
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But there are heavyweight champions I think that, even as a middleweight, I could have beaten. |
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But word soon came over a radio that no stopples for pipelines this large could be found in the region on short notice. |
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At that time, the three of them could not explain how this strange feeling came about. |
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I could tell you about the cab which, ordered by phone, announced its arrival by loud horn blasts from the opposite side of the street. |
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For all anyone could have known we could have been four fat, balding Brummies with one song, but people turned up to the gig completely blind. |
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