The climax of the film is a justly celebrated sequence in which the camera glides over a crowded dancefloor to pick out the true murderer. |
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And there is always that specter of a whiff of smoke being sniffed in the exceedingly crowded theater. |
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The last thing he remembered was gasping with pain when someone sprayed an aerosol mist in his face as he left a crowded elevator. |
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Local archery ranges are crowded now as bowhunters reacquaint themselves with a favorite bow or become familiar with new gear. |
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On Whitsunday all Kilton crowded behind us into the little chapel and saw the wooden statues wearing real mantles of bright wool for the day. |
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However, the covers are generally woeful, neither standing out at first glance amidst a crowded newsstand, or providing any lasting meaning. |
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At 6.20 am, crowded together in small boats and weighed down with heavy kit, the soldiers approached the deserted shore in silence. |
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The drift of the continents had sealed off the waters of the far arctic, as the northern margins of Asia and North America crowded together. |
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The beaches are a little less crowded, the weather remains stable and the water is still agreeably warm. |
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It was crowded, like any urban mass transit would be at rush hour, so we had to stand for this short trip. |
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Using it first time in a crowded boat in a rough sea is a recipe for disaster. |
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The train was more crowded than I expected, so in order to get a window seat, I moved into the inoperative cafe car. |
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Mia spoke as she moved past the mass of people that crowded the streets of the market square. |
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Although she can sail to windward, it is generally quicker to row into head winds, or through crowded anchorages. |
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A bunch of people piled into the van, and even more crowded into the flatbed. |
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The next thing was the mass of people that crowded between him and that door, and the way they all seemed to move together like waves. |
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The train station was crowded with the usual mass of commuters going to work along with a horde of kids going to school. |
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I guess that was so they didn't disturb the scrum of journalists crowded round a wide-screen telly watching the football. |
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Matthew Bland dissected the Padiham defence with a through ball but Hoyle was crowded out as he went to shoot. |
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I don't like bandwagons, because I am a slowcoach and it's usually pretty crowded by the time I get there. |
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With a crowded beach the Coastguards fired a maroon to signal the run down the beach from the Inn to the sea at 11.45am. |
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No one scored again until the third period when we crowded the front of the net and the point took a slapshot that the goalie never saw. |
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A score of men crowded the little courtyard visible at the end of the alley. |
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The others, just a score in all, crowded around him in the underbrush, shaking rain from their leather armor. |
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Rents were horrendous for urban dwellers, with entire families doubling up in crowded single room tenements. |
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In fact, so many people snorkel at Hanauma Bay that it often gets quite crowded. |
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Towns are getting crowded, while many of the best places to dive or snorkel can be inundated with boats. |
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From the long lines to the disorganized, crowded aisles to the stabby patrons, this store is sure to raise your blood pressure a few notches. |
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It was crowded, and I had to maneuver around many people, but finally she led us into an empty corridor. |
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I like to wear my big hiker's backpack on the crowded trains because I smash people in the face from behind without even feeling it. |
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Hundreds of aliens Eric's age crowded the marketplace, all of them carrying bags, suitcases, backpacks and trunks. |
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Sitting on a crowded train, one overheard conversation might catch your attention and remain in the back of your mind for the rest of the day. |
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Now we live in a more crowded, environmentally aware age and trains are back in fashion. |
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The streets were crowded with all sorts of creatures hawking their wares and goods. |
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In Hong Kong, scores of schools have closed, and some people are avoiding crowded places. |
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Although fine for adjusting broadcast stations, the Magic Eye was not useful for tuning weak signals in a crowded band. |
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The trio have been firm friends since nursery school, where they met across a crowded sandpit aged three and a half. |
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I was doing the usual shuffle up the crowded stairs, walking on the extreme left. |
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I walked slowly shuffling along the busy hallway reflecting how alone one could feel in such a crowded place. |
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Even tabloids are hard to read when standing on the train, if it's crowded enough. |
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For the girls' final screen test, Zhang filmed them as they stood in a crowded street screaming whatever came to mind at the top of their lungs. |
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Parents, are you tired of lugging your child's bulky car seat through crowded, security-clogged airports? |
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I was once on a crowded Muni bus, wherein someone made a loud, rude, and embarrassing sound. |
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When I was looking for my third period class which is Health, the halls were really crowded. |
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Schoolteachers today are struggling to find time to fit arts subjects into a crowded national curriculum. |
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Her rotund frame was crowded onto a porch swing, her naturally white hair colored, poorly, I might add, red. |
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He was joined by two other men who all crowded around her and started wiping the liquid off her. |
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Together they made their way through the sea of people as they crowded around Him. |
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When it becomes crowded they carefully root around in loose jacket pockets or open handbags. |
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The plot is thought to have involved the use of conventional explosives, probably to be loaded into cars and driven into crowded city centres. |
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The field was so crowded there was hardly room to move without running into a slashing sword. |
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Between nursing intervals, the mother leaves the pup in the crowded rookery as she searches for food in the ocean. |
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In 1974, in a crowded railway compartment whistling through northern Italy, I found myself squeezed next to a Cypriot student. |
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Burmese Rohingya wait in a crowded room for malaria test results at special clinic for malaria on May 4, 2009 in Sittwe, Arakan state, Myanmar. |
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The coffee shop was crowded now but he pushed his way to the front of the line at the counter. |
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Television appearances, charity events and photo-shoots have often crowded her schedule. |
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The small courtyard is also crowded with anxious relatives and concerned neighbours. |
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It was unacceptable that anxious patients should wait for hours in crowded accident and emergency departments. |
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The constant threat of terror forces you to think about everything, from being in crowded places to choosing a restaurant to even riding a bus. |
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I glared at them quietly, unable to concentrate on my book, feeling crowded in. |
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It was already crowded and pumping with Latin dance music, the bright lights flashing across the entire room. |
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In the morning it wakes me up to the sparkle and dazzle of the sea, and the gleaming stretch of beach, not yet crowded with slick brown bodies. |
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It gets so crowded here in high summer that there's often no room to sit down, let alone lay out a towel. |
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Cool and relaxing, the forest was a refreshing retreat from the muggy, crowded streets and alleyways of the now often crowded town. |
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We were even courageous in front of an amphitheatre crowded with excited leftists. |
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In the middle the open water of the fairway is crowded with pinnaces, jolly-boats, cutters, and pleasure steamers. |
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Boo has been far from angelic recently and the thought of taking him to a crowded football stadium was just too much. |
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There are no crowded anchorages with boats anchoring close enough to be rafted up. |
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The other half of the garage was crowded with lawnmowers, weed-whackers, tools, and excessive amounts of junk. |
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In a day or two after, I was requested to attend the judge's court, which was crowded with Europeans and natives. |
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Lutheranism had already taken root as had Anabaptism so Calvinism was seen as another protest religion in a ever crowded field. |
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In May, 2000, tiring of the crowded conditions, I took some photographs showing the type of service that customers have to endure. |
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It is boisterous, crowded, smoky, noisy, with people speaking loudly over loud Latin dance music. |
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Gutsy, you bet, because look around, the mall is crowded, shoppers everywhere, and it goes down right out in the open. |
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We can live crowded together in vast cities or as tiny groups in remote deserts. |
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A bench stood ready by the firepit, and at once a man bearing a tray crowded with brass cups was before us. |
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The thin strips of pink lamb melted in the mouth but I felt the many sweet elements crowded out the quality lamb. |
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Fabian Cancellara retained the yellow jersey after finishing as part of a crowded peloton. |
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She rested the weight on her hip, as the young man smiled at her and with a quick flick of his head indicated for them to leave the crowded area. |
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Merchants crowded around the entrance, some waving papers to get attention, others with a lambskin or a clay tablet with orders written on it. |
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He was right next to us as we walked down the alleyways and through the crowded streets. |
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Realizing that the city was far too crowded to find shelter, they sought a hiding place in the woods. |
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Many people were packed into the crowded living room, their scantily clad bodies writhing to the beat. |
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In February 1968 the air above this space was crowded with comings and goings. |
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But, like its predecessors, it has an ability to make itself heard above the din of the crowded media marketplace. |
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They were soon waltzing on the spacious dance floor, which was getting more and more crowded by the minute. |
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The granary is an old 19th century grainstore, six storeys high, fronting onto the river Suir whose quays were once crowded with sailing ships. |
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That, too, was absurdly crowded, not least because of a rare live appearance from, yes, Lily Savage. |
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It grew quickly, and by the eighth century it had tall buildings and was crowded with people. |
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In a dangerous combat situation, or even a crowded seaway, this can provide a huge advantage. |
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The harbour has both a commercial quayside and marina which was crowded with expensive yachts and cruisers. |
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It was uncomfortable and crowded because the captain or the first mate was making a quid on the side by carrying more passengers than manifested. |
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The area is crowded with vendors, big and small, all jockeying for position in the race to gain market share. |
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Then in injury time, Miller's searching header back across a crowded area wreaked momentary havoc. |
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They started down the crowded hallway, weaving around slower moving crowds. |
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He felt that if it could be so crowded on a Saturday, weekdays will be worse. |
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It's fun, but not distinctive enough to stand out from an increasingly crowded pack of action titles. |
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Maneuvering a heavy, expanded-mobility tactical truck wrecker into position often was a challenge in the crowded streets of an urban environment. |
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After a number of years it may become necessary to lift crowded plantings of bulbs in order to spread them out and revitalize the soil. |
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If there's something going on in that crowded four blocks of shops and restaurants, he knows the score. |
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The show's third season is on DVD for the first time, ripe for rediscovery in the crowded DVD market. |
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One thing after another crowded in upon me, demanding attention and pushing further down the list the things that really mattered. |
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He fished pellet at three and five metres to edge ahead of a crowded frame with carp, tench, chub, bream and barbel. |
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The place was jumping, yes a little bit over crowded, and slightly pretentious, but that just added to the atmosphere. |
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As I slowly made my way through the dark, crowded junkyard, I felt a smile creeping across my face. |
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Apparent to anyone who has swiped a MetroCard recently, trains are stiflingly crowded. |
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Then the commercial weight loss behemoths Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig joined this crowded field. |
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Bloggers brought another microphone to an already crowded GOP media table and became an appendage of talk radio. |
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Water, food and arable land will be more scarce, cities more crowded and hunger more widespread. |
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When it became too crowded, they moved her into an open casket on the street. |
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Instead, the politician who once braved a crowded Mumbai train hunkered down at home. |
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But since those rosy scenarios were first floated, the California political scene has grown more crowded. |
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We were quartered in crowded Nissan huts on the edge of the nearby city. |
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In 1991, it was the scene of one of the worst atrocities of the first Persian Gulf War, when a British warplane dropped bombs on a crowded market, killing 150 civilians. |
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Hundreds of thousands who had already arrived crowded into the temple on Tuesday behind the president to view the book, a collection of verses by Sikh gurus of the past. |
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Where yesterday the supermarket was closed and the carpark empty and rainswept, today both of them were crowded with too many cars and far too many people. |
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On Wednesday, two young female suicide bombers detonated in a crowded market in Kano State. |
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But it's so crowded, loud and smoky that even the intrepid Milica gasps for air, and we reascend the stairs to lounge against the bannister near the entrance. |
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Most of those rebirths were the result of mergers and acquisitions, but the fancy new naming keeps the companies fresh in the crowded marketing space. |
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Perhaps she is just overcome by the airlessness of a crowded room. |
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I have been to diabolically crowded shows of art by van Gogh, Vermeer, and Caravaggio, at the Met and elsewhere. |
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Out in the crowded hallway, broadcasting on the online Tea Party News Network, founder Scottie Hughes injected a note of realism. |
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If you think the city's sidewalks are crowded with folks yakking on cell phones, look at the streets around the NYU campus near Washington Square. |
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The story is all the more remarkable when you take into account the size of Europe's wine lake and the stiff competition in today's crushingly crowded fine wine market. |
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At York, the carriage ride will be briefer but a lot noisier, as the Ascot landaus make their way past stands crowded with up to 56,000 race-goers. |
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With a land mass about the same size as the UK or Japan and a population of just under 4 million people, New Zealand is one of the least crowded places on earth. |
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Britain's treacherous tides and crowded shipping lanes make rowing round Britain harder than crossing the Atlantic, according to the Ocean Rowing Society. |
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There was also fear that terrorists might take over a large ship, perhaps even an oil tanker, in the crowded English Channel shipping lanes, and cause a lot of damage. |
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Marie's subsequent rendezvous with her husband to discuss the ransom money is quite absurdist, occurring on a very crowded street near a poissonnerie and a merry-go-round. |
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A full anapestic metre with feminine ending gives somewhat the effect of anacrusis, since a third light syllable must be crowded in between the stresses. |
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Just entering a crowded restaurant car on the train back to Stockholm on Thursday gave me a brutal headache from the confusion and volume of voices. |
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On a dance floor crowded with drag performers who are preening either with feminine realness or clownish flamboyance, Aviance is a unique creature. |
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They crowded around him, eying him from head to foot, with great curiosity. |
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The area is a disturbed wetland, invaded by non-native melaleuca trees that have crowded out native flora and fauna. |
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When the butter is foaming, lay in a batch of floured codfish chunks in one layer, not crowded. |
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Most often, these early immigrants would live together in crowded rooming houses or primitive hostels in urban centers of the industrial northeastern United States. |
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Initially, single or married men were likely to immigrate alone, living in crowded quarters or rooming houses, saving their money and sending large amounts back to Poland. |
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It looks like a stereotypical convenience store, shelves crowded with garishly packaged junk food. |
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Now they are crowded round about us, trying to get a grandstand view. |
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The beach looked rather lonely on a usually crowded Sunday afternoon. |
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The entire student body crowded into the sports hall for morning assembly. |
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Scabies is often associated with poor hygiene and crowded conditions. |
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He is nothing if not lovable, a shaggy chatterbox whose run-on sentences resemble the colorful, crowded laundry lines strung between tenement windows in old photographs. |
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Just a few months ago my 3-year-old son, mid-tantrum, broke my grasp to run from me in a crowded subway station. |
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Yes, in our increasingly crowded city, space is at a premium and self-storage like this is a good idea, but why on earth does it have to be built in a residential area? |
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We were crowded around a single, circular lunch table in the cafeteria. |
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Veterans of old and more recent wars crowded around the bar downing shots of Regal Crown Black, chased by shiner Bock. |
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In this exhibition, the gallery floor resembled a crowded marina with an unlikely array of vessels, among them a tall ship, a tugboat, a destroyer, a cruise ship and others. |
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Misleading corporate health claims are the slow-motion equivalent of falsely shouting fire in a crowded theater. |
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Several hundred teenagers dressed in patent leather shoes and crisp green U.S. Army uniforms are greeting and backslapping each other in the crowded school hallway. |
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She soon established a studio that was crowded with visitors, not only to attend classes, but also to see her, seeking comfort, looking for happiness, tenderness and hope. |
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Typically then he sat almost unobtrusively in a crowded dressingroom and when asked for comment was at pains to stress that the victory was down to a team effort. |
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I exited the elevator quickly, marching out to the crowded street. |
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It's also one of those places that seems to be constantly crowded, especially on warm nights when lucky customers who've arrived early can sit out on the terrasse. |
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Government has a vital role in a crowded society, as a steward of common resources and public services. |
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The gym was crowded and decorated with balloons and streamers. |
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Several NGOs have social workers at railway stations, bus stands, marketplaces and other crowded locales to identify and relocate children who have run away from home. |
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The canteen was getting more and more cramped by the second and I found myself having to bump and nudge my way through the mass of students crowded in front of the exit. |
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In the avalanche of smells and sounds and sights on the crowded beach we had forgotten the twins, each of us assuming that they were following our meandering path. |
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One cannot but be awed to consider how the crowded mural of Bleak House or the elaborate tapestry of Little Dorrit were held together on semi-monthly basis. |
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Due to the crowded nature of Rome at the time, Octavius was taken to his father's home village at Velletri to be raised. |
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The ewer was on the mantelpiece, crowded today with white lilies and white mop-headed chrysanths. |
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At the end of an hour being driven through what felt like a crowded speedway track we were considering opening a spitoon factory. |
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Living in Anatolia, she embarked on the crossing to Cyprus on a very crowded boat. |
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During the annual Edinburgh Festival, the High Street becomes crowded with tourists, entertainers and buskers. |
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The plan initially was to construct a relief settlement to take people out of the crowded city of Belfast. |
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So don't complain if you see the sin-bins looking crowded for a week or two. |
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A table beside it was crowded with empty cola bottles and half-eaten bags of chips and cheezies. |
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Landlords whose land was crowded with poorer tenants were now faced with large bills. |
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The building is sited about 100 feet back from the crowded street. |
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Cells are very crowded and chemically energetic places, so miscopying sometimes occurs. |
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It then disappeared into a crowded shopping area with our lead and choke collar, costing us pounds 3 to replace. |
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It is regarded as a fine mountain, but can become quite crowded, particularly with the Snowdon Mountain Railway running to the summit. |
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Even RAF Luqa on Malta was extremely crowded with RAF Bomber Command aircraft. |
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In the West, bombing had destroyed 5,000,000 houses and apartments, and 12,000,000 refugees from the east had crowded in. |
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As many as 10,000 escaped slaves crowded into the city during the British occupation. |
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During peak hours, stations can get so crowded that they need to be closed. |
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Simeiz, famous for its splashy parties and crowded clubs, looked deserted. |
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The prison was so crowded that they had to resort to double celling and then triple celling. |
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Popular on the crowded roads into inner London, drivers who stop even for a second on a red route face a hefty ne. |
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The beaches of Gabon's Petit Luango National Park are crowded with forest elephants, red river hogs and even buffalo. |
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I regained my composure and stepped fully inside the crowded hallway. |
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The market for handheld devices is now crowded with competitors. |
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Sublime cafe fare in a sunny, noisy setting crowded with suits, ladies who lunch and artsy Mass Ave types. |
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Her young daughter, Alita, is about to move into the crowded home after being looked after by her grandparents. |
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The symphony warmed up inside the amphitheater while the audience crowded around outside. |
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Antibiotics, fungicides, parasiticides, algicides and pesticides are used to control diseases inside the crowded shrimp ponds. |
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Referee Michael Oliver failed to detect a foul in a crowded box and the Canaries escaped down the tunnel with the scoreline still blank. |
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Not long ago I spotted a limpkin hiding in the shade of a palmetto at a crowded riverfront park. |
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They crowded around him with vociferous welcome, Brown leading in a series of wild cheers. |
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She was from a large family and had many friends, so the funeral was crowded with mourning survivors. |
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London had been a Roman settlement for four centuries and had become progressively more crowded inside its defensive city wall. |
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Clusters of strong flowers rose everywhere above the coarse tussocks of bent. It was like a roadstead crowded with tall fairy-shipping. |
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Forced marches and crowded railway journeys preceded years in camps where disease, poor diet and inadequate medical facilities prevailed. |
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They rubbernecked as they squeezed past the masses sardined up against the window, while those who were in the know crowded inside the store. |
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These small buses can at times be crowded, as passengers are generally never turned down regardless of the number. |
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Marks Square and other popular attractions too crowded to walk through during the peak season. |
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Paulson will join a crowded tight end position that includes Heath Miller, Weslye Saunders and Leonard Pope. |
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Lonicera fragrantissima is a shrubby honeysuckle, with deliciously scented, creamy yellow flowers crowded on the bare wood through winter. |
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Others fled or crowded into refugee camps operated by the Freedmen's Bureau. |
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High rise flats and sprawling shopping centers give the area a far more modern feel than the crowded city centre. |
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The low-end became crowded with a variety of low-cost disk enclosures with iSCSI connectivity. |
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If you want to empty a crowded room strong body pong will usually do the trick. |
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Dublin became so crowded by the 11th century that houses were built outside the town walls. |
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They were crowded with allegorical figures, and filled with emotion and movement. |
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Parking, storage, and traffic issues in crowded cities, along with the easy driving position make them a popular form of urban transportation. |
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Even with the normal crew size of around 400, the ship was quite crowded, and with additional soldiers would have been extremely cramped. |
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Humans have characteristically crowded teeth, with gaps from lost teeth usually closing up quickly in young individuals. |
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Larger juveniles at metamorphosis always outgrow smaller ones that have been reared in more crowded ponds. |
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But on Tuesday morning it was crowded with players, some toting paddlelike bats, and filled with the sound of leather balls struck by wood. |
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Learners should not be too much crowded with a heap or multitude of documents or ideas at one time. |
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Dublin became so crowded by the 11th century that houses were constructed outside the town walls. |
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Avoid any plants that are wilted or drooping or crowded close together in a display, which can cause premature bract loss. |
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These differences are likely important for mothers and pups who need to remain in contact on crowded beaches. |
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Few islands are favorable for breeding, and those that are tend to be crowded. |
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In large, crowded areas, brittle stars eat suspended matter from prevailing seafloor currents. |
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Conwy's outer ward was originally crowded with administrative and service buildings. |
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The crowded roads in St Asaph have been a hot political issue for many years. |
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The balconies and verandas were crowded with spectators, anxious to behold their future sovereign. |
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The slum was based around narrow streets, badly ventilated and full of crowded houses that led to festering diseases. |
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They knew the lineage of all the boys and girls who crowded into old cracky wagons, rode four to a horse or footed it out to the lake. |
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For those and the reasons above, Aptitude's and Frankel's shedrow isn't a crowded avenue this week. |
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The duke's levees and couchees were so crowded that the antechambers were full. |
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A new snacks brand is hoping to stand out in the crowded category by launching bite-sized toasties. |
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The wedding reception was too noisy and crowded for my liking. |
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Their houses may be crowded with low, vulgar, filthy trash, exposing their wives to all kinds of blackguardism, and they have no fears of their doing wrong. |
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The story is organized in snippets, each identified by the time signature and corresponding to the events before, during, and after a suicide bombing on a crowded bus. |
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The Germans crowded into a phalanx and began to push the Romans backward, even though the latter jumped up on the shields of the enemy to thrust downward. |
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By the mid 1970s, every city in Italy had a crowded FM radio spectrum. |
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The Scots were not allowed ashore, and illness struck the crowded ship. |
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But what makes Dos Clothing stand out in a crowded market place? |
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Buffer zones often result in large uninhabited regions which are themselves noteworthy in many increasingly developed or crowded parts of the world. |
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In fact, most compact tabloids formerly used the broadsheet paper size, but changed to accommodate reading in tight spaces, such as on a crowded commuter bus or train. |
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However, this can also cause increasing problems for those not prepared to think differently and creatively in an escalatingly competitive and crowded global marketplace. |
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The Finca Vigia became crowded with guests and tourists, as Hemingway, beginning to become unhappy with life there, considered a permanent move to Idaho. |
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Their skulls are distinguished from those of dogs by their narrower muzzles, less crowded premolars, more slender canine teeth, and concave rather than convex profiles. |
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The pair were languishing in a crowded, barbed-wire topped Marrakesh jail but Mr Cole is now understood to have been granted a conditional release pending an appeal. |
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Lucy peered at the pictures with her face close to the page, and though they had seemed crowded and muddlesome before, she found she could now see them quite clearly. |
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Mass poverty and unemployment led rural families to stream into cities like Cairo where they ended up in crowded slums, barely managing to survive. |
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The paths of art, so choked and so dangerous, are, despite encumberment and obstacles, day by day more crowded, and consequently Bohemians were never more numerous. |
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Maybe the family who trick-or-treats together stays together.Little ballerinas, ghosts and superheroes may find it a bit crowded on the trick-or-treat trail this year. |
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To technologize Sarcelles, space had to be found in a fairly crowded, poorly wired building inhabited by individuals who did not wish to be disturbed. |
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A city break to Istanbul offers the chance to see wisterias scramble across stone buildings and the heart-shaped leaves of the Judas tree dance among the crowded squares. |
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The premium end of the UK yoghurt market is to get yet more crowded with the launch of a range of gourmet yoghurts that has already proved a hit in Australia and New Zealand. |
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Contemporary British painter Carl Randall spent 10 years living in Tokyo as an artist, creating a body of work depicting the cities crowded streets and public spaces. |
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With the castle so crowded, the outer ward had been given over to guests to raise their tents and pavilions, leaving only the smaller inner yards for training. |
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Many slaves died of disease in the crowded holds of the slave ships. |
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There was a slight shuffling movement amoung the men crowded about. |
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They all crowded up and leaned over the rails, nearly in my face, and kept still, watching with all their might. I could see them first-rate, but they couldn't see me. |
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The human habitations were crowded to bursting point, intermingled with these sources of heat, sparks, and pollution, and their construction increased the fire risk. |
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The ball was launched goalward and Wolfgang Weber scored, with England appealing in vain for handball as the ball came through the crowded penalty area. |
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Those with gardens often built Anderson shelters to take refuge in but not everyone was so fortunate and others had to use crowded public shelters. |
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On 19 September, at a crowded memorial service, his ashes were interred near the burial plots of Purcell and Stanford in the north choir aisle of Westminster Abbey. |
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Nodal tracheary elements are isodiametric to fusiform in shape, and have crowded circular to elongate prominently bordered pits and uniformly thick secondary walls. |
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But far more than the murmuring and insecty air of the moorland does the wet chirk-chirking of the living shore give one the idea of crowded and multitudinous life. |
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A short oar is easier to use in a narrow creek or a crowded anchorage. |
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Last year, the Prime Minister's Bureau tried a number of times to organize a trip to India, but the Indian government begged off, citing a crowded schedule. |
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It brought us the all-you-can-eat buffet, the salad bar and the sight of an acned youth carrying a basket of tiered lettuce across a crowded room. |
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Some other regions have already been using women-only cars, but Tokyo was slower to adopt them due to crowded platforms and the prevalence of mutual trackage systems. |
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A view of a window display crowded with a great many pairs of women's shoes indeed looks back to the gentle strangeness of Atget's shopwindow photographs. |
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The roads are crowded with carriers, laden with rich manufactures. |
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Now the ventilation space above head height is crowded with ducting, conduits, cameras, speakers and equipment acting as a baffle plates with predictable reductions in flow. |
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Others in the crowded bus, having nothing better to do, took up the cry, and soon many of the higglers were chorusing about the ugliness of the fisherman playing dominoes. |
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All around the shores of the narrow bogan crowded the beasts, watching with wide, fascinated eyes the flight and fall of these disastrous missiles. |
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Mystic sigils competed for crowded wall space with more modern scrawled messages, written by youths who have turned the temple into a drinking den. |
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We walk around to central world plaza, navigating crowded pavements chock a block with street vendors selling everything from fresh fish to meat on a stick to Thai beer. |
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In Husseiniya, a suburb of northeastern Baghdad, a police official says a roadside bomb near a crowded marketplace killed two people and wounded nine. |
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What a tragedy, that someone would set off a bomb in a crowded place. |
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