Brixton didn't take it kindly but with me standing right next to Lita, there was nothing he could do but curse out loud a few times. |
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I tried to curse the selkie for pushing me into the portal without so much as a by-your-leave, but for some reason my voice wasn't working. |
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If we lived in another age, I would be inclined to believe that someone had put a curse on her. |
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But the day I stood up against Panday, pujas of other kinds were probably held to put a curse on me. |
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These actions made a kindly medicine man angry, and he put a curse on them. |
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He started to attack the Goddess, but she then asked for the Lady's permission to put a curse on him. |
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Someone or something put a curse on Edmund that followed his family to the New World and took root in Dudleytown. |
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It's like some witch put a curse on me that would make all my pictures look horrendous for the rest of my life. |
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Too many communities in East Lancashire suffer from the curse of juvenile nuisance and much of it is caused and worsened by under-age drinking. |
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Forget anything you may have read about the supposed advantages of Atkins, the dangers of dairy or, for that matter, the curse of cholesterol. |
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Privately, he agreed with the view of the government that inflation was a curse and a burden on ordinary workers. |
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This is the great curse of the 20th Century secular scientists who are an abomination in the eye of The Lord. |
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He denounced them as the curse and weakness of Spain, the spoiled children of the peninsular family. |
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They judged every hybrid from then forth as a curse and a danger to be destroyed. |
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She walked as though she was ashamed of her beauty, like it was a terrible curse she had been burdened with. |
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Muttering the few curse words she knew, Cielle kicked the trunk of a nearby tree. |
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Claims that the woman invoked a loa to curse him with insanity are invalidated by a complete lack of proof that he ever became insane. |
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I love my books like members of my family but boy, did I curse them as I lugged them up five flights of stairs. |
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Most of the time, he was not much of a curser, but there was something to curse about! |
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The presidents who fell prey to the curse all were elected in years when Jupiter and Saturn conjoined in an earth sign. |
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Thus, we may say of Paul that he thought of himself as under a curse in his pre-Christian state. |
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The only ways to overcome this curse of predestiny are clever writing and serious, believable realism. |
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My favorite curse word, unlike the favorite curse word of most of my guests, is not obscene, it's not scatological, it's profane. |
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I'd rather sweat and curse over ten pages of something new than dry and polish one page until it's gleaming and ready to be put away. |
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As you led everyone in a prayer for deliverance from any curse over their lives, I felt a definite sense of release from bondage. |
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It is better to light one candle than curse the darkness, as a rough translation of a Chinese proverb goes. |
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It's just so much easier to curse like the proverbial inner city sailor than to speak in a traditionally sophisticated and cultured manner. |
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Using the curse of the werewolf as a metaphor for puberty, it's a sharp and, forgive the pun, biting take on adolescence. |
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You display great attention to detail which can be considered good fortune or a curse when it comes to relationships. |
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It is the curse of the diplomat who, in attempting to please everyone, ends up pleasing nobody. |
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If there is a curse here it is the curse of too much money, power, and leisure time combined with a disposition for risk taking. |
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He leaves the house with the curse of his father, but in the epilogue to the play, his family accepts his decision. |
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I should swear and curse by every invocable power at being addressed in that way. |
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What I mean by Robotism, then, is the crushing curse of sameness, the destruction of individuality, and the dead level of mechanical mediocrity. |
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But while most Manitobans curse the tiny bloodsuckers, this play makes them heroes. |
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Falkirk's big home support are a marvellous blessing, but occasionally a curse. |
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The problem, which is a blessing and a curse, is that this industry has an abundance of relatively young and inexperienced trailblazers. |
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With it we bless our God and Father, and with it we curse men, who have been made in the similitude likeness of God. |
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He regarded vampirism as a curse, and the ultimate evil was to force it on someone unwilling. |
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What is benison for Chelsea inevitably turns out to be a curse on their peers. |
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Uttering a muttered curse, I yank off my shirt and rip it into strips, which I bind tightly over the wounds. |
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She heard him curse softly and then he shifted his wait, effectively blocking her attempt at freedom. |
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This was followed by a string of curse words that the censors wisely bleeped out. |
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Sometimes, you curse and scream at the person driving next to you because you are in a mood. |
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She then has to solve the riddle of the tape before she too falls victim to its curse. |
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The police beat her on the legs, feet and buttocks while continuing to curse and shout at her. |
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The curse of nationalism and religious separatism has to be recognised and accepted as a force. |
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He completes passes other quarterbacks wouldn't dare attempt, but that is a blessing and curse. |
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Anesthetics and antiseptics have manacled the demon pain, and the curse of travail has been lifted from the soul of women. |
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I don't know anything about any curse. It sounds like a lot of contrived rot to me. |
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Over the years, the curse has served as a blanket term for a variety of shortcomings and has been something of a self-fulfilling prophecy. |
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Choking back both tears and nausea, a single helpless salty tear dribbles down your cheek as you curse your newfound lowliness. |
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Somehow avoiding the curse of having been partially lottery funded, this is unchallenging but happy and entertaining stuff. |
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I also curse my lack of preparedness, preferring in my slipshod diva manner to leave all decorating and shopping to the last minute. |
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The biggest burden for a young band like the Vines is the curse of comparison, but the band are the real deal. |
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The idea of something as modern and unremarkable as an unlabelled videotape containing a terrible curse is enough to make you take up reading. |
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Idleness is the greatest curse that can fall upon man, for vice and crime follow in its train. |
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That human minds thrive on aesthetics is a curse when trying to comprehend new surroundings. |
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A few curse the memory of them as clunky, unstable, slow, unreliable and inherently unsafe. |
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During these times of course registration mayhem you undoubtedly curse the evil that is voice mail. |
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Unlike other Muslims, Somalis believe that both their religious and secular leaders have the power to bless and to curse people. |
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Some are unable to string together words in a coherent fashion, others curse the never-ending punishment. |
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Beyond this she was believed to be able to interpret dreams, had second sight and was able when the circumstances demanded to bestow a curse. |
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Later, though, they curse me for being delayed in clocking out when the watches on their wrists clearly show it is time to go. |
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The ground wavered unsteadily beneath him and he couldn't help but curse as his back erupted in pain. |
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With the help of her creepy assistant, she destroys the body, intending to escape her own curse of vampirism. |
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The soft curse is given a certain punch by the distinctive southern accent that goes with it. |
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But what say people finally feel enough's enough and curse both houses by putting in community independents or Greens? |
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The victim is said to be frozen with fear and stays to hear the curse, a brief piercing chant, that the kurdaitcha chants. |
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Instead, I wearily picked up a broom, each sweep of the brush accompanied by a muttered curse on all builders. |
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Because no one keeps the whole Law, everyone who lives by the Law must be under a curse. |
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The illusion of easy communication disintegrates, the curse of Babel reasserts itself, English collapses into translationese. |
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Mr Smith said his curse followed gipsy tradition and had always worked in the past. |
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She begins to curse the summoner for his unfair request, saying that she would like to give his body to the devil. |
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It's no wonder then, that Paul calls down God's curse, God's anathema, His ban on those behind their potential defection from Christ. |
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We curse the empty reservoir of washer fluid in the rush hour traffic over freshly salted slush. |
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I agree that sectarian clashes are a curse and there is need to bring these to an end. |
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Menstruation affects half the population, but is vastly avoided by the general public and regarded not as a life force, but as a curse. |
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She roared out in agony, helpless to do anything except violently curse the executor of her friend. |
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The TV special will try to explore the curse rumoured to have caused the death of those involved in the discovery. |
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Kelu departed forthwith, despite the guru's curse for leaving him in the lurch. |
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For some reason, with the curse of lycanthropy comes the curse of country music. |
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That evil is malevolent violence, a curse that is the bane of our human existence. |
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Fearing a curse, the townspeople fled in terror as soon as the weather broke. |
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The heavy clay garden soil that you regularly curse over is fine for aquatic plants. |
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The informant's blow caught him full force in the chest causing him to curse into the gag. |
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We have to worry about people thinking we will curse them or even hex them. |
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Pete claims they can put a curse on you similar to the curses or hexes described by voodoo, witchcraft, or a good mummy story. |
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The power of magick is not just hocus-pocus, a wiggle of a rat, and a curse with a bat. |
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Here, the living characters are largely dispensable whereas the curse rules supreme. |
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He might curse the existence of the January transfer window, but should instead swear allegiance to it. |
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If you leave it, future owners can chuck it out and will not curse your memory. |
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Casual employment has been the curse of young scholars working in the humanities. |
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The shepherds pound the ground with their staffs and curse the sheep as they corral them into makeshift pens. |
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I am not certain I could strike at any one of the ill-omened Wade family without partaking of your curse myself. |
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This is where you can reap the rewards of your forward planning, or curse your impetuousness as appropriate. |
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He uttered a crude four-letter curse that would rival any sailor's colorful language, then tried to roll over again. |
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Each time she faulted, she would silently curse herself as the wrong note amplified itself in the empty hall. |
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Perhaps if more decisions were left to teachers they would tackle the curse of classroom indiscipline, which is the greatest barrier to learning. |
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Some cineastes still curse Hoop Dreams for turning film festivals into video festivals. |
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For his temerity he was sentenced to be nailed by his ears to the local pillory and responded by laying a curse on the courtroom and city. |
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Vicki heard a quick inhalation of breath, a stifled cry, and a strangled curse followed by the slamming of the door to the room. |
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No, the real curse here is the so-called sophomore curse that often plagues the follow-up projects of successful movies. |
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Other causes may be the evil eye, witchcraft, possession by an evil spirit, or a curse by a sorcerer or an offended neighbour. |
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Charm is a curse that protects its possessors from the hard lessons of life. |
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The curse remains such a potent influence on the lives of New Englanders that they will go to extraordinary lengths to try to lift it. |
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To seal my parents promise that I would become a pirate, Joe put a curse on me. |
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He says that some witches put a curse on his youngest daughter, causing her to have bad headaches. |
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While no one ever intentionally put a curse on the Red Sox, the same can't be said about the Cubs. |
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Ryan growled out a curse of pain and tried to wrestle away from the man. |
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Further, as evidenced by the Toscano shocker, the curse on Idol's women has been far from dispelled. |
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Off camera, Rooney was growing up fast, ditching school and developing an impressive vocabulary of curse words. |
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The remoteness of the area has been both its curse and its blessing throughout history. |
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The playwright Jon Fosse could avoid the curse of Henrik Ibsen to become a Norwegian dramatist Nobel laureate. |
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Legend has it that the Nguni believed the sudden darkness that fell as they crossed the Zambezi into Mozambique was a bad omen, if not a curse of Shaka Zulu. |
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You eventually regret the day when you finally get up close to one of your idols and see that they have scars and zits and they scowl and curse at the roadies. |
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Speaking after the incident, Karin Attwood, a white witch and Rollright Stones Trustee, said witches she knew had placed a curse on the perpetrator. |
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Dominic explained that the story goes that, before her death, Lucy put a curse on all successive governors of the old gaol that they would die young. |
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A bright crisp curse of the four letter variety, distracted Janey, from her pleasant thoughts about the Chancellor of the Exchequer and a pair of bolt cutters. |
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Even the Native Americans, who were massacred almost to the point of extinction, escaped the curse of race slavery. |
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Wouldn't you like someday to put a curse on the whole race of dogs? |
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As the Highlanders grimly plodded on, they found it difficult to decide which to curse first and most vehemently, the heat, the dust or that relentless sun glare. |
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Flooding is an annual curse for the Chinese people, but there is a desperation surrounding attempts to shore up the crumbling banks of Dongting Lake. |
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Now, I wonder which other sporting events I can put a curse on? |
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That is good news, because numbers games are already a curse in most betting shops, and what is betting on the lottery if not just another numbers racket? |
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Flinging open a cupboard and desperately scrabbling for some anti-inflammatory cream, I curse myself for positioning it in the most difficult to reach area of the top shelf. |
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Isis put a curse on this top floor so normally I can't come up here. |
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Italy remains the same, and that, as Lampedusa knew, is both its joy and its curse. |
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American liberalism has transformed itself into the L-word, a curse to be avoided even by some of its foremost champions, such as John Kerry and Nancy Pelosi. |
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As far as her role on Girls goes, Kirke says it has been both a blessing and a curse for her art career. |
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The oath itself is curse enough, being four pages in length. |
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Historical tales suggested that a woman attained both the power to give a curse and to confer a blessing in the period between her vow of sati and her death. |
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The first part was a simple curse, and the second an old saying. |
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They had need of us, and we had come, to act the age-old ritual, try to lift the curse from off their lands, give back to ailing Earth the potency their lives depended on. |
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Muttering a curse, she put the other two boxes down before starting to gather the papers scattered all around the hallway and into the living room. |
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Even the Easter rising of 1916 was doomed before it commenced through lack of proper communication and the old curse of command and counter command. |
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Not to curse the stage directions and threaten to send the stage manager to a labor camp. |
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While you shout expletives and curse my name, allow me to assure I do remember your suggestion that we promise not to use each others positions to our advantage. |
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If the playground idea is to go ahead, a lot of thought must be put into where it is located to avoid the risk of it becoming a curse rather than a blessing. |
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Famed as a colourful cultural melting pot, the qualities that blessed New Orleans with its unique character also served as a curse that led to its downfall. |
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It seems to be the curse of this column to write about clubs in trouble. |
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France is peopled with patriots in red caps and tricoloured cockades, armed with national muskets and sabres, sullen and suspicious, who instinctively curse all aristocrats. |
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Wil stepped back from the locker with a muttered curse, slamming the locker closed as Vicki turned away, mouth covered and eyes tightly closed, trying to blot out the memory. |
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Such vagaries are too often the curse of modern chill-out music. |
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It was also, in other words, the curse of the national interest. |
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Being a weak-willed type, I hate the curse of New Year's resolutions! |
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Even worse, my parents had turned this marvelous blessing into a wicked curse and an overbearing burden that I alone have to live with the rest of my life. |
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My character was required to swear a lot but I asked for the curse words to be taken out of the script because I didn't want to project that image. |
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But that did not prevent rumours that it was due to her unhappiness about the marriage and speculation that her sudden passing had placed a curse on the union. |
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The mother had told him a long story about the children being bewitched and the house haunted, blaming a neighbour for laying a curse upon her children. |
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Without thinking, she recoiled and said the foulest curse word she knew. |
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Of course, the swordsman would only lose here if he allowed it, and it was a viable option, but risking the spread of his personal curse was impermissible. |
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The curse words he had screamed at her still rang in her ears. |
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This made the sage even more furious and he imprecated a curse on Karna. |
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She suppressed a curse of anger, when her dress got a hang on a branch. |
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The humanity of Christ enters unto the holy of holies as one defiled by sin, blemished, and impure through contact with death and the curse of the cross. |
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There is a gasp at such a strong curse word and parents clap their hands over the ears of their children as even worse is shouted by the mayor's wife. |
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He identified communalism as the biggest curse of the society. |
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According to Bergel, Native American legend says that Tenskwatawa, a Shawnee warrior and prophet, put the curse on General William Henry Harrison at the Battle of Tippecanoe. |
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His life's mission is to cure the world of the curse of infertility. |
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They gave your father piggy banks when he was young because they wanted him to develop healthy spending and saving practices, thus protecting him from the curse of debt. |
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I curse like a sailor when I wake up before seven on school mornings. |
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Each age in our past history has bestowed on us its own contribution, as well as its own continuing curse. |
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One can curse the darkness or look into the candlelight for hope. |
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Throwing out a ceremonial first pitch has always been a blessing and a curse. |
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And the LORD said in His heart, I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake and the waters shall no more become a flood to destroy all flesh. |
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The strength of her faith in the power of love is both the blessing and the curse of her character and the core of Malick's difficult, discursive epic. |
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After spending seventeen minutes in blackness, trying to fumble the lock of the cellar open, Jack Moore kicked the door open with a curse and began climbing the stairs. |
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His dialogue is positively literary in the creativeness with which he invents new ways to use and morph curse words into insults. |
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Cynics have long derided the supposed lottery curse as a fraud, chalking it up to inflated media coverage of such deaths. |
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This lack of rest has caused a radical shift in my personality, making me cranky, irritable, and prone to curse loudly at the slightest provocation. |
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Whether becoming a charter school is a blessing or a curse remains to be seen. |
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If any person arrived at the age of discretion profanely curse or swear or get drunk in public, he shall be fined by a justice one dollar for each offense. |
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She put a curse on our department, which has still not been lifted. |
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Born as a result of a curse, she lives an accursed, wasteful, unproductive life of pain and loneliness, and dies in loneliness and in intolerable agony. |
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When you fought Dracula, in the first game, he put a curse on you. |
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He looked down upon his antagonist through a faint, red haze, and his sword hand tingled, but he set his teeth and fought back the sick ecstasy of his people's curse. |
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When juvenile nuisance and disorder are the bane of so many neighbourhoods already, some people are not only fuelling this curse, but actually making a profit from it. |
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The cast put a curse on him, and two days later he was dead. |
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And there's no need to worry about gippy stomachs here, although food poisoning was once the curse of the Dominican Republic. |
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Odine's curse with accompanying trigeminal and glossopharyngeal neuralgia secondary to medullary telangiectasia. |
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According to Washington Post, it was found that men swear more than women and f-words are plain Janes in front of Twitter's curse word of choice. |
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He cuddled it, baby-wise, but he looked up from it often to curse with an astonishing utter abandon straight at the noses of his captors. |
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With a mixed hand and the highest card the curse of Scotland, I've seen that man stand pat in a game with four millionaire mining men. |
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Golf is supposed to be a gentleman's game, but I curse everyone and his mother out there. I have to win. |
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May God's curse rest upon the arrogant men and the unholy ambitions which let loose this horror upon humanity! |
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Messages to her scratched onto metal, known as curse tablets, have been recovered from the sacred spring by archaeologists. |
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The cause of the riots was based on a conflict over two performances of Macbeth, and is usually ascribed to the curse. |
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Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. |
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His advisers tell him to sprinkle the blood of a boy born without a father on the site to lift the curse. |
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An oath, in case they were forsworn, draweth a curse on them, a detestable omination towards the priests of God. |
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The Birdman used to live on Samson Island, which people say has a curse on it. |
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The same curse and use of the word, rune, also is found on the Stentoften Runestone. |
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The word cuss appears to derive from the application of this sound change to the word curse. |
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Examples of this might be the Eumenides as vengeance, or Clytemnestra as symbolizing ancestral curse. |
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I curse thee and exclaime thee miscreant, Traitor to God, and to the realme of France. |
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I think at the moment the sculpture is a nice piece of history, but if the council destroys it, they would be showing their belief in the curse. |
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Sir Charles believed in the curse and was apparently fleeing from something in fright when he died. |
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You blackened, filthy sleeveen liar. I curse the living day I ever let you near me. |
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I shall not go about to extenuate the latitude of the curse upon the earth, or stint it only to the production of weeds. |
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Can there be a woe or curse in all the stores of vengeance equal to the malignity of such a practice? |
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And then bigger things, like helping to curse his rival with blindness. |
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Try to remember that name as you curse him out on your way to the clink. |
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Sporting history is riddled with jinxes and curses and perhaps none more famous than the Sports Illustrated cover curse. |
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A curse is laid on dissoluteTheban King Laius foretelling he will be killed by his own son who will then marry his mother Jocasta. |
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That this seal of approval can be reconveyed at low cost is a blessing, not a curse. |
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However, the so-called fiscal cliff could curse profitability for credit unions in the Land of Enchantment. |
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They're a curse and damnation, the size of colinary dishes, They transcend the kneecaps to the bottom of his britches. |
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Now it's up to her to figure out how to break the curse of the teind and retrieve the children from the land of Faerie. |
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In Bangla Desh they'll curse the West for never ever stopping The cheapjack trade in factory goods that keep us happy shopping. |
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Actor David Jason is waging a one-man war against the curse of cheapo docu-soaps, fly-on-the-wall series, DIY, gardening and cooking shows. |
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Playing Jessa is both a blessing and a curse for Jemima Kirke. |
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But Pai's grandfather Koro, the tribal chief, believes his grand-daughter is a curse. |
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You can curse them as bothersome on your large surf casting rigs or break out your ultralight spinning rods and have some fun. |
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They are saying there is a precedent, because Johnny Sauter said a curse word and was fined,'' Earnhardt said. |
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He had argued that he was not guilty because the curse word was not an offence in his native Canada. |
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Then we curse as our car galumphs over the inevitable bitumen bobble, or dimple depression, that follows the re-sealing. |
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In the bar in Garryowen, Limerick, yesterday, locals were questioning whether it was a gift or a curse. |
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He places a voodoo doll of the opposing team's most important player inside a small box and lights candles to say the curse, the report said. |
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The laws are at present, both in form and essence, the greatest curse that society labours under. |
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After this, the vengeance on the whole camp! or rather, the bone-ache! for that, methinks, is the curse dependent on those that war for a placket. |
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He heaved up with a sulfurous curse, braced his legs and glared about him, with a burst of coarse guffaws in his ears and the reek of unwashed bodies in his nostrils. |
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O for a withering curse to blast the germing of their wicked machinations. |
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Bless them that curse you, and pray for them which despitefully use you. |
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And, if thy time is sorrows, let all breath Breathe dirgeful music for is welcome such, Nor shall the stricken curse that thou dost hold Ingratitude a minion. |
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Later, sodbusters would curse the tenacity of the area's gnarled trees and search for arable land elsewhere, leaving the timber to deer and squirrels. |
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The atmosphere is broodily dark with Baker and his wife hit by a childless curse that might only be lifted if they can get the items ordered by the Witch. |
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The continual capacity of this terrorist outfit to wreak havoc in Nigeria and destabilise it has gone beyond alarming proportions and entered the realm of a quotidian curse. |
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Patch falls in love with Nora but cannot feel her physically because this is the curse that they will have to live with and can only possess a vessel of theirs on Cheshvan. |
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O JaneOs not the only one to curse the OmagicO of the airbrush. |
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The domestic snarler is felt to be a curse and an ignoble varlet, since for small reasons, or no reasons, he will disturb domestic peace and engender discomfort. |
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The ancient Romans believed a ghost could be used to exact revenge on an enemy by scratching a curse on a piece of lead or pottery and placing it into a grave. |
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Job would not only curse the day of his Nativity, but also of his Renascency, if he were to act over his Disasters, and the miseries of the Dunghil. |
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According to legend, a curse was placed on Scapa long ago by a witch. |
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Environmental groups and villagers keen to preserve the area's relative tranquillity secretly hope the nemetic powers of the mysterious old curse will not wane. |
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Raphael is an archangel whom God sends to warn Adam about Satan's infiltration of Eden and to warn him that Satan is going to try to curse Adam and Eve. |
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Several methods exist to dispel the curse, depending on the actor. |
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For example, if a citizen had his clothes stolen at the baths, he might write a curse, naming the suspects, on a tablet to be read by the goddess. |
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Mambabarang in particular are noted for their ability to command insects and other invertebrates to accomplish a task, such as delivering a curse to a target. |
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Come, sir, if he's been cursed to hell, why don't you bless him back again? What's the good of your blessings if they can't beat an Irish larrykin's curse? |
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Evidence was provided that the duke had been listening to prophecies that he would be king and that the Tudor family lay under God's curse for the execution of Warwick. |
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The Curse of Frankenstein was also the first horror film to feature Cushing and Christopher Lee together. |
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Curse them, because now I cannot watch the show without thinking about the woman's infamous reputation as an abusive, belligerent ball-buster. |
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Another work along the same lines is Curse Upon Iron, which replaces the bass drum with a shaman drum and adds female voices to the choir. |
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Tests on pure Paterson's Curse honey have shown that it contains up to 2 micrograms of toxin per gram of honey. |
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Please note that CURSE OF CHUCKY is now available on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital Download. |
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Curse the bludgers who created this problem by not paying their dues! |
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And he challenges you to complete every single brain-teaser on offer if you want to be free from The Curse. |
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However, The Curse of the Black Pearl became both a critical and commercial success. |
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Featuring strong RPG and adventure game elements, Curse of Darkness boasts innovative character growth and drastically improved enemy variation. |
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Originally we were going to call the album Phasm and we had several other titles that we kicked around but ended up with The Curse of Blondie. |
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In June 2002 Gore Verbinski signed on to direct The Curse of the Black Pearl, and Johnny Depp and Geoffrey Rush signed on the following month to star. |
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Before the Brogue Kick, the Irish Curse Backbreaker was my finishing move. |
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