The two schemers fall for each other but there's a lot of revenge-fuelled chicanery before love wins through. |
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I hesitate to think that the firm deceptively put this out just to attract potential teeny-bopper customers who would fall for it. |
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We also dipped and dried our own prunes and figs, made raisins from seedless grapes, and dried the walnut crop in the fall for winter storage. |
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It's easy to imagine why the land-lady's self-possessed daughter wouldn't fall for him and why her lonely, schoolteaching mother might. |
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He informed her that Nathan appeared to be setting her up to take the fall for the bank fraud, and advised her to seek counsel. |
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Or if you fall for the siren song of the Evil One, you're going to be drained dry and cast into the pit of flames in due course. |
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Why of all people did she have to fall for the cousin of the one who loves her? |
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In less than a year I had found the love of my life, had her fall for me, and almost lost her as well. |
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Well, you can't have stories when one girl who is deprived of love always fall for her cute best friend. |
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She would definitely not fall for the handsome jock, especially if she barely knew him. |
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He stood there wondering what cruel fate destined that his best friend would fall for the woman he loved. |
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Let us not fall for cheap tactics and propaganda that are designed to divide us. |
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Luckily for its readers, this newspaper would never fall for such cheap tricks. |
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It amazes me that people actually fall for this. Why on Earth would a complete stranger trust you with their money like this? |
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We can understand that, but it should not expect the public of New Zealand to fall for that nonsense. |
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They really believed that the people of Killala and North Mayo would fall for that sort of baloney. |
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Five years of hearing the same thing over and over again and watching American sheeple fall for it over and over again is just too depressing. |
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Leigh's Petruchio is too strong to fall for a woman who is blatantly manipulative rather than a match for his own true shrewishness. |
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But please, please do not again fall for the blandishments of peer pressure without asking why. |
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I fall for any woman who is under 5', weighs about 100 lbs., and is blazingly intelligent. |
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He wanted me to think he was an innocent, ordinary bloke, but I wasn't going to fall for that trick. |
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Sarah is too smart to be taken in by the humble doorstep salesman, too cynical to fall for slick advertising patter. |
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There's a sucker born every minute, and every one of them will fall for any worm and virus that hits their in-box. |
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Unless time and space are incredibly unstable, I wasn't born yesterday, and I don't fall for tricks. |
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When you're that kind of player, it must be so fun to play against no-marks who fall for every stepover, trick, flick and shimmy. |
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And he wasn't about fall for the trap the country bumpkins at Auburn laid for him. |
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This area is a haven in the fall for all sorts of birds, including blue grosbeaks, indigo buntings and an array of sparrows. |
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If you think I'd fall for your line, you've got another thing going, buster! |
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For Kennedy's sake, let's hope suicide isn't an occupational risk among writers who fall for the matadors. |
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Stuck in the desert, the two people from differing cultural backgrounds and with opposing personalities fall for each other. |
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Whether you hold a harvest hoedown or a stylish sit-down dinner party for eight, fall for outside entertaining this autumn! |
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If you expect me to fall for that cockamamie story that you just told, you've clearly lost your mind! |
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It may seem hard to believe people will fall for cold calls urging them to make split-second investment decisions involving thousands of dollars. |
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Sadly, many webmasters fall for such tantalizing come-ons without thinking carefully about what the repercussions might be. |
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The problem is once you fall for the guy with the infectious laugh or the girl that takes your breath away, you have to get them to notice you. |
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A kind, loving, and caring man is going to fall for your total being and not your dress size. |
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With its glitter and glare, pop-ups within pop-ups, you're guaranteed to fall for this grand book. |
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He's also planning to get back in the studio this fall for a follow-up to the well-received Here on Earth recording from a couple of years ago. |
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Built in 1898, the two-story frame house was sold last fall for far more than I would have guessed and probably more than it was worth. |
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I do not deny that there are dumb blondes, or those who like to play the part in order to manipulate the sorry men who fall for it. |
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To make an eternal triangle enter the story, both Sunalini and Bhageerathi meet and fall for a young man, Chandrayya. |
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I bit my bottom lip and start to wonder at what exact point I started to fall for him? |
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Still, if a referee is going to fall for that kind of prima-donnish behaviour you might as well give it to him with knobs on! |
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Intelligent women know better than to fall for such cleverly camouflaged spiel. |
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Soon global population will level off and then likely fall for a protracted period of time. |
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Ray is the sort of amoral lech we could never believe we'd ever fall for, right up until we're walking through the bedroom doors. |
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Someone will probably fall for Peploe's trickery and start rhapsodizing about how inventive her interpretation is. |
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As is the case with most buddy road movies featuring a female and a male, Tommy begins to fall for Lou Ann's wily charms. |
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Jane Bennet and Charles Bingley, the new lodger at Netherfield, fall for each other. |
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There was a subtle attractiveness to her, and I think that that was the one thing that made me fall for her. |
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If there's a problem, he denies it or finds someone else to take the fall for him. |
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If someone backed me up in a lie and then took the fall for me when it was exposed, I'd have confidence in him too. |
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You must have seen the soft side of her to fall for her so crazily. |
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European governments continue to allow employers the privilege of using cheap foreign labor while making asylum seekers take the fall for clandestine migration. |
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Along the way, he crosses paths with Leah, and the two begin to fall for one another. |
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I should be turning in the manuscript next fall for a spring 2006 release. |
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In the British press at least, there is a tradition of publishing spoof articles in as po-faced a fashion as possible on April 1st and seeing how many people fall for them. |
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Unfortunately, the laptop didn't fall for their cunning ruse. |
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Come on, do you really expect us to fall for such a childish ploy? |
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I would never have the audacity to fall for such a slimy two-timer! |
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Common bulbs planted in the fall for the spring are tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, muscari, crocuses and perennials such as peonies, daylilies, hostas, and coral-bells. |
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You're not expecting us to fall for that a second time are you? |
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I thought you had better sense than to fall for a swindler and a criminal. |
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Some families would stay there only in the fall for the caribou harvest and then would move on to trap in other areas of the barren lands or portage back to Tue Nedhe. |
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Poor patients in Africa fall for these drugs because of their cheap price. |
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I've tried hard to fall for Oxford, but during each visit I find myself hatching an exit strategy. |
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It's easier not to fall for all the hype in the calmness of your own home. |
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Now that global mobile phone sales have started to fall for the first time ever, producers may well have to turn predator in order to win market share. |
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I'm not going to fall for his charm just to get dumped a week later. |
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It is because of this, and despite the constant attempts by central banks to inflate the currency, that prices are continuing to fall for consumer goods. |
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The African American constituency isn't going to fall for this nonsense. |
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With the collapse in world equity markets and the fall in house prices, capital gains and inheritance tax receipts will continue to fall for the foreseeable future. |
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Did he expect me to actually fall for his stupid little flirting ways? |
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The disintegration of communist governments throughout Europe and the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 caused the Cuban economy to go into free fall for a number of years. |
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Sadly, many people still fall for the myth that women in abusive relationships look sad and traumatized all the time. |
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The media have been uninterested in pursuing this story for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was its childlike proclivity to fall for misdirection. |
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As I said, the mainstream media will fall for this gibberish. |
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At twenty-one, it was easy for strippers to fall for smooth-talking, married customers. |
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Iron ore producers are facing the first price fall for annual contracts in seven years as demand weakens for steelmaking inputs. |
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It was good of him to take the fall for you like that, I just wonder if he will come out of this one unscathed. |
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Oh, so you fall for Eva in both Sin City and White Bird in a blizzard. |
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Teachers are wimpier than working mums and are apt to fall for all manner of tummy aches and headaches from school-shy kids. |
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Don't fall for that old trick, if they are banging on then bog off somewhere else and let them talk to an empty room. |
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Extension hosts free career nights this fall for programs ranging from art studio to telecommunications. |
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I can't believe how many people still fall for the coin glued to the sidewalk. |
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However a fall for Sneddon in the 12th left North alone in the eventual Brummie 5-1 as they went back to 10 ahead with three to go. |
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I CANNOT for the life of me understand how anyone can fall for the fraudsters' trickiness. |
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He must think we have all fallen out of a monkey tree up here if he thinks we would fall for such patently crass patronisation. |
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In the fall for the first three to four years after planting, sycamores benefit from some slow-acting granular fertilizers formulated for woody plants. |
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McCullum was fortunate not to fall for the same reason on 20 from the next ball, by Anderson, after he badly misjudged an in-swinger from the Lancashire man. |
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Because the elderly are likely to trust the Damart brand, and this means they're more likely to fall for foreign criminals who use similar language in mailshots. |
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Nevertheless, in the past decades, the ratios tended to fall for men and increase in the case of women, which made the differences between both to be reduced. |
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