William Hague hopes to use this week's Conservative conference to prove he is fit for government. |
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Pumpkin soup was next, fit for Cinderella, with lardons and crispy shavings of Jerusalem artichoke. |
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Whether he is fit for the job is, of course, irrelevant to the continuing absurdity of the job itself. |
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The all-weather adaptability of the shelters makes them an excellent fit for the army's need for rapid deployment in any environment. |
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A lifestyle that takes advantage of the health benefits of wine is proving to be a particularly good fit for women. |
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Often we artists are a solitary lot, preferring to keep our work to ourselves until we deem it fit for sharing. |
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He couldn't see an inch in front of his nose, even with his expert eyesight fit for a perfect aim. |
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It is perhaps understandable that the Kikuyu people who reside on its lower slopes thought it fit for Gods' abode. |
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Let's hope his successor has the wit to fashion an intelligence agency that is fit for the struggles that lie ahead. |
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A policy of armed neutrality with an emphasis on quality kit, fit for purpose. |
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He was, according to the manager, fit for nothing better than the knacker's yard. |
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It was clear he was going to be fit for the Olympics, but he was worried about how the team would knit together. |
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If Her Royal Highness wants to hold a worsbraai at Buckingham Palace, she can easily find out if your wors really is fit for royalty. |
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I have done my job and got some of the products finished and either on trial or certificated by a National body fit for purpose. |
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The introductions continue and soon John has an audience fit for a King, filled with Dukes and Ladies, professors and clergymen. |
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The plaintiffs were required to carry out certain repairs by the local council in order to render houses fit for human habitation. |
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To the consumer this means the product is a reject in Brazil and is not fit for human consumption. |
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Madagascar's landscape may not be a bad fit for lions, giraffes, zebras, and hippos. |
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Unfit poultry meat can vary from being slightly bruised to containing infections or abscesses, which is legally not even fit for pet food. |
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The reason we live in a universe fit for life, is that it was hatched in a laboratory in some other universe fit for life. |
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Without the damp course the house, when completed, is not fit for human habitation because of rising damp. |
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There he cleansed the temple, prefiguring his great atonement for sin, making us fit for communion with God. |
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Among the changes, the back seats are smaller, creating a tight fit for some rear seat passengers. |
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Port Adelaide is confident star forward Warren Tredrea will be fit for the finals after injuring his shoulder in Darwin on Saturday night. |
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She's got real skill as a comedienne and the super-perkiness of the character is a perfect fit for her talents. |
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Under the Sale of Goods Act 1979, the goods sold must be of merchantable quality and fit for the purpose for which they are sold. |
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When you buy a product it should be of merchantable quality, fit for its purpose and as described. |
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It is clear that the vehicle always was of merchantable quality and fit for its intended purpose. |
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The club need to carry out renovations in the spring to ensure the building is fit for use throughout next season. |
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He suffered from poor eyesight so he was not fit for military service during the war. |
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He firmly advocated karma and bhakti as the means to purification of mind, which then becomes fit for realization of Atman. |
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Remember though you are only entitled to a refund if goods are faulty, misdescribed or not fit for the purpose made known to the retailer. |
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Once the poets and the sages were held to be pleasing triflers, fit for hours of relaxation in the lulls of war. |
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In no time at all, as we descended into damper riverside places, there were daffodils trumpets nearly fully formed and fit for a photo. |
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Robustness was meant to ensure that an assertable conditional is fit for modus ponens. |
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This boy, clad in a disheveled sailor's tunic and winter coat fit for a bear, stood no more than shoulder-high to me. |
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I sprinkled upon it a bit of salt from my twist, and it made a dish fit for those in a timber hall. |
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A film company are looking for locations fit for the silver screen for their latest production. |
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You are nothing but an uncouth, patronizing, unprincipled, rowdy group of misfits who aren't fit for any respectable job! |
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I may have called that food slop, but compared to this I consider it a meal fit for kings! |
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Surrey's unpaid labourer, Zaheer Khan, is announced fit for the Pakistan match on Sunday. |
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He may seem to have a voice fit for a boy band but don't be critical without listening to at least a few tracks of this album. |
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It is an error to suppose that the frail-looking, needle-like boat is only fit for racing purposes. |
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But brains from younger animals will still be considered fit for human consumption. |
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The law says your used car must be of satisfactory quality, as described and reasonably fit for its purpose. |
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Nonetheless, the group seems fit for bringing the house down on this late summer night in Seattle. |
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Regulations requiring that the houses be deemed fit for habitation have been waived so that they can move in. |
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Vic representatives visited the Southern Cross shortly after Easter and found the first and second floors fit for habitation. |
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But up to 150 council workers based at the Fashion Corner council tax office were waiting to find out whether the building was fit for work. |
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He pronounced them fit for consumption, upon which we all fell to them hungrily. |
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Nothing can enter these kitchens that isn't deemed fit for human consumption. |
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Mr. Saunders apparently thinks that the boat, as delivered, was fit for the purpose for which it was intended. |
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I contacted a wine merchant in London and told him I wanted to buy some that would be fit for drinking in ten years time. |
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Meat which is not fit for consumption in the EU is now heading for South Africa. |
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He says that the property is not fit for human habitation and is in serious disrepair. |
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New aspects require policies to ensure that rail personnel are fit for duty and, in particular, that they are not impaired by drugs or alcohol. |
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Now, does Professor Collins believe that a professor at his university is fit for his job if the professor lies in his research? |
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But does taking a certificate guarantee that someone will be fit for purpose? |
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That must go as far as not working excessive hours and being fit for the job they are doing at the time. |
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While the results demonstrated an abundance of creativity in the audience, not all of the sculptures would be fit for public display! |
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The 13-mile run may still be three months away but participants are being urged to get in training now to ensure they are fit for the event. |
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He is prone to being overweight, to having a dodgy knee, to not being able to stay fit for a full season. |
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Validation means making sure the information the customer sends you is fit for purpose. |
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Everyone except the government seems to have acknowledged that the assessment system is no longer fit for purpose. |
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What is currently on offer is simply not fit for purpose, in terms of funding or scale. |
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The only approximation of the classification which could have been created would not have been fit for purpose. |
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You love luxury and sensual comforts such as silky satin sheets, robes fit for a king or queen and beautiful surroundings. |
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New windows, a brighter floral display, and an external paint job have left the place fit for a queen. |
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The city hall is taking steps to make an arts and cultural centre fit for a queen. |
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He collapsed and died suddenly after not suffering an epileptic fit for several years. |
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Many live either in accommodation not fit for human habitation or are without housing entirely and have to make do living on the streets. |
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He's a good fit for the offense, predicated on pounding the ball in the running game and hitting big strikes off play-action. |
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I want to be clean and healthy and fit for my kids and have normal highs that aren't due to cocaine. |
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The homes, or rather hovels, that they lived in would not now be considered fit for pigs. |
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A few days before the full mission simulation, the medical board had passed us fit for flight. |
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A film that claustrophobics might do best to avoid, it's a perfect fit for the single midnight showing. |
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Everything from a Hammond to a horn section works through nine songs fit for a daydreamer waiting for the sun to cleave the clouds. |
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It is a site fit for a king, this hillside peering over the roofs of Berkeley toward an expanse of shimmering bay. |
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Nothing's tougher for an animator to mimic than hair, and the Affleck has a motionless coif fit for a video game character. |
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And bouncing up the stairs to his second-floor lair, Williamson seems awfully fit for a tipsy man of fair-to-middling age. |
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This can be looked upon as cold-blooded and barbaric and not fit for today's modern society. |
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They clean the impure water from the impurities and chlorine makes water fit for drinking. |
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With the news that Australia's leading wicket taker Shane Warne will be fit for the match, the game promises to be an evenly fought contest. |
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No corn-cob pipe is fit for anything until it has been used at least a fortnight. |
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Beer may be fit for frat boys, and wine good for dinner parties, but I'm a sophisticated drunk. |
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Baked in the oven under a pastry crust and served hot with boiled potatoes and a green vegetable it's a dish fit for a king. |
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The last of these included the use of preoperative assessment clinics to ensure that patients were fit for surgery. |
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If this neighborhood becomes a student ghetto it won't be fit for students. |
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His army medical records note that immediately after his arrest he was examined and found to be fit for detention. |
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As for the main entrance, it is fit for a municipal swimming pool, and little else. |
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And now it has issued guidelines to drivers to make sure they are fit for the road. |
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A tractor had been employed in the initial stages to level the existing fields to make it fit for the cultivation of rice. |
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The expert concluded that, gynaecologically speaking, she had been fit for work since 24 March. |
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This would have encouraged dissenters to feel they are part of a national family, rather than outcasts only fit for punishment. |
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It is estimated they have over three million men of military age fit for duty. |
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The actors doubled as technicians, moving furniture about to create a dining area fit for a Queen. |
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This medium build, slightly warm and sweet Californian Syrah, plump with ripe currants and light tannins, is a fine fit for the spicy delicacy of hot Toulouse sausage. |
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In its place, yellowing lamb's lettuce and blackening oak leaf lettuce, both fit for the bin, were mixed in with frizzy endive and watery grated daikon-type radish. |
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Between now and the next general election we have to persuade millions of people up and down the country that this Conservative party is fit for government. |
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First, the food and drink had to be certified fit for human consumption. |
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The Northern Ireland international has shaken off the dead leg suffered at Shrewsbury in midweek and has been deemed fit for City's final game of the season tomorrow. |
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The meeting had been in doubt because of frost but this disappeared overnight and the course was passed fit for racing after an early morning inspection. |
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She played a young woman hired to beguile a man, a natural fit for the natural beauty. |
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New windows, a brighter floral display and an external paint job have left the place fit for a queen, although the lived-in atmosphere inside has been left untouched. |
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The Association executive have had talks with the club, who indicated that they will do their utmost to ensure the playing surface is fit for cricket to be played. |
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The Roadmen's cottages have been used for no more than rough storage for some years and would require considerable work before they were fit for habitation. |
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Collins needed stitches but could be fit for next weekend, but Willoughby is out for some time after fracturing his cheekbone and damaging an eye socket. |
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Not every shirt or jeans will have a perfect fit for everybody. |
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However, there is evidence of the shameful goings on at Guantanamo Bay, where cameras have shown us cages not fit for animals, shackles, gags, hoods and blindfolds. |
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All of which would suggest that a film which casts spiders as the malevolent force of evil would be a natural fit for a when nature attacks horror movie. |
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Under the Sale of Goods Act retailers must sell goods that are of a satisfactory quality, are accurately described on the packaging and are fit for their purpose. |
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The concept of the early modern period also enabled an exploration of topics and subjects not previously thought fit for consideration in relation to the Renaissance. |
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His nonconformist work is a perfect fit for Valmorbida and Roitfeld, who are rather untraditional art dealers themselves. |
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Five years in Iraq demonstrated that the vehicle was not fit for purpose. |
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Perhaps the trauma of that August day, when he was forced to spend so many hours in an outfit not fit for any particular athletic activity was just too much for him. |
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Boxes of dainty shoes fit for Cinderella were stacked in the corner, with every kind of head-dress and veil just waiting for the right blushing bride. |
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Whether it's a tourer, a motorhome, a holiday home or even a folding camper, the winning leisure vehicle will be decked out with mod cons fit for a gadget geek in heaven. |
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Speaking of which, even with the late arrival of winter, Pamporovo was definitely fit for skiing last weekend with tons of snow and every ski run ready to be traversed. |
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He sees a specialist this week but it is thought the crack is already healing and it is hoped he will be fit for the start of the season next month. |
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And Tebow, even if he only plays a handful of snaps per game, is a natural fit for this scheme. |
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The mankles themselves were sandwiched between patterned capri pants and lace-up loafers fit for a 90's school girl. |
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It's a good fit for these books, which are set in an alternate modern-day world, but which also manage to give off a Prohibition era-slash-mobster vibe. |
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Wouldn't a mobile operating system be a better fit for slates? |
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If I was to build a wardrobe fit for a president, I needed to know what I was working with. |
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His tall frame was solidly fit for the rigors of special ops missions. |
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Look at some of the buildings, run down and no longer fit for purpose. |
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Haslett, a noted tough guy, knows how to mold a swarming, aggressive unit, and he could be the perfect fit for the mentality St. Louis wants to adopt. |
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The bathroom is fit for a king and queen, with his and hers basins, large mirrors framed by driftwood, a separate shower room and toilet and a huge tub also encased in wood. |
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He was deemed fit for surgery and a left pneumonectomy was performed. |
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She was in a room fit for a queen from the 1800's, with gold linings on the walls, red velvet decorating the spaces where paintings didn't reside. |
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We want to know what you know about Hobart and why it would be a good fit for you. |
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Despite assurances that the SA80 was fit for use in desert environments, soldiers on several occasions released the safety catch only to find they still could not fire. |
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Although lecherously swarmy as befits the character, the performance seems an ill fit for him, thus detracting from any otherwise superlative work. |
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And those who would seek to give us that kind of politics are very happy to indulge the patronising fantasies of those who think it is all we are fit for. |
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At the time of the sale, Baker Tilly managing director Laurence Longe indicated the division was not a good fit for the newly merged firm. |
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I later read that to be fit for enlightenment, man must be fearless. |
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It may not be hugely fashionable,but the bootcut is the most flattering and versatile fit for all body shapes,'' she says. |
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Nevertheless the centres of our towns and cities are substantially underpopulated because many ceased to be places fit for family living. |
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Thankfully, it was soon confirmed there was no break and Bell, too, is expected to be fit for the match, which gets undersay today. |
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The man of melodrama was not perceived as a fit for the postwar world. |
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He thought it would be a natural fit for moi to play a fashion editor. |
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Water to him is fit for nothing but making punch and a birchy beverage they call tea. |
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The eastside was an area fit for Mule because of his harsh no-nonsense approach to doing business. |
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His mother and grandmother quickly put a stop to it, and this may have convinced them that Claudius was not fit for public office. |
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Wilfrid was criticised for dressing his household and servants in clothing fit for royalty. |
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Ofsted has been criticised as 'not fit for purpose' by the House of Commons Education Select Committee. |
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Not one in a million is fit for it, and least of all those who seek the opportunity. |
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A referee was called, and sided with Azinger in ruling the ball fit for play. |
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The army had dwindled to fewer than 5,000 men fit for duty, and would be reduced to 1,400 after enlistments expired at the end of the year. |
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But the Real Madrid star was back in the fold on Tuesday and now looks likely to be fit for Saturday's curtain-raiser against Greece. |
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In February 1941, Dahl was discharged from hospital and passed fully fit for flying duties. |
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He decided to leave school by the end of 1941 and work as a miner as Elfed was not fit for work due to illness. |
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Smith left behind many notes and some unpublished material, but gave instructions to destroy anything that was not fit for publication. |
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To be declared fit for overseas service, the division's soldiers had to fire 24 rounds on a rifle range. |
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Recruitment has generally shifted towards finding the most motivated recruits, rather than solely those otherwise most fit for service. |
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Potential negative effects include hybrids that are less fit for their environment resulting in a population decrease. |
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Only a limited number of vehicles are allowed for each convoy and convoy leader is obliged to decline vehicles not fit for the drive. |
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The local water supply being inadequate, a massive distillation plant was introduced to make sea water fit for drinking. |
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The 1970s distinction between narrow gauge, standard gauge and steam centres alone is no longer necessarily fit for purpose. |
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If Throwback Thursday isn't a good fit for your goals, come up with your own recurring content theme. |
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The underspecification of the project led to the development of software that was not fit for purpose. |
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They build cabinets, wall units, desks and any other specially designed furniture custom fit for the clients needs. |
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The question of whether the story is fit for publication is now moot. |
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Not age wildlife, money to is fit for us Secondly, and mo antly,we can't afford after land. |
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At A-level and GCSE there are so many top grades they're not fit for purpose. |
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The series was a natural fit for a woman who, if not a card-carrying gearhead, certainly qualifies as an aficionado. |
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These demystifications may help you evaluate ASPs and determine whether they are a fit for your business. |
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It's more downbeat than Backbeat, but a good fit for Sky's series of one-off dramas. |
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We believe the Zales Party Animal collection is a perfect fit for the season. |
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It is a diadem fit for a King among kings, an Emperor among emperors. |
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Most presbyopes being fit for contacts are informed about me simple, practical options available to help them read. |
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Nokia has developed what appears to be an RNC that's best fit for coverage-only buildouts. |
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There will be mask-making and dancing before bedding down in one of the staterooms and breakfast fit for a king. |
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Root mean square error and coefficient of determination were used to evaluate the goodness of fit for the different effects. |
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The Rawthorpe kids feature in Wednesday's episode, when Stef and his hungry volunteers make a blood sausage fit for a vampire. |
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Harkness for several years at WordPerfect, Novell, Bookcraft and ASH Capital, I feel he is an ideal fit for the Company. |
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The flexible inner and outer cannulae work together to provide the best fit for unusual anatomies. |
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There are lots to choose from covering a variety of cuisines, fit for anniversaries or catch-ups. |
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Crooner Barry Manilow has called in a team of ear, nose and throat doctors to help him get fit for his Scottish fans. |
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I think that this is a perfect fit for the fall, when spookiness is still on people's minds. |
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The infant was spoon-fed until she was physiologically stable and fit for surgery. |
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Even objects that lie about haphazardly were fit for mantic purposes. The prcatice was called apantomancy. |
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Garazo emphasizes that it's important to work with a board certified plastic surgeon to determine if they are the right fit for you. |
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The concept of heterarchy is essential in understanding bureaucracies, so that they can be aligned and fit for purpose. |
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Udal now hopes to take advantage should first-choice spinner Ashley Giles not be fit for the start of the English summer. |
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Water fit for human consumption is called drinking water or potable water. |
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Stirling engines are also a good theoretical fit for this application. |
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An SQA Spokesperson issued a statement, stating the exam was fit for purpose and allowed students to show their understanding of the National 5 Maths Course. |
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In conjunction with his venture for cooperative mills Owen wanted the children to be given a good moral education so that they would be fit for work. |
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Mortice, who had earlier presided over Ballet Rambert's switch from classic ballet to modern dance, was not an altogether happy fit for The Royal Ballet. |
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The BW board decided that a volunteering element would be desirable, an operating environment seen to be fit for purpose necessary and a secure income stream essential. |
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The baby was spoon-fed for a few days until he was deemed fit for surgery. |
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When you wake up you'll have feet fit for the strappiest of sandals. |
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The umpires are also the arbiters of whether the pitch is fit for play, and if they deem it unfit, with the consent of both captains can change the pitch. |
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Against this background EFPIA decided to provide an unrestricted research grant to the Escher platform to explore if the model is fit for purpose. |
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It was a dispatch intended specifically to communicate a sense of closure to the Spanish monarchs, to show that England possessed a dynasty fit for an infanta of Spain. |
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We are utilizing top-of-the-range components developed from expertise gained over 30 years in manufacturing autopilots, making this an ideal fit for a company such as Volvo. |
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When his father saw him he fumed terribly, cursing like a pagan, and asking whether his son were a roysterer fit for the gallows as well as a fool fit for a cassock. |
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Skytrain will be fit for action after a couple of all-weather starts and he merits an interest as he returns to the turf in the Kingsize Pools At totepool. |
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Liverpool seems a good fit for what was already a very Anglophile town. |
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If once in a while in our rough riding a neck is broken, I regard it not as a waste, but as a price well paid for the breeding of a race fit for headship and command. |
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These stamps have been used postally, but are still fit for a collection. |
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Can you give me a guarantee that he will be fit for the match? |
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This new RF family is also a perfect fit for a broad range of smart RF applications including remote control systems such as garage door openers or telemetering applications. |
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The challenge is to connect those stories with each other, to see them as part of a larger, shared story, rather than as freakish tales fit for the sleazoid talk shows. |
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