Churchill drove himself hard but drove his subordinates harder, for they had to fit into the rhythm of his working day. |
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The device would fit all sizes of pram or buggy, including three-wheelers, and was compact enough to fit into the overhead lockers on aeroplanes. |
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You are likely to take steps that do not fit into social norms or patterns. |
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The ad was for an expat magazine, and it focused on helping expats fit into Singapore culture. |
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Where do poverty, dysfunction, violence and high mortality rates fit into the analysis? |
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The signings, although no huge names, appear to be pretty decent players and seem to have fit into the pace of the English game well. |
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And the masters and diploma courses are especially designed to fit into people's work commitments. |
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These flexible batteries can be rolled up, fit into corners, or embedded in thin plastic cards. |
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It also means that issues which don't fit into the Orange-Green template are given a low priority, if they get a look-in at all. |
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For examination, use the largest speculum on the auroscope that will comfortably fit into the ear. |
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The steel glasses were 3 feet tall and you wonder how all of it fit into one person. |
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It told the strange story of one man's yearning to fit into society so much that he magically morphed into his surroundings with ease. |
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These harmonies, however, fit into the jazz idiom just as bop made its way into the mainstream, enriching both. |
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One piece of wood has tenons that fit into matching sockets drilled into another piece of wood. |
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I am quite conscious of the various approaches to characterisation, and where I fit into that as a scriptwriter. |
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There were no more positive adjectives could fit into my life since that one was so strong. |
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It seems that Ed and I just don't fit into the predestinated mold that the government and the general society would like us to. |
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Also repeated were precast concrete sunshields above the windows that were sized to fit into the surrounding brick dimensions. |
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Also, how does the large variety of animals and plants produced by selective breeding fit into this issue? |
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The formerly disconnected ideas are gradually shown to fit into each other. |
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She helped Jen fit into the tight-knit group of kids in their training session, thereby gaining her trust. |
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He had us watched on a number of occasions so we can feel confident that he believes in our ability and that we can fit into their game style. |
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I tried to be a sales executive, a sailor and even got married to try and fit into the role of a good wife. |
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She's worried that she's fat and she's never gonna fit into anything but mom jeans. |
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Just 20 months ago Vanessa Hodkinson could not fit into airline seats or get through turnstiles, let alone sit in a cinema seat. |
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It is definitely more precise than the bore sighters that fit into the muzzle. |
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By using the hot knife, you can cut the sennit on a angle that will fit into corners like a picture frame. |
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A fifth category of unclassified RCC is used for tumors that do not readily fit into one of the other categories. |
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Often, I had wondered how people like Shawna fit into their skintight clothing and now I knew first hand. |
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The man with the clipboard may want your opinion, but he's the one holding the form that your opinion must fit into. |
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I think I now fit into both camps as I'm pretty sure I will be similarly boneheaded in the future. |
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Mackerel are relatively indiscriminate plankton feeders and will take just about anything that they can fit into their mouths. |
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Instead they choose to hurt a person who doesn't fit into their narrow-minded view of the world. |
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What I study does not fit into the traditional boundaries of sociological knowledge. |
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That's a problem, since Kerry does not conveniently fit into any neat political cubbyhole. |
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Nevertheless, abbreviation pays off in having everything fit into a tight volume. |
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Those that don't fit into that category include chaplains from charismatic and other evangelical churches. |
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Small enough to fit into your suitcase, they usually consist of a cloth seat plus a wide belt, which fastens to upright chairs. |
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A lack of legs helps them fit into tight gaps and crevices and down narrow holes. |
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Where did I fit into this strange universe with sorceresses and powerful stones. |
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Strictly speaking, class and caste are different social institutions, though castes are often assumed to fit into the four varnas. |
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They chase off clownfish that don't fit into the hierarchy and many scuba divers tell anecdotes of being nipped at if they venture too close. |
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I did consider veganism at one point, but thought it too extreme to fit into a modern lifestyle. |
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We don't have any children of our own yet but I don't see how any child of ours would fit into such a situation. |
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The keystones also fit into notches carved in the large round stone, and prevented it from moving. |
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The only table that can fit into the tight living room is stacked with books and papers. |
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I guess, I just find it strange still that people would starve themselves to fit into some impossible couture creation. |
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Pat the fish dry and arrange it on a lightly oiled heatproof plate or bowl that will fit into your steamer. |
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Removable stowage boxes which fit into the rear footwells are available as an option. |
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He does all that in ways that do not fit into the traditional pattern of a reporter filing copy to an editor, who then approves and publishes. |
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The fishing pole holder uses clasps that fit into the rails and keeps disassembled fishing poles secure during transport. |
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This pattern of politics leaves people who don't fit into either category completely out of the picture. |
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Indeed, these poems also fit into the definition of poetry given in the first pages of the collection. |
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Only about half the mourners were able to fit into the chapel, the rest having to stand outside throughout. |
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It has been an unlikely success story, for the Frenchman initially struggled to fit into his new surroundings. |
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The Incisivosaurus specimen clears up where oviraptors fit into the dinosaur hierarchy, says Currie. |
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In turn, the tips of the barbules have tiny hooklets that fit into grooves on adjacent barbules. |
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The eukaryotic chromatin must be highly organized to fit into the small volume of the nucleus. |
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We have little sense, however, of how these asylums fit into general systems of child circulation in specific historical contexts. |
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Rivers are routinely corseted, straightened, shrunk, and rerouted as they are made to fit into our humanized landscapes. |
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When the episodes are prepared to fit into a more restrictive time frame for airing in syndication, scenes are frequently removed. |
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As humans, we must fit into a close-knit social system to succeed, yet our primary aim is still to look out for ourselves above all others. |
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Hansen suggests the radio can fit into the faceplate itself, or be relocated to a drop-down headliner panel. |
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Thankfully, the latest breed of electronic tachographs are much easier to fit into the facias of such vehicles than the older style units were. |
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Men gave up their individuality and personal freedom to fit into what they believed their women wanted. |
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Second, the products of the new technologies are sometimes hard to fit into the law's pigeonholes. |
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It doesn't fit into the pigeonholes with which marketing departments are comfortable. |
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As a result, artists are constructing elaborate conceits to make what they produce fit into the category of a print. |
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Yet the earliest dinosaur fossils that best fit into the dino to bird scenario are contemporary with the earliest bird fossils. |
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Eminem may fit into that tradition of lyrical catharsis and boulevard jeremiads, but he certainly didn't create it. |
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There are a number of other achondrites that do not fit into any of the preceding groups or subgroups. |
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Most Americans fit into a mold defined by the dominant racial and cultural trends of their upbringing. |
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Through a knowledge of the aerobiology in your area, your physician can identify whether the symptoms fit into this pattern of disease. |
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The next step is then to find all the things that you think really ought to fit into the definition of existence. |
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It just copies particles' positions, and rearranges ones in the present to fit into the instruments. |
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Use the keyhole saw and cut any remaining portions of the wall out so that the patch will fit into the hole. |
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For those who can fit into the seats the driving position is excellent, with the floor-mounted pedals being dead ahead and well spaced. |
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Certain priority post, such as registered mail, will still be delivered to the door, as will items that cannot fit into the letterbox. |
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The rentable sober drivers ride scooters that are collapsible, so that they fit into car trunks. |
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As the plot unfolds, Sonya finds that she has to repress herself in order to fit into mainstream American culture and attain her goals. |
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Was there actual evidence from your client that the tobacco leaf was cut in order to enable it to fit into bags for easy transportation? |
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The sculptures that would not fit into the great gallery were installed in the antechamber and salon of the large glass conservatory. |
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I have a leopard-skin outfit I got in the mail from Frederick's of Hollywood that I can still fit into. |
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It's a fact of life that students, when they graduate, will have to pay off their debts and fit into the commercial world. |
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Retailers and brand-name licensers of merchandise made in sweatshops where children are employed also fit into this category. |
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Be assured, this latest XJ is compact enough to fit into a normal-size garage, and can easily cope with the tight spaces of multi-storey car parks. |
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Kent is oblivious to the fact that he couldn't possibly fit into this rarefied social environment, where the Social Dance is as complex as a gavotte. |
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The first was the short-wave transmitter, which could be used to communicate at great distances but was small enough to fit into an aircraft or tank. |
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To transport gaseous substances such as propane or acetylene economically, they must be compressed greatly to fit into containers of a reasonable size. |
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Actually, most of the girls in the drama club fit into this category. |
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Another concern voiced by some is that the length of the boat does not include the bow pulpit and owners have found their Silvertons don't fit into their slips. |
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We'll be putting some precious furniture and essentials into storage but only a few things we know we'll not have room for or will not fit into life in the City. |
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If other group members appraise him as a creative type, they are likely to be a receptive audience for his ideas, and he should fit into the group harmoniously. |
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Female mink are also easily able to fit into a water vole's burrows. |
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The first is that it is not your everyday, sensible food that must fit into a busy schedule and meet some often rigorous requirements of speed, kilojoules and practicality. |
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She had put herself on a strict diet to fit into a new bathing suit, hadn't eaten all day, had a few drinks at a friends party, felt woozy and went to lie down. |
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The cast he wears on his leg and the crutch he uses would seem to fit into the injurious arc of your career if nothing else. |
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The cushioned surface of the liner is in contact with the foot while the interlocking grooves on the underside fit into the perforated cage to create the outsole. |
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On woodwinds, a cloth bag has sometimes been tied over the instrument, and small pear-shaped wooden mutes were made to fit into 18th-century oboe bells. |
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A daily diet of four litres of milk, 300 gm of ghee, dried fruits, vegetables, rice, chapatis and cereals cannot fit into everyone's grocery list. |
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As hard as I try, my feet just won't fit into those size threes, though I'd very much like them to, if not for style then for tax saving purposes. |
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Lifestyles dictate that many people eat on the move so King needs to look at customer behaviour and fit into that by offering fast food with fresh ingredients. |
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Well, ultimately, the screenplay is the only part of a movie that you can fit into a wastebasket. |
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The chessmen, red and white, fit into the boards by tiny pegs. |
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It was during my unsuccessful attempt to buy a cotton skirt in an American department store that I was told my hips were too large to fit into a size six. |
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Put into rhyme, it would fit into many of the rueful, hortatory songs of the '60s, when truthtelling was praised both as a moral medicine and for its beauty. |
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Even now, mixed raced children either embrace a black identity or go bonkers trying to fit into a white society that won't accept them as one of their own. |
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Complete with bearskin, he reaches 9ft and cannot fit into the Royal sentry boxes, meaning he has to be replaced by a shorter soldier when it rains. |
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Rob Thomas' late, lamented Cupid broke the mold for cinematic TV shows that don't fit into the prescribed categories of one-hour dramas or half-hour sitcoms. |
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Yet the multiple causes affecting the Saudi Bedouins do not fit into the neat valences of event ecology, nor do they extend outward from a single environmental event. |
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In the security section, eight prisoners fit into a typical single-person cell, and a few cells held ten prisoners each, cramming prisoners in elbow-to-elbow with each other. |
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It's interesting how well supposed funny men John Leguizamo and Doug E. Doug fit into their roles as a depressed, lovelorn young man and his angry, militant welfare friend. |
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They grumble about long, windy, unpolished pieces that don't fit into Slashdot's paragraph-link weblog format, and a style that sometimes glosses over key distinctions. |
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How does this project fit into a larger view of your practice and some of the enduring issues that have driven your work and continue to preoccupy you? |
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No matter how credible, genuinely intentioned, or brilliant an aspirant is, if he does not fit into the caucus's agenda, he had better drop his ambition. |
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The numbers might not add up because some chemicals fit into more than one category, for example, they might be carcinogenic and be suspected respiratory toxicants. |
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His skin was dark and rough looking, he didn't seem as if he fit into the English world though his voice consisted of the soft R's and guttural sounds I've heard all my life. |
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Autumn, or Bacchus's Trickery of Erigone is one of a pair of oddly shaped canvases, perhaps meant to fit into rococo mouldings, which celebrate Spring and Autumn. |
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Her document was trifolded to fit into a thin pigskin leather envelope. |
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While many of us play tennis just for the fun of it, we also are challenged by the idea of how it might fit into a total health and wellness strategy. |
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In the first film of the festival, Ludwig, a gravedigger who has spent all his working life at the cemetery, loses his job and tries to fit into the world of the living. |
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However, most content on sites can be sorted into the family areas of serif, or sans-serif, with either having a decent fit into the scheme of the design. |
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At the anterior edge of the fulcrum of the pleura is a small articulating process which fit into a socket in the preceding pleura or the margin of the fixed cheek. |
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I used to be very pretty and could fit into anything that was a size ten. |
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The moving specialists' first task is to help the seniors downsize their belongings so they can fit into, say, a retirement-center efficiency or a one-bedroom apartment. |
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By the time Brady arrived, the city was a veritable Tetris game of villas fit into a grid of staunchly protected private estates. |
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One can think of a few American commentators who fit into that mold. |
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Bill had so many pictures of his family stuffed into his billfold that it barely fit into his pocket. |
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I'd get my weight down for the event, then blimp out to where I couldn't fit into Orson Welles' cape. |
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As a retired sergeant, you should fit into the crowd at the officers' club. |
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The spectrum of Anglican beliefs and practice is too large to be fit into these labels. |
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Not all Members of Parliament can fit into the Chamber at the same time as it only has space to seat 427 of the 650 members. |
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The final piece of the equation fit into place on June 10, 1993, when the Nunavut Act received Royal Assent. |
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David Riesman states that the youth audiences of popular music fit into either a majority group or a subculture. |
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Before the season started, Mansell could not fit into the narrow car and was deputised by Mark Blundell for the opening two rounds. |
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Many mutagens fit into the space between two adjacent base pairs, this is called intercalation. |
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We're looking for a highly motivated individual who will fit into our fast-paced corporate culture. |
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David Jones and Dylan Thomas are two writers of the 1930s who do not fit into this paradigm. |
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The qualifications fit into three categories, the status of the poet's parent or grandparent, their skill and their training. |
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All of these letters easily fit into the chronology of Paul's journeys depicted in Acts of the Apostles. |
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Phase 2 was designed to fit into the Centre's curved slate frontage, with an upper part constructed from timber. |
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Longships had hooks for oars to fit into, but smaller oars were also used, with crooks or bends to be used as oarlocks. |
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Many references to elm in European literature from the Renaissance onwards fit into one or other of these categories. |
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A book, movie, television series, or other artistic creation is said to be sui generis when it does not fit into standard genre boundaries. |
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The term alternative rock was coined in the early 1980s to describe rock artists who did not fit into the mainstream genres of the time. |
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Other hybrid languages, such as English, do not strictly fit into any of these categories. |
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The Constitutional Court controls the laws and the actions of the public administration must fit into the Magna Carta. |
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They are made to specifications that ensure that they are so nearly identical that they will fit into any assembly of the same type. |
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I got a look at your boss's memoirs and I couldn't help but notice I wasn't in it. How do I fit into all this? |
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A workman could check the stone size himself by seeing if the stone would fit into his mouth. |
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Subnormal numbers cannot be normalized because this would result in an exponent that does not fit into the exponent field. |
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They also realized that elements like actinium didn't fit into the scheme they'd grown up with. |
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How has the Internet fit into your experience over the past two weeks? |
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Two-bladed bob skates are available for tots and presumably anyone else who can fit into a child's size 7 shoe. |
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All nine candles, including the center Shamash which lights all the other candles fit into Nelly's wonderful cooky dough menorah. |
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One day, in inspection, the assistant foreman showed me a completed circuit board that fit into the nose cone of a cruise missile. |
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The group turned out to contain 480 morning types, 95 night owls and 1,045 who fit into neither group. |
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These clues are all anagrams of the answers you need to fit into the grid, so you have some unscrambling to do before you start fitting them in. |
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There are also other stops along the way that fit into this crazy quilt of human existence. |
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Vocal problems, such as phonatory instability and vocal cord strain or abnormalities also fit into this category. |
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How does the conservation of endangered species fit into your biology curriculum? |
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However, secret data has unknown value and cannot be adjudged to neatly fit into this ensample before publication. |
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Not all tree huggers fit into the stereotype of the peaceful environmentalist. |
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When events in the Middle East refuse to fit into this Procrustean bed, the West is often left helpless in its cluelessness. |
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If you'd prefer a subtler contribution to this trend, the Oxford floor lamp is simple and slender to fit into compact spaces. |
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And for women who've worked out all winter in order to fit into those string-tied bikinis, well, more options mean there are plenty of itty-bitty bathing suits, too. |
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Both sizes fit into supermarket trolleys and, and if you want to, you can pop a foldaway tray on the bottom as a sturdy base, or use it on top for a lid, ideal for storage. |
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Changes in local paleogeo-morphology and paleoecology may be reflective of larger regional changes that fit into a proposed Prograding Megafan model. |
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Katrina has been trying to fit into the Barbie doll mould with her hairbands and polka dotted frocks, check skirts and cocktail dresses in jewel colours. |
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It is necessary to tell some story about deservingness or about the danger of exploitation that makes the proposed regulation fit into one of these natural categories. |
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The ME and MR Series fit into a gun-drilled cylinder in the same way a magnetostrictive sensor would be installed but without the counterbore necessary for the magnet. |
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We have an enormous amount of systems that fit into an Army command post. |
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Just as I thought, the brand-new staff sergeants didn't even respond, so they obviously fit into level one because they saw little reason to do anything not required of them. |
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The completed homes sit on what was previously a parking lot, and like puzzle pieces, they fit into the townhome and brownstone-dotted neighborhood with ease. |
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The diminutive creative midfielder would be a welcome addition to any squad, though, like Moric, there will be questions as to how he would fit into Real's starting lineup. |
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Current rules state travellers can only carry 100ml containers on to an aircraft and the bottles or tubs must fit into a sealable bag measuring 20cm by 20cm. |
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If you are vetted in a regurgitative model of schooling, then this idea of student empowerment, and project-based learning, and inquiry, doesn't fit into that model very well. |
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The employee was unable to fit into the largest size, and the arbitrator held that it was not reasonable for the company to be required to tailor-make each costume or uniform. |
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Words can be categorized based on the pattern they fit into. |
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Pactolus Bank, visited by Sir Francis Drake, may fit into this category. |
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The pommels, of which two sets must be provided, fit into these incisions. |
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The exact literary category or classification that Duan's large informal narrative would fit into is still debated amongst scholars and historians. |
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I'll need to lose weight if I want to fit into my old jeans. |
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Change Thackeray's spirited devil into a dancing skeleton with an answering grin, and you have a picture that would fit into a medieval, or Holbeinian, Dance of Death. |
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Monte Carlo, which boasts a population of only 38,000 people, most of whom are not ethnic Monegasque people, can fit into half of the area of New York's Central Park. |
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