This meant that he had to get off the start line of stages five and six using just the starter motor. |
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Now with coeliac disease you've got to really get off gluten and stay off gluten. |
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My girlfriend stood by me, had faith in me that I would get off the gear and get clean. |
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When asked how most couples avoided getting pregnant, he replied that the bloke would have to get off at Redfern instead. |
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The worst way for a meeting to get off topic is to get too caught up in the competition. |
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He said it was unfair that women were punished in situations such as Lawal's while the men get off. |
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They then scutched and hatcheled which was mainly to get off the shaff. Then they spun the inner part of the flax on a flax wheel. |
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At the end of the day, I'd get off the bus a couple of stops early and walk home just to stretch my legs. |
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Thousands of people were forced to get off their trains at suburban stations. |
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In attempting to get off the mark, was within a whisker of being run out, Kevin's throw careering for overthrows instead. |
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Moreover, do you have the money and the business know-how to get off the ground? |
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As Pedregon approached the end of the track, his chinstrap came off, forcing him to get off the throttle. |
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Non-banking corporate fraudsters often get off scot free, occasionally with golden handshakes, for similar reasons. |
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The Minister needs to get off his chuff over the summer months and get on top of this portfolio. |
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Why should the ministry not get off its chuff, do the work, and come up with a decision? |
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I had to get off the bus halfway through my journey, find another bus and return home to check. |
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A tram sped away from a stop leaving a five-year-old girl alone on the platform before her mum had time to get off. |
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Another passenger said the tram kept on jolting to a stop before the driver told passengers to get off. |
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As reported in Franks passim, the Dullard show is like a wounded albatross trying to get off the ground. |
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It's a play about actors, and I think our own actors get off on that because it's not often you get a chance to explore it in that way. |
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Sometimes there's an element of claustrophobia that enters when you're on an airplane, and then there's no place to get off and go. |
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Here they were faced with steep cliffs which they had to climb to get off the beach. |
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He then asked if any of the readers had any pet hates which they wanted to get off their chests, so he would air their peeves in the column too. |
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So tired, as I got home really late last night and then couldn't get off to sleep. |
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Sitting on a fence does not imply a lack of commitment, it simply gives one the option on which side to get off. |
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So while criticism of volunteers is easy, one should go easy on the fault-finding unless one is willing to get off the fence and do the work. |
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World Cup winner Sir Geoff Hurst has urged youngsters to get off the couch and start taking part in competitive sport. |
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The driver told them to get off the truck, and reversed when he thought they were clear of his path. |
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He said he often saw people get off trains without paying because conductors had not collected fares. |
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We knew that without financial support, interdisciplinary research might never get off the ground. |
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Of course, not everyone has the pluck to become an entrepreneur, and most businesses fail before they get off the starting block. |
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Some you travel with longer, but you invariably get off at different stations. |
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My friend makes up an excuse to get off the phone five minutes into every convo. |
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You get off the train and walk south, drawn irresistibly towards the mighty red portico carved out of the building itself. |
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Croydon has become home to the first in a series of innovation centres to help fledgling businesses get off the ground. |
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Fans should try and understand that at a competition, when you finally get off the ice, you're exhausted and drained. |
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Also, some people are better set up to pursue longer term goals and others need more immediate rewards to get off their duffs and do anything. |
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The move would effectively record for posterity the names of all those supporters who helped the new club get off the ground. |
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One weekend, there was a half-hour crawl along Didsbury Road to get to the car park and it took 20 minutes to get off it. |
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It's a crossed line, the other party won't get off the phone and it takes the intervention of the operator to get through to your lover. |
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It was forced off by either a crowbar or a jemmy and it must have been difficult to get off. |
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Once he understands that crucial difference, he should get off to a good start. |
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They can take bad penalties and, despite their excellent penalty killing, get off their game. |
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Perhaps Tracy's achievements will give me the nudge that I need to get off my duff and get this thing done? |
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We have to get off our duffs, get our noses out of the TV, and get our children to speak up. |
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Everyone going to intermediate stops had to get off there and switch to the next local. |
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I was immediately scared and just wanted to get off the ice and into the locker room. |
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A handful of local people get off the bus, dispersing in different directions. |
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He knew exactly where his bed was and laid on it like Lord Muck, and seemed quite astonished when we told him to get off the sofa! |
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Despite the admirable longevity of an established asparagus bed, the plants get off to a slow start. |
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Perhaps the end of our affair with TV chefs will mean we actually get off our rumps to make a bit more effort in the kitchen. |
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There is lots I have that I want to get off my chest in an effort to move on. |
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This year's campaign will follow the dismal showing of 2004 where the event didn't even get off the ground because of a lack of interest. |
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So if your crush is shooting hoops in gym and you can dunk, get off the bleachers and join him. |
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Some walkers warned a group of four boys to get off the frozen river at Water End. |
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One of the unique attractions of the park is that walking safaris are allowed and you can get off your vehicle for a nature walk. |
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Corporate backers of privatization are urging the Administration to get off the dime. |
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From here on in, the band clearly get off on the audience's excitement, and it's a proper gig. |
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After some failed attempts to get off their mailing list, he decided to take matters into his own hands. |
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They just wanted people to get off their backs and so they did something fast. |
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They want to get off the sales cycle and return to the glorious past that existed back at the dawn of the computing age. |
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The only people it really helps are those accused of crime in the courts, to allow them sometimes to get off on a technicality. |
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I remember once, many years ago, trying to get off school by telling my dear old mam that I had a terrible ear-ache. |
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Although we didn't detect any ginger in our ginger chicken fillet, the meat wasn't the tough old bird we often get off Bulgaria's grills. |
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It isn't safe unless we get 6,000 people through the door and I want everybody to get off their backsides and get in here. |
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My generation learned that if we wanted to accomplish anything, we would have to get off the dime. |
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She was just about to tell him where to get off when something rather peculiar caught her eyes. |
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At 21, if I approached a 40-year-old hard-nut comedian to play my new little comedy club in York, they'd probably tell me where to get off! |
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I am not getting any younger, and I need to move on if he's never going to get off the dime. |
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So if they ask my company to pay a license fee, I'll be recommending that we tell them where to get off. |
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There's just no reason for people to really get off the dime and start doing heavy business spending just now. |
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Imagine if we never again had people darting across three lanes of traffic to avoid a traffic backup or to get off on an exit at the last minute. |
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The hope is that when they are 60 they can still get off with a tasty blonde in her early twenties. |
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When the game is over, thank the scorekeepers and congratulate the winners, then get off the floor. |
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Fans with vastly different tastes still get off on its piercing wail, distorted rumbles, or clean and warm sound. |
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Although they admitted to kidnapping the students, they managed to find enough excuses to get off scot-free. |
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It is outlandish that index funds with very similar portfolio mixes and investing strategies can get off scot-free for charging higher fees. |
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As before, low-ranking men and women will take the full blame while the higher ups get off scot-free. |
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From the beginning I've had the suspicion that at the end of the day Walker would basically get off scot-free. |
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To get off the yacht required abseiling down a rope but I was too scared to make that small jump onto the rope. |
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That's where the kids who were fighting decided to get off too, pushing and elbowing their way past the other people who were trying to get off. |
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They could do it as they enjoy special privileges and may get off scot-free with violating both the exchange rules and the laws of the land. |
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Given that I have no extant close family, I get off relatively lightly I know. |
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They take advantage of having a tiny bit of power over other people because they totally get off on jerking them around. |
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It was a mark of the Scottish Executive's desperation to get off the Holyrood hook that the First Minister had to rely on fiscal jiggery-pokery. |
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For the past eight years, Moira's been on methadone, a drug most imagine only junkies use to get off heroin. |
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If you want to get off with your doctor, change lists and find out what he does in his spare time. |
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But our image is of two idiots beating each other up while trying to get off with women. |
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I was on the bus the other day, and the bus was drawing towards my stop so I was standing by the door waiting to get off. |
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If jurors you think are sympathetic to you get on the jury and bad jurors for you get off, you're happy. |
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Maybe Beau will get really drunk and think you're a girl so you can get off with him! |
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Celebrity worship may be simple-minded, self-indulgent and craven, but heads of state should not expect to get off so lightly. |
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When the houseboat's roof started rattling, they knew it was time to get off. |
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He seemed solid, unflappable, disciplined and optimistic, a man who would get off the canvas quickly if felled and resume with a smile. |
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I explained I had tried to buy a ticket but the inspector was very rude and told me to get off. |
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If things work out and you become an institution, how long will it be before you're riding a tiger and can't get off? |
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Frequent fliers overseas often carry a medication called temazepam, which helps them get off to sleep quickly. |
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They are our mind's way of telling us that something is wrong and we need to get off our keesters to fix it. |
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I just act polite and a bit contrite and seem to get off with warnings, always. |
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The landlords refuse to get off their fat behinds and allow the agents to fix a serious water leakage problem with our air conditioner. |
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He became angry when she asked him to get off so she could pull away and launched a torrent of abuse. |
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Our homes will be powered by micropower units that will allow us all to get off the grid. |
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She couldn't get off the rope tow and ended up going to the top of the mountain. |
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As it operates as a home for men trying to get off the street, they are asking this year for toiletries like toothpaste, soap and shampoo. |
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The government exhorts us to get off the roads and onto the railway, but it may not have considered the opposite proposition. |
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We can bring about this massive transfer of power from the government to the people, but only if you'll get off your keesters and help us out! |
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Whenever they are caught they seem to get off with little or no punishment at all and just end up laughing at the system. |
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In practice, most people caught with small amounts of cannabis will get off with a warning. |
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Since there are no eyewitnesses to the killing and Richard claims it was an accident, he may get off with only a few years in jail. |
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She sang to the bartender, who smiled widely, not daring to tell the minx to get off his counter. |
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As with any addiction the more one uses, the more one needs to get off, and my doing these inconspicuous plays was just not doing the trick. |
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I get off at ten, and while that may be too late for me and the missus to go out for dinner, it's not too late for a romantic dinner at home. |
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Nearby, a crowd mobbed a man on a pay phone, screaming at him to get off the phone so that they could call relatives. |
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The officers have radios and mobile phones and have authority to ask passengers to produce tickets and to ask troublemakers to get off. |
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Irving and Ethel were two of a kind, indefatigable troupers who simply never wanted to get off stage. |
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We get off, but apparently the bizzies shut the bar down just after until everyone had left. |
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This now begs the question, is it time for the silent majority to get off the fence and let its voice be heard? |
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Our back tire suddenly blew and we had to try and cut through about three lanes to get off the highway past cars and trucks. |
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Growers aren't sure why the cotton is difficult to get off this year, even though quality is unaffected. |
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He managed to get off the bus before me, as I had two bags, my guitar and my skateboard decks to carry. |
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He belted two huge sixers, but eleven to get off the last two deliveries was a big ask. |
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Hopefully the swells will settle down a bit, before the wife starts filling in the chores list and the boaties can get off shore. |
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For the moment, the project is bogged down in bureaucracy and can't get off the ground because of government inaction. |
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While most get off with a warning, there is at least one case of dismissal. |
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At midnight when you get off work and you're all keyed up, I'm all worn out. |
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It is high time that all concerned get off their horse and do the decent thing in the interest of the people. |
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Okay, so my career as a domestic goddess didn't get off to such an auspicious start. |
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I just wish somebody would trust us so we could get off the ground and she could take a breather. |
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Freddie was a no-show because of vertigo, an inner-ear disorder, and he couldn't get off his hotel room floor. |
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If that was me, my mother would run on to the pitch and tell me to get off the wet grass before I catch my death of cold. |
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After a couple of test runs, Hughes had reporters get off the plane and lined up the press boats to give them a good view. |
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Spring will get off to a dismal start today with gales, hailstones and thunder storms. |
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There were reports of desperate stampedes as people rushed to get off trains and out of stations. |
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Even America, which is the leader of the democratic world, does not let corrupt directors get off the hook. |
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As I see it, it is vital that you keep calm and happy so our baby will have a chance to get off to a good start in life. |
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Point out any paragraphs that seem to get off topic or need to be divided. |
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If you should get stung by a box jellyfish, you won't get off lightly. |
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It's difficult to get off our keesters and do something about it. |
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My nearest relation, my wife, is telling me to get off my database and take out the garbage. |
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What is more surprising is that hard-working people so often shrug their shoulders and accept that the work-shy are entitled to what they can get off the state. |
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And even if the suspect goes on to be pronounced innocent, he or she does not get off scot-free. |
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Yet meaningful negotiations to free the hostages have failed to get off the ground. |
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They will get off the sinking ship, and jump on the life raft. |
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Before we get off the phone, Kent stumbles and stammers until finding her footing in a heartwarming anecdote. |
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Events get off to a ghoulish start as a pair of grave robbers rendezvous in a dark alley to transfer a freshly stolen body from one car to the other. |
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She manages to get off some funny lines and deft observations of the lookist culture, but you have the feeling they came from her co-workers at the magazine. |
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What they represent as ludic freedom in fact represents an attempt to get off the point, abandon the development of new products and instead behave in an infantile manner. |
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Audiences here are pretty unmotivated to get off their bums. |
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I get off him, surprised to find that I'm not the least bit saddle-sore. |
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If you misjudge a turn and slide into the barrier you may get off lucky with a broken tail light, or you may totally shatter the window depending on how hard the car hits. |
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But I told him where to get off and he hasn't spoken to me since. |
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If he tried that with me now, I'd tell him where to get off. |
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He must be a real softie and too shy to tell her where to get off! |
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It would be a travesty if officials are blamed and MPs get off scot-free. |
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So the evildoers get off scot-free while good people get dumped on. |
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Changes that define whether piracy is for profit or not have set a threshold that will allow not-for-profit offenders to get off scot-free, Lee said. |
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But here the company can take away our pensions and get off scot-free. |
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Jockeys should never get off scot-free when they make mistakes, but the recent calls for jockeys to be banned for months for dropping their hands is quite nonsensical. |
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If you know in your heart that you're a ball of fire, but just can't get off the couch in the evenings, you might want to look into your diet and exercise programs. |
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We scrambled, but one plane had trouble and did not get off. |
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There were no designated stops which meant people could get off anywhere. |
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But I managed to get off stage without doing myself an injury. |
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He must be gutted that he gets 9 months, and other criminals such as muggers, OAP beaters etc. get off with a suspended sentence or community work! |
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Get a thrill, get off a lucky shot, take home a trophy, put it up in a secret chamber of our heart. |
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This may be enough for some, but if you wish to capture hidden aspects of the place you will be visiting you might want to get off the beaten trail. |
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Rick looked up at the ship, it was moving too slow and too late, it might get off some shots but not enough to stop them or to get the breach out of the way. |
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But before long, Morgan was ready to get off the wonk and back to the Oval Office. |
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You want to get off your face on jungle drugs and see visions. |
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You know I was so paranoid about deep-vein thrombosis, I took my aspirin and wriggled my legs but still I thought, that'd be right, I'll get off the plane and cark it. |
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He says he has been clean from heroin for years and now takes a prescribed opiate to combat the pain, but is desperate to get off the addictive chemical. |
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But it's the smell of the paper mill you notice when you get off the plane, and the white billowing smoke of the paper mill that you remember when you leave. |
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If Smith is such a great constituency Member of Parliament, why did he not get off his chuff and write to the Minister about the issues of which he speaks? |
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Abandoned motorbikes could be seen under the water where the partygoers had left them as they scrambled to get off the site as quickly as possible once the storm struck. |
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Their motive is to give wild parties and get off with girls. |
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If I had to get off the computer to get a coffee or a drink of water, I'd usually try to time it so I detach myself from my headphones at the end of a song. |
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As the woman made to get off the boulder she was perched upon, a tiny pinpoint of yellow light flashed upon the horizon, something which was almost invisible. |
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I finally thought to get off on the fourth floor and descend a flight of stairs, only to find that a custodian had roped off that end of the third-floor hallway for mopping. |
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Nine metres down it is possible to get off the ladder on to a ledge of jammed rocks and enter a parallel aven, with much flowstone on the walls and water entering at the top. |
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The gangplank was let down and the passengers began to get off. |
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I was surprised, and I thought he might even get off with that defense. |
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He confessed to police and was lucky to get off with a bond. |
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And every once in a while he would get off with one of them. |
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Most of what I get off on when watching a band is their interactions. |
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In contrast it was a disappointing day for Heikki, who failed to get off the grid at all after suffering a transmission problem with his Arden car. |
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I wish people would understand that, and I wish this jury would really get off the dime and start deliberating a little more conscientiously and get this thing finished with. |
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Apparently wracked with indecision, the Supreme Judicial Court needs to get off the dime and render a verdict in same-sex marriage in the commonwealth. |
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Yes, you may have to get off your duff to start your vehicle. |
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At regular station stops, since no express was working on weekends, plenty of time was available to get off and explore the sights in the small eastern towns. |
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Understandably, Borle has a lot to get off his chest on the topic. |
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Even Shah began stodgily, taking 34 deliveries to get off the mark, and doing so courtesy of a misfield. |
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It yearned to get off my body and back on the pale, slopey runway model where it made sense. |
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We arrive there five minutes later and I sit up very rockily. I have to get off this boat, I am getting sick. |
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Wellington refused to get off the train, and ordered that the trains return to Liverpool. |
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In fact the great majority of innovations never get off the bottom of the curve, and never produce normal returns. |
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Passengers for London from Amsterdam and Rotterdam will undertake all security checks before boarding and will not need to get off in Brussels. |
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I'm going to launch an e-zine for Restructuring Today as soon as I get off the phone with you. |
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Then there are the potterers who get off the ship and explore the local town on foot or take a bus or taxi to a local attraction. |
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So bad, as it turned out, that in order to, uh, get off the pot every morning, I had to gulp down an unreasonable amount of Pepto-Bismol. |
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Vasconcelos said, 'Many taxi drivers greet visitors who get off the bus with offers of palm reading or transport to a bruja. |
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Who would actually choose to get off a bus sweatier and more frustrated than when they got on? |
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To get off the list, a traveler must submit notarized copies of birth certificates and other documents. |
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Nerds can get off on the trainspotterish aspects of the series, whose parameters and standings are explained and displayed with clarity. |
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A TEENAGER lashed out at a bus ticket inspector after being told to get off because he was drinking alcohol. |
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Personal motivators are being trained on Tyneside to help people get off the couch and do more exercise. |
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Besides, HoC is wondrously binge-watchable because viewers get off on Frank's ridiculous omnipotence. |
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And then when they do, because of you, they get off scot free! |
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So the double resigner from Cabinets should get off his high horse and answer questions about how he won the lottery without buying a ticket. |
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This represents a drop in grade and with rival Jack O'Lantern having had two runs this season without success, Rasselas can get off the mark. |
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After Upheaval Bottom and Hardscrabble Bottom, we get off our bikes for a hike out to Fort Bottom, a well-preserved Anasazi lookout tower. |
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Oh for crying out loud, get off the computer! You've been on there for ages! |
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Going after him now, with the train slowed down and everyone standing up to get off, would be a dangersome waste of time. |
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Once on the way back from a game we had to stop the team bus seven times so Gordon and Ronnie could get off to fight over some stitch-up Ronnie had pulled. |
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Can you get off the phone, please? I need to use it urgently. |
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During a stop, the head constable decided to get off and stretch his legs, an activity he became so preoccupied with that the train, and his prisoner, left without him. |
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It takes more than a picture in a girlie magazine for me to get off. |
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While there may be better longer term prospects in the race, Give Me High Five can put her race experience to good use and get off the mark at the third time of asking. |
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Some years ago it was reputed that the sheep used to do commando rolls over cattle grids to get off the moors so they could wander down into the village. |
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I could only get a single from the Pier Head and get off at Birkenhead, walk up the very steep gangway, show my bus pass again and be issued with a single ticket back. |
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I was on Ripsaw where everyone sits in a row and the barrier wouldn't close because of me so I had to get off and walk away in front of everybody. |
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Well, Steverino, this looks like where I get off and join another trolley. |
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Instead of having it mended he would count the number of times the pedals went round and would get off the bicycle in time to adjust the chain by hand. |
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His big plans to get rich never quite seemed to get off the ground. |
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