I could get into the Pavilion, or The Flea Pit as we called it, for the price of two jam jars, washed or unwashed. |
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Petrol station bosses have begun an investigation into whether heavy rain caused water to get into a fuel pump. |
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Why didn't I ace that test when I needed to keep my grades up if I want to get into college? |
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The balance of poignant to funny material is now a bit out of kilter and I have to get into the premise of the whole thing a lot more quickly. |
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The council also visits schools across the town to talk to children about the trouble they could get into if they were caught in the act. |
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So at school I used to act up and get into trouble, and then I'd go home to my mum and start crying because I thought the teacher didn't like me. |
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The ship will not go fast enough to get into orbit, but the pilot will be weightless for three minutes. |
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The radiographer will help you to get into the right position for the X-ray. |
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Still I'm not letting any of these jokers write me any references or be character witnesses if I even get into trouble. |
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He did well enough at school to get into a good university and he studied hard and graduated with flying colours. |
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When paint can get into the adobe, then it hardens in there, and it makes it cling better than anything. |
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Participants are being urged to get into the spirit by pulling on tight trousers or a spangly jumpsuit. |
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If you do get into cover the shootouts that follow are pure digital whack-a-mole. |
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I try not to get into them too often, but what I will nibble on are pretzels dipped in ranch dressing. |
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And a young advance man beckoned to me, told me to get into his pickup truck, and said that someone wanted to see me. |
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Just because he's wormed his way into the headmaster's good graces doesn't mean he can't still get into trouble. |
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But sometimes puppies get into mischief that's more risky than amusing, and this adventuresome spirit can spell danger. |
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Could you get into some specifics regarding the different types of space fighters and their weapons? |
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Now, I want everyone to get into formation behind me and we're going to practice synchronized aerials! |
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She got incredibly hyper and we managed to get into a huge food fight, sliding across my kitchen floor on chocolate syrup and whipped cream. |
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Goodman also suggested that whippings or canings should be brought back for children who get into trouble. |
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After being given a crash-course in rowing, my first hurdle was to get into the boat without it keeling over. |
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Some members of the Ladies Dart Team from the Castle Inn have decided to get into a keep-fit routine. |
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It frequently carries topics and issues of wide import that get into the mainstream papers months or years later. |
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Students with lower grades can still get into Southern if they score high enough on college-aptitude tests. |
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She has rearranged her childcare in order to get into town for 8.20 am and give herself a better chance of finding a parking space. |
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They called the fire crews at around 2.15 am but they were unable to get into the building until a keyholder arrived. |
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If, you got the nose too high too soon, you could get into a position where it would not get airborne. |
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The security men were holding back the crowd to let the shaken minister and the officials get into a waiting car. |
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I ran across the street to get into the office. There were several customers at the windows, some being served, others waiting to be served. |
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On the bright side, if students can get into the vertebrate examples discussed here, maybe some will plumb deeper into other phyla and kingdoms. |
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An accomplice can get into the witness box and give a whole lot of evidence that is common ground. |
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Of course, the best way to deal with debt is never to get into the red in the first place. |
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The differences between the officers of the Empire in Star Wars and the uniforms of Klingons are immense and too numerous to get into here. |
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As soon as you come near to the South Downs, you get into the chalk lands, and all the older buildings begin to have knapped flints in them. |
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It helped her get into a fancy boarding school, for instance, but it also attracted superficial wooers looking for the ultimate status accessory. |
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It's cold enough for light woollens but not yet time to get into heavier clothing. |
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I am not going to get into the business of defining what a koha is and what it is not. |
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The moment we get into murky decision-making processes, everybody has an alibi. |
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With the labor market that slack, there's no reason for companies to get into bidding wars for workers. |
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You have to get into their last third of the pitch as often as you can and then it is all about the quality of the chance you create. |
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Have someone lace you into the corset rather than trying to get into it with the laces loosened. |
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Roads should be relaid properly and not allowed to get into the disgraceful state which Bradford roads currently find themselves. |
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But when you think of it, it allows you to start the engine, get into gear and release the brake with one hand. |
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The yields at which investors have the opportunity to get into both markets look sensible. |
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You save more lives that way, even if the wilfully ignorant of the chattering classes get into a lather because of it. |
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With temperatures below zero and icy roads many people were unable to get into the village for supplies of candles, batteries for torches etc. |
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He intends to campaign on issues such as law and order and the number of economic migrants trying to get into Britain. |
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Paragliders are not cheap, though they represent one of the least expensive ways to get into the air. |
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In the Derby, she was left at the post, and her rider galloped her hard to get into good position. |
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When hand watering, get into the habit of dead heading your annual flowers and weeding the garden with your spare hand. |
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Her favourite perennials are lilies which put on a show of colour before the annuals get into full swing. |
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I think we get into law and legalism, and we don't understand that it's really, really human to err. |
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If you want to get into beauty treatments, have pedicures, because all your ills go to your feet. |
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While I found it to be full of antic spirit and coarse entertainment, she just couldn't get into it. |
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You've spent hours reveling, but just as the night is winding down, two drunk guests get into a vicious argument. |
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This one took me a while to get into, because I liked its opening track so intensely that the rest of the album initially felt like a let-down. |
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He had frozen his scoring shots initially in his innings and grafted hard to get into his stride. |
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We should not get into the ideology of capitalism versus socialism in health care. |
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Mann likens this process to the method acting style of movie stars such as Robert de Niro, who go to great lengths to get into character. |
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The fighters circled the ring for a little while, but it didn't take them as long to get into some action. |
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I do not intend to get into an argument with an apologist for mass murder such as yourself. |
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A queue of about 150 people were lining up to get into a nondescript-looking door. |
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The officer said he feared he could get into trouble without first having a risk-assessment conducted. |
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I took off as normal, concentrated on getting the glider established above hill top height before attempting to get into the pedals. |
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If the arbs get into the conventional investment trust sector it will contract, absolutely. |
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Many small and some large tetrapods with no obvious arboreal features can get into trees. |
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I can't get into his most private thoughts and listen in as I can with so many other people. |
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Most of my clients will get into trouble by gambling the money they need to live on, go to a loan shark, then they gamble that. |
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The American players also seem loath to get into the whole thing, although all are aware of what went between Monty and that bunker. |
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The forwards did not get into gear and should have given their opponents a lesson in scrummaging and loose play. |
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They get into debt because they don't know how to handle their money and then go running to their parents for a hand-out. |
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I had always been a fast runner, so it didn't take me very long to get into the park which was 2 blocks away. |
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I was so shy it was unbelievable and it never occurred to me that I could get into this business. |
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But you just can't get into the middle class today with a low-class education. |
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To brake on ice or snow without locking the wheels, get into a low gear earlier than usual, let the speed drop and brake very gently. |
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Gerard Byrne said the men forced their way in at the back of the church, breaking through two doors to get into the sacristy. |
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They should deal with operational matters only, and not start to get into the madness and lunacy of policy setting. |
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So even if your child does everything right, she or he may not get into the college of their choice. |
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The tailgate hinges on both the side and the bottom so you can get into the trunk without sprawling across a filthy expanse of sheet metal. |
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The orbit has to have some inclination to it for the apoapsis to get into the magnetotail. |
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A pruning saw with a curved blade that's narrow at the tip will help you get into tight spaces. |
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I'll tell myself I just don't want to get into it, when the truth is, I have no backbone whatsoever. |
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The mission would fail if any of the four engine burns needed to reach the Moon and get into lunar orbit underperformed. |
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This woman is obviously a flirt and a tease who is looking to get into trouble. |
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An effective run stuffer, he also can get into the backfield and pressure the quarterback. |
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Now we get into the romance part for a while and forget science fiction for now. |
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On the oval, a half tenth of a second is a lot in this series, and then you get into traffic and lose a second or two. |
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But they must know to what extent you will be able to bail them out if they get into financial difficulties. |
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As the newest of the five terrestrial channels the station has had an uphill struggle to get into the hearts and minds of the viewing public. |
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Indeed they are struggling to get into the team, baulked by players who last season didn't get games when Veron and Beckham were fit. |
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The siblings always get into some kind of scrape or moral dilemma, and there are a lot of siblings to choose from. |
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And one has to wonder, too, whether anybody who really was streetwise would get into a car so visibly marked. |
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She loved his kindness and his silliness, though she was a little unnerved by his desire to get into scuffles. |
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We need to get into the top three at some stage and even if it is towards the end of the season then that is okay. |
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But then we'd have to get into what quantum thermodynamics means, and well, that's a battle for another day! |
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Yes, I was accosted, again, in my driveway with two very thickset people, attempted to get into the car at night. |
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The rain which threatened to pour didn't fail to dampen the spirit of the crowd who were determined to get into the spirit of things. |
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There's some meanies trying to get into the bridge while their buddies here distract you guys! |
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The crooks then tore a hole through the roof to get into the club's tea bar, before escaping with sweets and drinks. |
|
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I get a thrill when I can get into the male psyche and learn about what makes them tick. |
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If four candidates on a single ticket were all to get into Legco they would require the support of nearly the entire constituency. |
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All the songs have been carefully selected for your enjoyment, from laid back sounds to a beat that makes you stand up and get into a groove. |
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They had tried to get into the house through the back door, on their knees, but they were beaten back by the heat and smoke. |
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Despite their brave efforts, they were beaten back by dense smoke and flames as they tried to get into the upstairs bedroom. |
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Without a low-cost way to get into orbit this problem will continue to bedevil the space industry and its supporters. |
|
Some terriers' tails were cropped because it made it easier for them to get into badger setts, fox dens and the like. |
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You have to have the microbe, the bacteria get into you somehow, either through the skin, through the stomach or breathe it in through the air. |
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The water manages to get into the sewage system causing the waste to surge up out of the manholes. |
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When soft totalitarians get into a bureaucracy or university or media, they go for power over the announced aim of their institution. |
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Brain abscess is a serious disorder that occurs when micro-organisms such as bacteria or fungi get into the brain, causing inflammation. |
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They get into cells that are supposed to protect us from bacteria, the microphages, and it's in there that they're able to produce this toxin. |
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But that doesn't mean you can't find affordable ways to get into race marketing at local tracks or through smaller circuits. |
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I have always been a great believer in trying your best to get into good positions in sport. |
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She wore a train on her wedding dress 2,000 ft long in an attempt to get into the Guinness Book Of Records. |
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However, it makes me sad to see our fellow brothers and sisters abort Xhosa and adopt other languages when they get into the limelight. |
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Anyhow, as I'm no football commentator, let me shut my trap as I may just get into territory where I cannot defend myself. |
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Damien said a man had shinned up a drainpipe and tried to get into a first-floor room on Thursday night to impress his girlfriend. |
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I'm not like some of those big-head celebrity hounds who are too good for people or who get into movies for free. |
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You plan to trek on the treadmill at least four times a week so you can get into the healthiest tip-top shape possible. |
|
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In this family home, the boys misbehave, don't listen to their mum and dad and get into trouble at school. |
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Dogs, just like humans, forget, get distracted, make mistakes, get into mischief and act on impulse. |
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But, like anyone with too much fun time on his or her hands, it was also easier to get into mischief. |
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The bulls have to compete in feed efficiency trials as young animals before they get into the bull studs. |
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Some people will no doubt get into blogging in the misguided belief they'll be able to change the world with it. |
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Work has to be done to get into bikini shape, lose those bingo wings, attain a flat stomach and so on. |
|
The model suggests an answer to the question of how triglycerides and cholesterol esters get into and out of lipid particles. |
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Triplexes can be designed to be livable and, compared to single-family homes, they are an affordable way to get into this community, he said. |
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But the issue won't be mitigated until conservatives make a serious effort to get into academics and make their arguments heard. |
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It's easy to criticise, but we should put our shoulder to the wheel and do our bit to persuade our clients to get into the sector. |
|
I have very little doubt that all the MMA stars are capable fighters, and I wouldn't dare get into the ring with any of them. |
|
Feeling at a loss, we get into our canoe and shove off, and then any thoughts of the Dunns' welfare vanishes as we think of our own. |
|
He argued that if a few black people get into high profile positions every black person benefits. |
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Do they have a trustworthy neighbour they can ring if they get into difficulties and a number to contact you at work? |
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I still get depressed and I still get into bad moods, but that engulfing sadness is something I haven't experienced in quite the same way since. |
|
I didn't want to get into explanations of pipes or mailer options, both of which have been discussed in other articles. |
|
Set in the prestigious New York Ballet School, the film follows a group of eager young moppets who make the grade to get into the academy. |
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Anyone arriving later than 10.30 am is unlikely to get into the estate in time for the race start. |
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Kids! It's not rocket science! If you get into the water and it's too cold you get out. Simples! |
|
Soon uhlans as well as the other mounted troops had to abandon their horses and armed with rifles, get into the trenches. |
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So, Ford wants to sink the ship rather than allow the flagship of the Russian sub fleet get into enemy hands. |
|
It was just unbelievable, like a dream come true, scoring the winner at Hampden to get into the play-offs. |
|
Mr Coffey kept his other eye shut throughout most of the ordeal as firefighters cut the rod down to size so he could get into an ambulance. |
|
On the whole, though, this is either a specialist release for real dancehall heads or a bluffer's guide for those wanting to get into the scene. |
|
The bulk of the screen time goes to a team of undead children and the wacky high jinks they get into while searching for human blood. |
|
Every girl has a pair of skinny pants at home that she can't get into any more, right? |
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If you really get into it, you might even find yourself sporting short-cropped bangs, bobby socks and a poodle skirt. |
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Some people come in too quickly pushing against the tide, get into the slack water, and are pushed forward. |
|
I hated the stupid 57 tram, filled with bogans and taking ages to get into the city. |
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The succession of unexecuted missions was wearing on the morale of the SF soldiers, who were eager to get into the fight. |
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Educated young people who had failed to get into university were unfitted by their education and aspirations to enter industry. |
|
The slice slows the ball's speed down giving you the time to get into a better position. |
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While it is not necessary to get into the myological detail, they do effectively make the point that the girdles were large and well-muscled. |
|
After a summer of slouchy boho, flowing fabrics and flouncy layers, it's time to get into something less comfortable. |
|
It is dark and unlit with several bends and there are no obstacles or barriers at the side of the road to help you if you get into difficulties. |
|
Embsay are another side with the potential to get into the title race if they can convert their unplayed games into maximum points. |
|
But you don't fully feel the weight of that until you get into that situation where you're the boss. |
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I would urge the community to not get into a place of rigidity and narrowness where they can't view the whole and what is at stake. |
|
Altogether a nasty piece of work, but a delight to get into the head of and write. |
|
Now, you get into court, you're confronted with cops perjuring themselves and jailhouse snitches saying you confessed all to them in your cell. |
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Both pathogens can colonise the intestines of beef cattle and get into the food chain during slaughter at the abattoir. |
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The comfort of playing the role that is more or less like you is a very natural way to get into abhinaya. |
|
One minute I would be terribly home sick and the next I couldn't wait to get into central London. |
|
Outside, scores of people mill about, waiters serve free coffee and soda, and a long queue waits to get into the hall. |
|
Now I know how she feels when she can't get into her jeans during that time of the month. |
|
It is driven by gears rather than a belt, and also comes with a telescopic extendable wand which means it can get into tight corners and edges. |
|
We hear a lot about how it has become too easy to get into university these days. |
|
They thought she was easy, that they could buy her a drink and then get into her pants at the end of the night. |
|
Be careful though, you might get into a story-telling session and find the whole day has sped past. |
|
I went and hung out a load of washing in the time it took to log on and get into my site. |
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Soon it became exciting, the thrill of doing something that we could get into trouble for and for me it was a revengeful out cry towards my parents, especially my father. |
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He said if I spoke as a red ragger my son would not get into the school. |
|
We felt that that the tradeswoman's voluntary and active participation in the war was made clear enough by showing the great distance which she has travelled to get into it. |
|
Not wanting to get into a conversation, David quickly hits the button to turn off the telephone and as it bleeps, the doorbell sounds through the house. |
|
A short time later Ripley was seen to get into his pick-up truck bearing a distinctive Native American Indian emblem and used for transporting broken-down coaches. |
|
With her open Midwestern face and winsome smile, it was easy for her to get into conversations. |
|
The four anti-nuclear campaigners believed nuclear weapons were being held at the Suffolk base and said they tried to get into the base to get photographic evidence. |
|
After some brief, lucid exposition, we get into the story proper. |
|
Post-water break, Rubio managed to get into a groove and ease on in for a smooth-jazz finish. |
|
In particular it wants assurances that the checks the industry has in place to ensure that the bacteria causing botulism does not get into baby products are adequate. |
|
|
It was so big that it took me an hour to get into it and the only way for me to go to the bathroom was to take off the bodice. |
|
It is famously difficult to get into Crannog at the best of times. |
|
They think they'll get into trouble, or become unhelpful and difficult. |
|
He tried two or three times to get into Parliament as an independent. |
|
It's not until you get into the elements heavier than lead that you find nuclei whose binding energy per nucleon is low enough that the fission fragments could tunnel apart. |
|
How did Cedric, your former close friend and current tormentor, get into the SUR party? |
|
Still, the school has gotten more difficult to get into and the caliber of student attending has improved, as a result. |
|
He had a natural affinity with the tribe and would never miss an opportunity to be with them, interact with them and frequently get into discussions with them. |
|
If you're good enough at school to get into med school, it probably doesn't make financial sense to go. |
|
Once again, we get into these enormous potential legal tangles. |
|
An Australian backpacker is not going to relish a guided tour of central Sofia but will definitely get into white-water rafting or bungee jumping in the Rila Mountains. |
|
Men get into the house either by recommendation or after passing an extensive Internet obstacle course that only genuine transvestites would know how to do. |
|
The Dryden translation is a little harder to get into with its deliberate archaisms and anastrophes, but once you do it's very rhythmic and compelling. |
|
On March 25, I stood in line outside the Supreme Court, waiting to get into the hobby Lobby oral argument. |
|
If you are travelling in the left hand lane, and you see cars coming down the slip road, it may not be possible to get into the middle lane, because of heavy traffic. |
|
Lakers forward Karl Malone has been banged up and just generally not close to his old self, missing wide-open jumpers and struggling to get into any kind of rhythm. |
|
Oudin from Marietta, Georgia, had to play a series of qualifying rounds to get into the Open tournament. |
|
Squirrels are infamous for their ability to get into bird feeders. |
|
People lined the sidewalks, waiting to get into the theatre. |
|
With a similar system to Australia, most of these people wouldn't get into our country, weeding out criminals, drug dealers and social security scroungers. |
|
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Garrymore, lacking the overall balance of their opponents, did make a spirited effort to get into the reckoning in the third quarter, but could make little headway. |
|
When they get into their bureaucratic tribe, their tribalism comes out. |
|
That of course takes the problem back in time as to where or what organized the collagenous lattice in the dermal mesenchyme, but let's not get into that. |
|
The first pitch requires a 20 metre rope with a pull-back line, and is belayed in an alcove round to the right which is a little awkward to get into. |
|
Last week's controversy over the standard of Scottish refereeing is a mere bagatelle compared to the state of anguish they get into at that most fevered game, cricket. |
|
When you confuse it with ethics or idealism, then you get into murky territory. |
|
The speed and the angle of sinking made it extremely difficult to launch the life boats and the first one that did get into the water spilled its occupants into the sea. |
|
She rejects him after he cannot get into the army, but when she is kidnapped along with his train, he single-handedly attempts to get the train back. |
|
She will need a TER of 97 or 98 to get into physiotherapy at university. |
|
Such verbiage and dithering in the face of market mayhem helped Europe get into its mess in the first place. |
|
And the red zones are areas where we cannot get into to effect delivery. |
|
We might use the churches which did not knuckle under to Hitler, although it is questionable in the minds of some people whether churches should get into politics. |
|
Why did he get into arguments with petty people, like the trumpeter in his town? |
|
It merely emphasises the fact that parents are aware that children tend to get into mischief and do not exercise the same degree of responsibility for safety as adults. |
|
In other words, we are going to get into the circumstances of the rightfulness or wrongfulness of the gentleman's removal from this country in the first place. |
|
I get into an involved conversation with a balding forty-something. |
|
Tammany Hall is a game that simulated the dynamics of politics without having to get into the details. |
|
What does that image mean to the American people, a guy who can actually get into a super sonic plane, and actually fly in an unpressurized cabin, like an actual jet pilot? |
|
Words, for her, are characters that own themselves, and which might at any point strike out on their own, behave mischievously, and get into trouble. |
|
Why was she about to get into this conversation with David anyway? |
|
|
You see, when states have the ability to curtail the applications of a Constitutional right, you get into choppy waters. |
|
Far too may lives of both air passengers and crews have been put at risk by lager louts, champagne Charlies and ordinary people who get into a rage. |
|
So the walkway has been closed off and the builders are in to repoint the masonry, since the bees can't get into any mortar that isn't old and soft. |
|
And let's not get into the limitations of narrative structure and formulas of what makes a good story, since, of course, they're fairly archetypal at root. |
|
I could get into their heads, so I knew if they were bluffing. |
|
I always tried to get into the spirit of things with dancing, clapping, and singing out in the pews. |
|
We will also get into acrimonious discussions on morality and values. |
|
As you get into open waters, you select a split screen with the radar on the top half, and a chartplotter with an offshore waypoint on the bottom half. |
|
Where low seeded teams get into trouble is when they over-analyze. |
|
The best thing to do with these bozos is not to get into back and forth chants with them, but to participate in the festivities themselves and outnumber them. |
|
She added that psychiatrists can end up serving two masters when they get into the position of being an administrator rather than a clinician, and a choice has to be made. |
|
Who does a girl have to boff around here to get into a club? |
|
From there the runners tackled Snowden, then it was another dash to get into the treacherous Menai Straits before the tide turned and made the passage impossible. |
|
When we get into his suite, he collapses on the couch and begins drinking tequila again. |
|
Outside the courthouse, they were swarmed by a media mob until they managed to get into a livery cab. |
|
More worrying are signs that banks are losing patience with sensible, responsible customers who manage our money properly and do not get into debt. |
|
Was there a lot of boozing hell-raising to get into character? |
|
The minute you let it be known you're planning a sales campaign everybody wants to get into the act. |
|
Glory be to God, all sublunary coastings will soon be over. Yet a little while, and we shall get into an eternal harbour. |
|
I had a little dog who practiced all the dogly virtues. He never tried to get into any chairs or on any couches. |
|
|
Another Ridgewood Y regular described seeing Dalton get into a trash-talking dunkfest on a tough playground in Miami. |
|
From what I hear of him he's a fakir, and I won't encourage him in his attempts to get into society at my expense. |
|
It is sometimes a long time before a player who is frozen out can get into a game again. |
|
His counterpart Neil Warnock got his tactics spot on as Chelsea struggled to get into any sort of groove in the first half. |
|
I managed to get into the house through the front once, but I was plunged into darkness and eaten by a monster called a grue. |
|
Should a score be only slightly below the pass mark, the candidate may appeal to get into grammar school. |
|
An English girl, looking like a schoolteacher, is apt to get into a cab with you and, to your surprise, she'll probably pull a man's pants open. |
|
Ted Andrews twice, while drunk, tried to get into bed with his stepdaughter, resulting in Andrews fitting a lock on her door. |
|
No way could I muck about or get into trouble, because it would've got back to him within minutes. |
|
The League is attempting to get into the Guinness World Records for the smallest league in the world. |
|
The Spanish fired their crossbows and arquebuses, but were unable to see their attackers or get into formation. |
|
Every time I get into a conversation with this ravishing girl, I want it to last forever. |
|
Tod finds Brock sleeping in his bed and as the two get into a scuffle, Peter and Benjamin rescue the children. |
|
Wait and see old Caleb Quirk get into the box. I'll settle his hash in half a minute. |
|
He was aiming to get into the school swimming team, and to that end he swam every evening. |
|
Work carefully through high overpulls when tripping out, it may add a couple of hours to the trip, but you should not get into trouble. |
|
Access courses meet a very real need for a second chance to get into higher education. |
|
She was the sort of woman middle-aged men said they wouldn't throw out of bed, but never expected to get into it. |
|
Whistling Dixie was travelling well when he fell at the second last at Ascot and Mary Reveley's raider could get into the shake-up. |
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It's hard enough for Afro-Caribbeans to break into the media in front of camera, but harder still to get into the production side. |
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She knows how to get into all of the hippest clubs and restaurants. |
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The alien enemies' verbal taunts and blurbs also start sounding like an annoying broken record the deeper you get into the game. |
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Can you believe someone could get into a cathedral and do a concert? |
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I first saw him when he was in Goldie and then he helped Andy Taylor get into our band The Gigolos. |
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Lager will be flowing and oom-pah songs sung as thousands of people get into the raucous spirit of the famous German beer festival. |
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Godolphin's recent CCA Oaks heroine Jilbab could never get into contention, merely plugging on for fourth. |
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The festival will see youngsters encouraged to get into the spirit of swingtime by stepping back in time and learning a few Jitterbug moves. |
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The Brain Trust made some arguments for regulations then that they are now still trying to get into the law, Heuschel says. |
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The gutbuckets on screen should be ashamed for allowing themselves to get into such a state. |
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He made an excuse to get into the house and stole cash, passbooks and cheque books. |
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I re-ally wanted to get into a workplace environment and I have always had a very strong interest in the automotive industry. |
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Thousands defied an 11-hour daytime curfew to try to get into the capital Katmandu but were dispersed. |
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So one always likes to see one's goalscorers in positions where they can get into the box. |
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She was a little unlucky to get into a bit of argy-bargy at Goodwood, but on her best form this year she has as good a chance as any. |
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But the nose cone did not detach to allow it to reach the necessary velocity to get into orbit and it fell into the sea. |
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We are not a side that wants to get into an arm-wrestle but we were forced into one, and we really had to grind it out. |
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Rather than slathering on more suntan lotion, get into an air-conditioned center and, uh, condition yourself and get centered. |
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No one talks long with this intense, long-time Kiwanian from Tyler, Texas, without itching to roll up his own sleeves and get into the act. |
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But once you get into octoroon territory, it holds far less mystique. |
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Before we get into the party season, MARIA CROCE asked nutritionists to bust the myths and reveal what could really work for a hangover. |
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The snake was slithering by Mads's right car wheel, but she finally managed to get into her car without getting bitten. |
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The goal is not to build a six-pack or get into shape to run a marathon. |
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Also known as Halloween Lady Beetles, apparently they often swarm at this time of year, trying to get into the house for the winter. |
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Also, the stars contain an oxidizer, called perchlorate, that could settle onto the ground and get into drinking water. |
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How she came upon this ability is part of a back-story too contrived to get into here. |
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The plane touches down, the coaches deboard, they climb some stairs to get into the base, and the captain greets him in a UCLA hat. |
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I guess you have to be a genuine Bardolater to get into the spirit of the thing, but I was really looking forward to it. |
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But to do their work, ribozymes need to first get into the cells, and for that they need help. |
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It is believed the crewmen, aged 21-56 and all from the south of England, managed to get into a liferaft. |
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Either we do something and get into the life raft now, or we could go over with the boat and end up in the water with no life raft. |
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To get into the mood, cast members visited Pixies Diner in Linthorpe Road, Middlesbrough, for a root beer float and pancakes. |
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Their commitment to get into shape by taking up sport in order to inject some life into their love life had gone pear-shaped. |
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How does England get into the second round, do we need a couple of newts and a frog or two with a lizard's tail for good measure? |
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He broke into the safe room and all the drawers, but was unable to get into the safe. |
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As many players as possible should get into his slipstream because the gaffer is going places. |
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An unusual attraction is the salmon ladder, by Pitlochry Dam, which helps the fish by-pass the dam and get into Loch Faskally. |
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She shows the mum-to-be how to use a birthing ball during labour to get into a comfortable position. |
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Now I'm deep into Zen meditation and macrobiotics and, as soon as I can, I intend to get into narcotics. |
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How does an English major like yourself get into filmmaking? |
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Even wannabe deltiologists and cartologists, looking to get into the game, can spend about pounds 65 for a mixed batch. |
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