I like her and she lets me get out of class when I need to without ratting me out. |
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Swing is about the dancing, the music, the spirit of lower-class youth, the rat-tat-tat of a song you just can't get out of your head. |
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There are theories that men sprinting in flat shoes get out faster than women hampered by heels or waiting to help a colleague. |
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But what are ravers to do when they want to get out of the afterhours and under the skies? |
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I had hopes to get out and catch a few mushrats but I'm not sure there are any left alive. |
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Another point is that unemployment is a trap that can be hard to get out of. |
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We're not sure what it says about our city, but everyone seems as keen as mustard to get out of Shanghai whenever they get the chance. |
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We can no more get out of this living death than a fish can dry itself off. |
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I have a dog, and I've noticed that though she is pleased to see me when I get home, it's often because now she can get out of the kennel. |
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The way for Europe's new governments to get out of this jam is to revive old-school Reaganomics. |
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He gesticulated and swore at the young couple, holding up his fist and thumping the vehicle, and mouthing to the passenger to get out of the car. |
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I was approached by the Cowboys in 2002 and was keen to get out of Sydney at the time. I don't go much on the lifestyle down there. |
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Can you at least let word get out that in fact you are not going with The Junior? |
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They moved into the churchyard to get out of the light and he led her around to a paved area at the rear of the church. |
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Jessica couldn't wait to get out of the shoes as she quickly slid her key card into the little slot to open her hotel door. |
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In a fit of teenage rebellion, I had told God to get out of my life and leave me alone. |
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It's his first race and stuff, but when it starts to understeer, you should get out of the gas and not run into the car above you. |
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People can feel there is nothing to identify with but David Beckham, and all that's left is to get out of your skull on drugs and alcohol. |
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Seal off the victims, get out the test tubes, work out a recipe for some injection that will kill the virus and Bob's your uncle. |
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You and your date get out of the car, keeping an eye out for muggers and murderers. |
|
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Jerry was the first one to get out and told them that with any luck, he wouldn't see either one of their ugly mugs until they had to report back. |
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I searched for drugs in every town we worked in and I got into some dangerous situations but I was lucky to get out unharmed. |
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Well, I love to hear the throaty growl of the diesel engines as they warn vans and sissy pick-ups to get out of the way. |
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Contact the Elderly brings a bond of friendship to elderly people who cannot easily get out unaided and therefore lack social support. |
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I try to blot it out, but it's something you just can't get out of your mind. |
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We go down and pull a U-ey into the entrance of a neighborhood and we get out to switch drivers. |
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It was good to get out of the flat, get a few beers in, read the paper and get some moral support from people. |
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It was nice to get out and get some fresh air and a bit of a mooch around though. |
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She gave the thumbs-up sign to her mechanic, signaling him to get out of the way. |
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The captured prince screamed and tried to get out of her grasp but she had the sharp blade of a knife pressed against his throat. |
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She had turned turtle and capsized and those who were not able to get out in the first few hours were surely trapped for good. |
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Under normal conditions, if a horse has cast a shoe, I can get out in a day or two and put it back on. |
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Because I felt ashamed, I felt that he would think I'm just trying to get out of working and begging for a sick note. |
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What amazed me was he was sick as a dog, but if a school was coming the next day, he'd put on his suit and get out there. |
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He had tried to get out of the house, but there were ants swarming all over the door. |
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That's when emotions can get out of hand, and the child can be caught up in a tug-of-love over access. |
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There is some truth in the old saying that there is a small child in each of us only waiting to get out to play. |
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So, I went next door to help her get out of her evening gown and fold some of her day things and store them in her trunk. |
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My mind shrieked at me, demanding that I get out while I could, while my heart was intact. |
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The moderator of the English language debates got a lot of bad press for letting things get out of control. |
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You shouldn't worry, many of us find it hard to be creative enough just to get out of bed in the mornings. |
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She was still trying to think up a way to get out of trying out for the dance team. |
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Except shoeshine boys are generally smarter than editors, and will usually get out first. |
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I get out my billfold and not having any ones, I hand the man a five-dollar bill. |
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Yet there is a hint of trepidation as he voices his fears that his team might struggle to get out of their squandering habits. |
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I hope this Search For The Stone treasure hunt will encourage people to get out walking and help the rural economy back on its feet. |
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Perhaps there won't be a Smarty-like horse tale this year, but get out the hat and whip up those mint juleps anyway. |
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Whether it's adventure travel or a mental-health break during reading week, they'll help you get out of town. |
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An explosion in an eastern Kentucky coal mine killed five miners yesterday while one other miner was able to get out alive. |
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I guess what you get out of it depends on the mindset with which you approach it. |
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Maybe they should be happy to get out of Atlanta with a split of the two games. |
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I wish she'd just get out of my room, respect my need to be alone for a while and just stop bothering me. |
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I had to do an emergency stop on a hill, get out of the car with Astel and leg it after some crooks on foot. |
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The ASA was very careful to point out that there would be no get out by burying the screen size explanations in microprint. |
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It may be an attempt at a get out or a legal belt and braces against inevitable environmental criticism if the plan is approved. |
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He had been down in the engine room when his ship was torpedoed and was only just able to get out in time. |
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Houdini could get out of a glass box full of water in a couple of minutes, even chained up and in a straitjacket. |
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Apparently Roly stopped taking his drugs, flushed them down the toilet, and begged Alex to help him get out of that place. |
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Consequently, this patient may not comply with bed or activity restrictions and may try to climb over the bedrails to get out of bed. |
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Well, it's a great opportunity to have a platform on which you can get out the ideas that you think work. |
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It's harder still when there's no moral cop walking the beat to blow the whistle when things get out of control. |
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If you're overspending then you'll know it's time to tighten your belt, cut back on the non-essentials and get out of debt. |
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Behind him, the capital ships were starting to shift, trying in vain to get out of their tight formation. |
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An inspector and several other police officers get out and stand in the middle of the road. |
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My daughter suggested that I was wallowing in self-pity and should just get out more. |
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Obviously, he needed to get out from under a self-obsessed, over-bearing mother! |
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She was frustrated because a large ginger cat was parading itself on the patio in the full knowledge that she could not get out to see him off. |
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It was nice to get out of the city and have a chance to see some of the landscape that we had not yet seen. |
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The best travel writing shoots off in a thousand directions while never letting a hair get out of place. |
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We were eager to get out of there, and to the new base near the front lines. |
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The rains in April and May of that year of 1951 were not too heavy and we were able to get out a bit. |
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One has to add considerable extra time to one's journey just to get out of town or into it, for that matter. |
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Now until the end of the July is the time to get out the secateurs and start pruning those roses. |
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Settle into a comfy chair, get out your notebook, and put on your thinking cap. |
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Sale prices and bargain bins are being used to entice you to get out and spend again. |
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Sensual and materialistic, they want all the power, comfort and control they can get out of life. |
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Residents spoke of how they felt imprisoned in their roads on big match days because they could not get out of their driveways. |
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As such, she doesn't get out much, since her few attempts at dating are scuttled by the conspicuous presence of her bodyguards. |
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It bothers me most that I was dragged into the situation I tried to get out of. |
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She was wise enough to realize that most of them were interested only in what they could get out of her. |
|
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They all start running off and, thinking the coast is clear, I get out of my car. |
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In sufficient numbers this message would get out through the party scrutinizers, they can't keep a secret. |
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Dad was a working-class Thatcherite before Thatcher, who believed you have to get out there and help yourself. |
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The wife was shutting the garage door tonight and I didn't get out of the way quick enough, so I got a bang on the head. |
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The train stops midway through the trip, long enough for passengers to get out and walk into the forest. |
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People often say that it's harder to get out of the team that into it, but whoever believes that has a screw loose. |
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Too much screen time has also been associated with obesity and has fed into wider cultural laments that children don't get out enough. |
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Today, having successfully expanded and marketed its own brand name, it is not about to get out of the personal computer business. |
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You'll be lucky to get out of the backfield with your ball carrier, but at least you won't be able to complete as many long bombs. |
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The race had ended and this crew was waiting to get out of the boat when I noticed the woman bailing. |
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When both of them are set after the same slimy car thief who has jumped bail things get out of hand. |
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There are still bags of sunshine every day and if you can get out of the wind there's some real power in it. |
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It was also funny because even though it probably didn't hurt her that badly, she still managed to get out of playing. |
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You can't get out of Heathrow without falling immediately into a bad temper. |
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It seems that this poor schlepp can't even get out of bed, never mind dressed. |
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And the Hamptons are fun to visit, but it's a schlepp to get out there and it's more than we want to spend. |
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Besides that it was annoying to have to maneuver through people who didn't know enough to get out of the way. |
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Activists ring doorbells and telephone voters in critical districts, urging supporters to get out the vote. |
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But I was doing consistent lap-times, apart from when the backmarkers would not get out of the way. |
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The men in white were outstanding and the score even threatened to get out of hand. |
|
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Because of the children and the difficulties of taking a tiny baby and a young toddler together up and down the stairs, she did not get out much. |
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And hey, if they get out of line, they can always taser them into submission. |
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We live in a two-bedroom maisonette with no garden, and it's hard to get out of the cycle. |
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Plus, I also have to have a reason to get out of the house so I can drop it off in a public mailbox. |
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Could it be that there was actually a real and tangible hope that we would get out of here? |
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I don't know if we're going to do the Rivers and Wildlife Celebration but we will get out for some sandhill crane and snow goose action. |
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I don't know how I'd get out if it wasn't for people like yourself that really care for old people like me. |
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Does he have what it takes to get out there and create the conflict and controversy that are part and parcel of talk shows? |
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The 22-year-old already is in a tailspin, having failed to get out of the fifth inning in each of his last three June starts. |
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Suddenly there were all these cars trying to overtake me, tailgating me, blowing their hooters, angrily gesturing for me to get out of the way. |
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Inexplicably I couldn't get out of fifth gear while touring around behind the safety car. |
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The larger the thing that you can credibly attach yourself to, the more meaning you get out of life. |
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He was determined, from day one, that this was not going to get out of control. |
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So, he was buying AstroTurf for the company, and he instructed me to get out and put it around all our hotels. |
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Pen nodded and with the assistance of the nurse she was able to get out of the bed and into the wheel chair. |
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Don't come running to me when you're so hung over tomorrow you can't get out of bed. |
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It looks more like an ethical excuse to get out of a loss-making business that's not really going anywhere. |
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My first task is to get out my loppers and attack the roses in the poppy field. |
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The enemy cannot go ashore there except in longboats, and archers concealed in the high grass can kill them before they get out of the marsh. |
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Straight for the hills, the green hills around Glasgow, apparently glad to get out of there alive. |
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The problems encountered include low seating, seats are too soft and the chairs don't have armrests to help people get out of them. |
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When they aren't rocking out, the band do what they can to encourage their fans to become politically aware and get out to the voting polls. |
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We arrive at the church too soon to my liking, but I get out of the car none the less. |
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Her desire to see the world and get out of the mundane makes her a likable character, despite her trance-like personality. |
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So, get out your pens and writing paper, and write a hand written letter to your MP asking that they support this bill. |
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It's still pretty high, but even if it does, we can be on alert to get out of here as soon as possible. |
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The twins kicked and wriggled under his arms but couldn't get out of his powerful hold. |
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In the worst-case scenario, the antagonism will get out of control and will paralyze the party. |
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When others are putting in 60-hour workweeks, these clever souls have found ways to get out of the office early and often. |
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A small knot of men standing in front of J.R.'s split in two to get out of our way, laughing at us and pointing. |
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She managed to get out of hospital this week after having a word or two with the doctor. |
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He climbed from the tow-truck landing in an ankle-deep puddle, and ran towards Gregg, shouting for him to get out of the way. |
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We are knee-deep in financial trouble and have no idea how we are going to get out of it. |
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The company cannot be allowed to get out of its legal responsibilities in this way. |
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It's nice to spend time with a partner, but it's also a blessed relief when they get out from under your feet for a while. |
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Such a move would be the economic equivalent of an animal gnawing off its foot to get out of a trap. |
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She could feel the words inside of her, leaping to get out like wolfhounds tug at their leashes when they smell prey. |
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Basically, if you are holding a wolf by the ears, there is no way to get out of a situation without getting hurt. |
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Similar problems would occur, I assume, if New Orleans were repopulated and people tried to get out very, very quickly. |
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As with alcohol or drugs, while most people can gamble purely recreationally, for some people it's a means of escape that can get out of control. |
|
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She turned and began again to figure the codes, and another plan to get out of this cellar. |
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I commented that since I was newly single, and trying to get out more, it was so nice to reconnect with old friends. |
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If I want to get out of it at any time I can, but I can also make unlimited overpayments and that is something I plan to make use of. |
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If you get out of jail and you're 60 or 65 or 70, is there a likelihood that you're going to recidivate? |
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The lumbering wadcutter bullet seemed to take forever to get out of the barrel and you really had to hold hard to get good scores. |
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So altogether it would take at least two years if everything went well, it would take at least two years to get out of this life. |
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I get out of bed at the usual time, though my body aches protest at the before-dawn wake-up. |
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But then you get out there and the adrenaline kicks in and you're away again. |
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He was an inspiration to those who wished to get out and sail in the yawl but were seeking the courage to do so. |
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We get out big numbers especially at the peak times in the mornings and evenings to catch the scab buses. |
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When someone rings up and asks if I wanna catch a movie, my first reaction is how can I get out of this? |
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Alex tries to get out of his grasp but that just causes him to hold her even tighter. |
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Do not be conceited, he who blows his own horn will find people are quick to get out of his way. |
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A good time was had by all, though the show didn't get out until almost quarter to one in the morning. |
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On occasions competition threatened to get out of hand, and both teams gave no quarter in their quest for goals and clean sheets. |
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The rich white people of the South had the cash and the cars to get out of Dodge the moment warnings were issued. |
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It is the first show of the season and I think everybody is ready for getting to a show after lambing, and it's nice to get out and meet people. |
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If you consider yourself so morally superior, get out there and allay the fears of the ignorant public. |
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Sunday would bring NFL, a cozy blanket, and a day I'd not get out of my jammies. |
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Now it doesn't take a genius to figure out if I put in 100 watts and get out 350 watts I am getting a lot of free energy. |
|
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They asked me to get out of the way so they could take photographs of her alone. |
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I feel sick, have a painful headache and feel a bit under the weather, but I know that if I push myself and get out of bed I will feel better. |
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An inaccurate weather forecast meant the gritters did not get out in time, and steps will be taken to ensure it does not happen again. |
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There's a blind exit onto Bridge Street at the bottom of the hill and it is awfully dangerous trying to get out there. |
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I submerge straight away to get out of the slosh and follow a compass bearing over the shallow kelp and into the Ore Stone. |
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It's more of the same syntho new wave, catchy as all get out with Roxie's strong vocals. |
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This then traps the users into a world of addiction, which is very hard to get out of. |
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She just wanted to get out of there and she could feel the tears welling up in her eyes, threatening to spill over onto her cheeks. |
|
After the nicotine fit was satisfied, both of them quickly reboarded our train to get out of the way of the approaching freight. |
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You know, there's so much air time spent in this city on admonishing people to get out of their cars and take transit, cycle or walk. |
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The male passengers were asked to get out and help push the bus to give it a jump-start. |
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The first ranking event of the season reminds us that snooker players don't get out a lot. |
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As a result, almost 70 per cent admit trying to get out of sports lessons whenever possible. |
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I had to get out and let the whiffletrees loose, then the team managed to get out on solid ground. |
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Being in a rush to get out this evening we sat Tommy at the table whilst we were eating and all had a civilised meal. |
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They have to know they were lucky to get out of Miami with Kerry having scored a whimper rather than a bang. |
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He went out to his horse's stall where his horse stood whinnying to get out and stretch his legs. |
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I did nine shows there and I was in great shape, so I'm raring to get out there. |
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It is understood the family living at the two-storey home received a threatening letter in the past few days, telling them to get out of the house by 5pm that day. |
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Tell me about the sort of products you'd get out the sandalwood tree. |
|
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Those shareholders get out from a bad situation with a premium over the market price of their shares. |
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His attorney has been hunting for a loophole that would allow him to get out of the deal. |
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At the time of his defection, he felt a strong need to get out of Cuba, and accomplished just that. |
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Fed up of being surrounded by a revolving cast of affluent crashing bores, I vowed to get out more. |
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He's just wooing Bella to get out of babysitting and changing diapers, obviously. |
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Yet both parties also devote millions each midterm to rally their bases and get out the vote. |
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Like she said, she wants to move on and get out there and burn the blue dress and bury the beret. |
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He dropped the keys into his pocket, thinking of what was just ahead of them, starting on the sidewalk without any intention of waiting up for Brooke to get out of the car. |
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We must arrange to vote by absentee ballot in the general election, so that we can go to the swing states and work to get out the vote on election day. |
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Contestants are being given plenty of advance warning to get out their drawing boards, their hammers and barrels and get working on their master pieces. |
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The door had jammed, and I had been unable to get out of the car. |
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There are also reptiles, like adders or grass snakes, slow-worms and lizards that are prone to fire damage because they cannot get out quickly enough. |
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I have work release after second block, so I get out at ten thirty. |
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If you're tired of tripping over your rug rat, why not get out of the house for a few hours with your little ray of sunshine by visiting Little Tots Playgroup on Chapel Hill? |
|
After recoiling in horror when she realised it wasn't her boyfriend, she told the man to get out of her room and reported the matter to the police. |
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They wanted to sound the death knell for the campaign, file their stories, and get out of Memphis as soon as possible. |
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Even if they could get out of this hole, wolfsbane wasn't the easiest thing to find in this area, and the hour he had to reverse the lycanthropy was ticking away. |
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The proper response to the problem, we are told, is to lock up and perhaps re-educate violent men while helping women get out of violent relationships. |
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It's so hard to get out everything I want to say and to be clear and have the time to explain myself, and to create a kind of intimacy with an audience. |
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When storm clouds start to form, sagacious leaders deal with them before things get out of hand. |
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To actually get out into a muddy field for a change and have some bombs go off certainly beat sitting around a dining room table. |
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We swipe a fanged cupcake and fight one last battle, to get out of the party. |
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I never go anywhere without a spray that I use when I get out of breath. |
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Just get out and start walking, increasing your pace and distance as you get fitter. |
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It's an unusual feeling to get out of a full-sized, heavy-duty crew cab pick-up after a road test and find the old minivan annoyingly cumbersome to park. |
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It has taken us back to our childhood in Carlisle in the 1940s and 1950s when you were scared to get out of bed in the morning in case your bare feet froze on the lino. |
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If an animal threatened to get out of place, a hiss or a shout or a well-aimed rock would turn it back where it belonged, but such measures were not often necessary. |
|
I have the energy of a 30-year-old and I want to get out there and live! |
|
Even as the audience rushed to get out of the hall, before the mandatory half-an-hour's load-shedding got up with them, the rhythm of tribal music was in them. |
|
We just wanted to get out of there asap so we asked for the check. |
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He was rugged, but his muscles didn't get out of control and he stood six-feet-four-inches from the ground and dwarfed most men that he came across. |
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And with the successful reforms of the last 20 years, we've picked the low-hanging fruit and we're going to have to do something pretty substantial to get out of this. |
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They then quickly sped off to the north to get out of the Ettin Hills. |
|
I really lucked into this and was able to get out of the other deal. |
|
Of course, these stupid lunks get out their own weapons, and I'm all laughing, because these stupid cheese-heads are going into a fight with a Kobrian! |
|
When somebody broke into her rented Moscow apartment in September, she decided it was time for her to get out of there. |
|
In a hair-raising series of events, he was able to get a ticket to the United States and get out of Uganda. |
|
She somehow fails to mention that his massive highway projects enabled the sanctimonious suburbanites to get out of the city and into the suburbs in the first place. |
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I figured at least there I'd be able to get out the pool quickly and seek sanctuary in the house if my wonderful boyfriend and best friend tried anything else. |
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She's way too excited to tell you about EVERYTHING, and often goes off on wild tangents and digressions just to get out a pretty straightforward tale. |
|
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Maybe the judges scored the Russian skater generously because they just wanted to be done with it all and get out of Sochi alive. |
|
I'm going to get out the Tarot cards again and give them a try. |
|
Initially, we're meant to identify with Hart, who objects whenever Cohle's highfalutin Satre-isms get out of hand. |
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He directed me to get out of the car and made me walk a straight line. |
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In fact they think I just made the whole story up to get out of trouble. |
|
Once we get out into the real world, we continue to follow their every step, hounding them everywhere. |
|
I simply cannot wait to get out there and really make the most of the sun's light, baking my skin to a crisp as I pursue manly outdoor activities. |
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I wanted to get out of the house, and I felt bad for bailing earlier. |
|
On a Sunday afternoon they get out and parade their Maoriness, but when they get down to Parliament on Tuesday, they forget about the people who put them there. |
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He's going to make one last big score, get out of the business. |
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She would have given anything to get out of her painful tan heels, white knee-length dress, and scratchy light brown hat and put on some torn jeans and tennis shoes. |
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Push, barge, I'm more important than you, get out of my way, it's your fault, no I'm not saying excuse me thank you or sorry, or acknowledging your presence. |
|
High spirits often get out of control and lead to violence and mayhem. |
|
As the motorists tried to get out of the melee, those who came out of the rally seemed to be enjoying themselves, dancing away on road medians and traffic islands. |
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Marooned in this far-flung corner of the world by the tyranny of distance and outrageous airfares, the only way to get out of it is to, well, get out of it. |
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I seriously suggest you to get out of the business of writing. |
|
Emerson is clearly bound by a legal lease that it can't get out of unless Yamanouchi voluntarily seeks to surrender the lease, which it has not offered to do. |
|
And when I did finally get out of bed, I was so thirsty I made my way to the kitchen crawling along the floor. |
|
If driving gets dull, you can always get out of the car and run around town a little, though most of the buildings are just shells and can't be entered. |
|
Comedians are in the trenches, the ones that get out of the trenches are ones in trouble. |
|
|
How can the people involved in these movies get out of bed in the morning, facing the mountains of tricksily demanding work that they have assigned themselves? |
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The only thing I managed to get out of the whole experience was a painful foot which is presently swelling up quite nicely, and a bruise on my bottom. |
|
You get out of your car and the fiery heat hits you full blast. |
|
Nowadays, it looks like Anschutz is trying to get out of the multiplex business. |
|
They can seem crusty, Eighties phenomena who have singularly failed to get out of their pinstripes, Jermyn Street shirts and carefully-knotted ties. |
|
I try to get out on my mountain bike or racing bike as much as I can. |
|
There they were, standing out against the people who were rushing on to get out of the blustery winds. they were wearing a ripped shirt and a dirty suit. |
|
The newspaper wanted to get the exclusive interview with the murderess and her family before the police could get out there and return them for trial. |
|
The thief managed to get out of the van, which is understood to have contained parcels and registered post, and escaped before the police arrived. |
|
They always get mad as all get out when something happens, too. |
|
I'm descriptive as all get out when it comes to how people speak, but once those words are on paper and there's a grade involved, I turn in to the Prescriptive Grammar Queen. |
|
But there was still a paper to get out in Washington, and I went there late in the afternoon to tackle the dismal job. |
|
The lame excuse offered was that the meeting would get out of hand. |
|
Then you get out on the open road and really step on the gas and Yowzah! |
|
Japan-Korea ties will hinge on what Tokyo expects and can ultimately get out of Pyongyang, especially in security assurances versus war reparations. |
|
I saw her when she had to have cloth restraints on her arms so she could not get out of bed or pull out her IV, and I saw her sleeping like an angel with her stuffed cat. |
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If the annual report did not include the CEO's report, management's discussion or multi-year summary, then you will need to get out your pencil, paper and calculator. |
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I think our case here would have to be that we can't get out of it, that one way or another you're in this argument, it's a very, very difficult one to retreat from. |
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Not answering is not a way to get out of revealing information. |
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As her severely rheumatoid hands are useless, an adequate range of movement in just one of her knees means that she can still get out of the chair without help. |
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And O'Neill had no complaints as he offered few excuses as his side failed to get out of bottom gear. |
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With the suggested 20mph limit, many cars will not even get out of second gear. |
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To see if a rock or an area is causing interference on a compass, get out of the area, and see if the needle on the compass moves. |
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To preserve as much time as possible, the ball-carriers should get out of bounds. |
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They were probably trying to get out of the tundra into forested country to obtain sables and firewood. |
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Just get out of my way and I'll be rightways up and out of this cursed tunnel. |
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No curialist goes into a meeting without knowing what he intends to get out of it. |
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Once we get out of this sideways economy, our figures will more accurately reflect what we're truly capable of. |
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But you never know what tomorrow will bring, and we want the NAACP to be available to tackle the issues before they get out of control. |
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If the burning snuff happens to get out of the snuffers, you have a chance that it may fall into a dish of soup. |
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He wants to get out of there something awful, but he just doesn't have the money. |
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In this case of supermorbid obesity, the patient was unable to get out of bed. |
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It's got a sort of anti-art-student art student feel to it, and it's catchy as all get out with the not-too-stilted English leaving it endearing. |
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Called Wakey Wakey, the application is a video alarm clock that features lingerie-clad Anderson saucily coaxing the user to get out of bed. |
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What I liked about the script was that everyone gets in to such terrible peril you wounder how on earth they will get out of it. |
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Zaria Gunn, another 6-year-old, can't wait to get out of her cramped quarters inside the school library. |
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He made the decision to get out of the military and the military civilianized the job the same year. |
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The Highlanders were struggling to get out of their own half but they were regimentally organised and defended superbly. |
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The driver was seen to get out of the vehicle and check their nearside wing mirror before driving off again towards the Central Link Road. |
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So you're talking twentyish years for something that was optimized to get out of there quickly. |
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The Chief Constable surely lives in cloud cuckoo land, he needs to forget what former Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom spouted and get out more. |
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I resolved to find all my pits good homes and to get out of the rescue and breeding business. |
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I can't come to work next week as I am on jury duty and I can't get out of it. |
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Pepys took a coach back into the city from Whitehall, but only reached St Paul's Cathedral before he had to get out and walk. |
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At the same time, he shared in the drafting of a proclamation giving Anabaptists and Sacramentaries ten days to get out of the country. |
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They guarantee that you get out of doors because if you don't walk them properly, Vizslas will just eat your house. |
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I wanted nothing more than to get out of that godforsaken place without delay. |
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Carlsen just wants to get out of the Opening and then settle down into ' battles' in middle game and thereafter. |
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If you're smart, don't sign the employment contract. Just get out of here while you still can. |
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His 'Attishoo' had been an excuse not only to get out a handkerchief, but a monkey nut too. |
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His children, married and single, were ever on the watch for what they could get out of him. |
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No, sadly not an electric cattle prod and a CD of opera played at full blast until they get out of bed. |
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The answer is to dig them up, but you have to get right down to the roots and get out the little bulblet. |
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And this meant that we had to shoot our scenes at breakneck speed so that the actors could get out on time. |
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I was a complete computer geek in high school, but I get out a lot more now. |
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She wanted to say regardless of who got the contract, they should get out a calendar and pen it in. |
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It was mainly to educate city children who might not get out to the countryside very often. |
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He needs to pass water several times a night and as he cannot get out of bed, I am required to assist, which disturbs my night's sleep also. |
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They broke into the school, pretending to be guards, telling the girls to get out and come with them. |
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If you sleep in then you sleep longer whereas to lie in means you're awake but not willing to get out of bed yet. |
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