The Cowboys winger is understandably very slow to get up after he had the stuffing knocked out of him by the hard-hitting ranga! |
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He will not get up on his hind trotters and explain this appalling legislation. |
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She has the intestinal fortitude to get up and have a go after every effort has been made to shut her up and close her down. |
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He was in the same get up, just with a moleskin jacket, and very short deerskin shorts. |
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No dancefloor, just get up and shake your moneymaker if the moment takes you. |
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Suddenly, an AI, in the ultimate Turing test, decided to get up and leave the game on its own. |
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But you're a different story, you can keep an eye out that the three of them don't get up to any monkey business. |
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I get up and sit on the edge of the bed and for a few minutes I'm in a twilight zone where I can't figure out what I'm supposed to do next. |
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She twisted herself into a sitting position, and from there, she managed to get up on her feet. |
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There is no morning after if the night never ends, so get up and get right back into it. |
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An extra plus is that the song would infuse any crowd at a live show to get up and mosh or dance. |
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Or I could get up early tomorrow morning and make sure my mountain bike is road-worthy and use that. |
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But it just won't do to get up on stage and thrash around, and cry, and blurt things out. |
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In the end, I skived off to a side street and made myself as inconspicuous as possible so I could get up to date. |
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It would have been impossible for me to have left part of that cup undrunk... but for the fact that this morning I had to get up early. |
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I forced myself to get up and, with what little strength I had left, began running after the horse and sled. |
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I was too tired to get up and go to school for 8 in the morning so I just slept in. |
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It was not like singing in musicals, where you arrive knowing the score and piece and more or less get up and sing. |
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Every time I get up onto the Olympia stage, I fear slipping and falling during the performance. |
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Look, after a night out on the booze, I'm sure we all know how hard it can be to get up in the morning. |
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Some mornings she lay in bed for hours, replaying the crash in her head, unmotivated to get up and uninterested in seeing herself on crutches. |
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I wanted to get up and go for a run, but I had a faint headache that was nonetheless making me feel fairly queasy and nauseated. |
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If you had to get up in the middle of the night you might be unsteady and fall. |
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I started to turn away, making to get up and head to the restroom to find some tissue as I sniffled slightly. |
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It seems that you would rather get up on your soapbox and shout then have a meaningful conversation. |
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But I'll get up on my soapbox about almost anything if I hear someone else express a strong opinion about it that I don't agree with. |
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It just so happens there are enough nervous nellies in the Labor and National Parties to ensure that such a proposal would not get up. |
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This is mail I fully intended to answer, but I get up and flush the lot down the brasco. |
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They would get up to about a foot long and were almost neon green in colour. |
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The story behind the breakfastless children, the experts reported, is that Mom is a slugabed who refuses to get up in time to scramble the eggs. |
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I get up early and travel to the bride's home or venue to do the makeup for the bride and bridal party. |
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They could all get up and sing a song or 10, and they all knew the songs and sang along! |
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The way I look at it, if you have a disability, then you can either lie in bed and feel sorry for yourself, or you get up and get on with it. |
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Keith used to get up quite early, long before Jan, and have a couple of cups of tea with a nip of rum in them. |
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I'm not a morning person, but I like to get up with my husband, who teaches seventh-grade special education. |
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If you are caught videotaping a film, you can get up to three years in prison, six if it is a second offence. |
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She tried to get up but it was too hard, her head spun and the dizziness overcame her. |
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In my 21 years in this House I have never heard a member get up and criticise the personal religious and spiritual beliefs of somebody else. |
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I get up and throw myself at him, burying my face in his jacket, wanting to hide away in this familiarity. |
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This is their first chance to get up on stage and give their comedy acts a burl and they're all keen, confident and quietly scared to death. |
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His voracious appetite forces my wife to get up at all times of the night to feed him. |
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I get up at 4.15 am, have a bowl of Cornflakes and a high-salt sports drink, like Lucozade, to prevent dehydration. |
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That get up is outrageous and serves to remind us that our present day gangs are letting us down with their naff sportswear. |
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So I didn't have any alternative then but to get up in front of everyone and attempt to play the thing. |
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I would roll out of bed, into training, now I have to get up with more purpose and travel over an hour to work. |
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The north-south divide is emphasised by the fact that directors in the north-east and East Midlands also get up to 12 per cent below the average. |
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As recent events have demonstrated, the most effective cartoons get up your nose. |
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Smokers are welcome, which again, given the size of the place, might get up your nose if you don't indulge. |
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While he may get up your nose and you can disregard him as much as you want his achievements cannot be taken lightly. |
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Xin was shocked to find that he could not get up and noticed the deep stab from the Elantas sword in his thigh for the first time. |
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That I have had to get up at the crack of dawn the past two mornings has not helped my mood. |
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It is a brilliant feeling to get up on stage and perform in front of thousands of people. |
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You can see the frustration as he attempts to get up or pop upstairs to the loo with the aid of a stairlift, which his boys love to use. |
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But here, every time I'd get up to planing speed, the boat would invariably veer off course and stall. |
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I get up muttering obscenities under my breath as I try to wake up my foot that has decided to fall asleep on me. |
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He would often get up from bed at night when an idea occurred to him and write it down. |
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There are British athletes with nerves of steel who can get up there and deliver. |
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I think the oil burner is making a funny noise and I get up and whack the carbon monoxide detector to make sure it's working. |
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Sometimes when I get up in the morning, I say, don't let it get you, old boy. |
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I would get up early in the morning and sit on the steps, gazing at the sea, the wind roughly caressing my face. |
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Thousands of prisoners every morning have to get up and empty the stinking chamber pots which have sat in their cells overnight. |
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Some mornings I get up to write and don't have a clue what I'm going to say. |
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Momentarily, I will get up, take a few steps down the hallway, and peek out onto our front stoop. |
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When he didn't move to get up she marched over to the curtains and pulled them open. |
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I would get up with a smile on my face and do everything sincerely, with all my heart. |
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When I came home, Andy had taken his place and showed little inclination to get up after I helped R. on with her robe. |
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Logan tried to get up, but her hand was clamped very tightly around his arm. |
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Sleeping patterns may also be affected, hence the reason that young people go to bed later and get up later. |
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If she flinches, makes an outcry and tries to get up from the sofa, don't worry. |
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But the monotony renders it very difficult not to channel-hop or get up to make tea. |
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If she leaned too far to go to the toilet, she'd overbalance entirely and never be able to get up again. |
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He then spun around, realising that Luc could manually override the elevators and get up to higher levels. |
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She has a special feel for swing and Latin dance rhythms and enjoys seeing patrons get up and dance while she is playing solo. |
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The attractive girls get up in each other's grilles and talk smack about their cheerleading prowess. |
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Trying to stand on shaking legs, she managed to get up and walk two paces, but then she collapsed into an undignified heap. |
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But every time I almost get up the nerve to go and speak to her, I chicken out. |
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I'll just get up on the table and scatter your fine crystal and chinaware on my way out! |
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And with the honeymoon period growing ever shorter, new CEOs have little time to get up to speed. |
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By the time I get up, do the usual daily chores and get everyone fed it'll be time to go to work. |
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No offense to your cinematographer, but he's a stills photographer and you expect him to get up and use a movie camera. |
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He could not get up everyday and face the daily humdrum life of a high school English teacher. |
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If he wasn't so dependent on her for his own survival, he would just get up and keep walking until he reached civilization. |
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It affects mainly men over the age of 45 and common symptoms include a need to get up several times in the night to pass urine. |
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Some people also complain of tension headaches, stomach cramps and of having to get up repeatedly at night to pass urine. |
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One morning while camping out you get up for a glorious day of climbing and find that you have no coffee. |
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The weather held good for us yesterday so we took the opportunity to get up on the moor and bag up the peats ready to bring in. |
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Slowly I get up to the lights, then across them, and the traffic is clearing, as the town centre road peels off, then the next road. |
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If someone needs help if she has fallen and can't get up, she can now click on a pendant or wristwatch that taps into a support system. |
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There are moments when I feel tired by this, and drained, but then I get up the following morning and decide I'm going to face these people down. |
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Quickly, as if expecting him to get up and leave, she pushed the coffee cup towards him and pulled out her notebook and pencil. |
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We were all fairly surprised to find ourselves barely able to walk straight when we finally did get up. |
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And then I was really cold and I couldn't get up to make a hot-water bottle in case there was a scary thing in my kitchen. |
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Since I hadn't the energy to get up and improve matters, the record played on almost inaudibly. |
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It's like when you go to a comedy club, and the less experienced comics get up and start pulling out the lewd jokes. |
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He calls his servant to bring a pickaxe, and get up on the phrontistery, and knock in the roof about their ears. |
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Alexia was about to get up when she was yanked backwards by her hair, she felt a knife at her throat and looked up. |
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He would then get up, grab at a piece of furniture, and throw it about the room. |
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It took me about a few seconds to regain composure and get up from whatever I had fallen on. |
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The Honda Insight and the Toyota Prius will get up to 70 miles per gallon and cruise 600 miles or more between fill-ups. |
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The front panel, and particularly the rotating connector panel at the top, do have a plasticky feel to them once you get up close. |
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I reached Rob, and he was still face down, contorting his limbs but making no move to get up. |
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Caroline, who is a singer and takes part in local talent competitions, was never able to get up on stage and introduce her own songs. |
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I get up early and exercise and have devotional time-private time of reading and prayer. |
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We should spare a thought for the cow cockies who get up in the morning and work extremely hard to support their families. |
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If you get up early enough, you can probably travel at least 300 miles per day but don't cramp yourself with time limits. |
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Their comedy routine involved Jeanette cross-dressing as a naughty school-boy called Jimmy, who would get up to all sorts of trouble. |
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It was like peddling your guts out to get up a hill, only to freewheel down the other side. |
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If she cried for the moon, he'd borrow every ladder in the parish and lash 'em together to get up. |
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The ginger girl decides to get up before her and goes directly to the front of the bus. |
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Next thing, them going get up one morning and go to the seaside and want to full up the basket and empty the sea. |
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Because cars are not allowed in the District, this funicular is the best way to get up there. |
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Then I realized that I'd have to get up early to milk the goats and I am just not capable of becoming an early bird. |
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You'll be sickened by what four young men can get up to with just a few bull whips, staplers, drawing pins, gaffer tape, sandpaper and hammers. |
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It's crucial that elephants allow these researchers to get up close so the animals can be darted and fitted with radio collars. |
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I used to get up early to watch the trams get steam up using coke from the old Christchurch gasworks. |
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The direct drive would develop 510-hp at 2400 rpm while the geared engine could get up to 560-hp. |
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It prevents people from stopping and loitering there for all hours of the night and deciding what mischief they're going to get up to. |
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There would never be anyone who could get up to my room's window in the first place, pry it open from the outside and get in without me knowing. |
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What would make someone get up so early and wait in the chilly wind just for a cheap meal? |
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Diving in Limassol usually takes place early, because the wind tends to get up in late morning. |
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I learned to hunt through libraries, to get up a subject, to quarry for material or opinions. |
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You would not believe how many years it took me to get up the courage to go on the ghost train at the show. |
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The same woman waited until the delicately poised last chords of Mahler's slow movement to get up and leave. |
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I get up and stretch out my stiff muscles and take the bookmark and put it in the book on the page I was reading. |
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The Rail Passengers Committee believes companies are behind the times and need to get up to date. |
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I would get up early, leaving my room to be taken care of by a gyp who would even make my bed. |
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If we take a look at each category, it quickly becomes apparent that many websites need to get up to speed. |
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They invite you to get up and visit the wine room adjacent to the dining room. |
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We get up at 6.30 am and head out to the beach with our wheelbarrows, shovels, rakes, machete and rubbish bags. |
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But whenever one of our children wet the bed, he claimed that they were lazy, too lazy to get up, go to the bathroom. |
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She had never actually seen a widgie but she knew Stella's get up was exactly the kind of thing troublemakers wore. |
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With two reams, he wouldn't have to worry about running out in the middle of a good part and having to get up to run to the store. |
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If you can't get up, do a series of in-seat exercises like toe wiggles, ankle rotations, knee lifts and shoulder shrugs. |
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Besides their potential role in identity theft and unauthorized purchases, the key cards can get up to other mischief. |
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At which point, I wondered, would it be ok to get up and move to the empty, inviting seats across the aisle? |
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Is it me, or is it also missing the fact that you'll need to get up to fill the kettle with water in the first place? |
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Maybe he could go back to sleep, and not get up until the hot water tank had refilled? |
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Consequently, the ability of pregnant sows in stalls to get up and lie down could be improved by increasing the space allowance within the stall. |
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This meant you could get up and go over to the other side of the room and lollygag around in the line for sharpening pencils. |
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They said they would like to visit a farm, especially during lambing, to get up close to some of the animals. |
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In fact maybe you should stop them watching TV altogether and make them get up from that playstation. |
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Because of my lapse of memory this morning and the resultant disappointment of having to get up, I have a plan. |
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Pet owners who get up with the lark to walk their dogs in a country park are fuming after penalty notices were slapped on their cars. |
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Try to get up at the same time every morning, even if you stayed up late the night before. |
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On Thursday morning, I had to get up and go to school because I had my AS French resit exam to do. |
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The girl was thrown to the ground and landed on her lower spine, sending a shooting pain up her back and she was unable to get up. |
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She tried to get up but the stinging pain on her back caused her to cry out in anguish. |
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At this, a couple of selection team hopefuls get up and reluctantly drag themselves from the room. |
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I don't go to bed early enough and therefore struggle to get up in time to get ready at a leisurely pace. |
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At five o'clock in the morning, the reveille sounds and prisoner Ivan Denisovich Shukov lies in his bunk, wondering if he should get up. |
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By the time I got to the climbs above the 50 foot pit, I needed Paul's assistance to get up, and progress was pretty slow beyond that point. |
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He has let himself go, no longer caring about his appearance, or able to get up in the mornings. |
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Speculation has run rife on all sorts of mad theories about who will get up in each state. |
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I can't get up and down the flanks like I used to as a right back so moving to the centre was probably a good career move for me. |
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Don't be ridiculous, I scolded, you're just trying to think up any old excuse so you can get up from the computer. |
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Dizziness, light-headedness, or fainting may occur, especially when you get up suddenly from a lying or sitting position. |
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He decided to get up anyways, better to get an early start then to risk having that dream again. |
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So I had to get up, ring the doctor and take them to the appointment, even though I felt like death warmed up. |
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Time to rise and shine, so get up take a shower and breakfast will be ready when you are! |
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He doesn't get up quickly like a rocket but gets up slowly, no matter what the contents are. |
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All I had to do was get up from my chair and step forward to the rostrum to speak. |
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I've got to get up early in the morning as I have a long journey ahead of me. |
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I merely wish to get up and to rouse myself, so as to think that I am still master of myself. |
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Forcing herself to get up, she sat back on the edge of the table, hoping she looked calm. |
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He started to get up and groaned aloud as all sorts of aches and pains assailed him. |
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Everyone at the table seemed to instantly get up, and soon other tables followed suit. |
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His guts screamed with pain, and he was so disoriented he couldn't move until the sound of gunshots made him force himself to get up. |
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If the call takes a sudden emotional or personal turn, get up quietly and signal that you are going out to the waiting room. |
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It is not comely and not of their nature for Goths to hurry, so Morgan takes her time, making sure she is last to get up and leave. |
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We get up about the same time every day, eat the same sorts of things, and put on the same sort of clothes. |
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He told me that once he sits down for practice with the tanpura, he does not get up for four to five hours! |
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I wondered why she didn't get up then I realized that shock had sapped her of her strength. |
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Sutham would get up early in the morning and walk around his village selling bean sprouts for 25 satang. |
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As I am usually up all night Saturdays and Sundays in Roppongi, I don't often get up and out early on those days. |
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They are teenage lads and they need a bit of ego to get up on stage but they take it in their stride. |
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As a teenager, I know what my fellow teens get up to, and how these antics can be stopped. |
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Mr Gibson's mum would get up at five in the morning to do the washing in the communal washhouse complete with mangles. |
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He fell at the last fence on the back straight but horse and jockey get up unscathed. |
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She would get up at 3 AM in the morning and clean the house from stem to stern on a school night keeping all of us awake. |
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One can now get up, speak in Maori, get double the time, and thus cut off the ACT party. |
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Gee how early did you get up to be able to prepare the pancakes, scrambled eggs, bacon and fried rice? |
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What they get up to in the privacy of their own kitchens is entirely their own business. |
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If I lose my balance, if I fall over, into the mud, in this much pain, barely able to move, I may not get up. |
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Jenny and Jim watched him get up passively from his seat at the kitchen table. |
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If you get up and scream as if you're a fairground barker, an incredible energy has to come through. |
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I'm very busy this morning, especially as I have to keep stopping work to get up and look at it. |
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I had heard her get up to go to the bathroom so I was afraid she'd fallen or something. |
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He could never get up enough nerve to ask Terri out, and his odd hours interfered with meeting anyone. |
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I can get up and leave the room as long as you are tied to that chair over there. |
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Every morning, in a still-sleepy state, you get up and reach inside your underwear drawer for a pair of tights to wear to work. |
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Many beaters like to carry their own stick, to help them get up and down banks, as well as for beating the undergrowth. |
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It is bad enough having to get up early in order to beat the traffic, without finding one still cannot get in to work on time. |
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They gave a shout of joy, but bedad, when they offered to get up they found themselves glued to their stone seats. |
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I will probably make it through the night without having to get up to go to the toilet. |
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Both systems offer a programmable thermostat so your floor will be warm and toasty by the time you get up. |
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Alan proceeded to get up from the table without a word and stalk off, his shoulders hunched and his brow beetled. |
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I don't usually get up early when I'm on vacation either, but this trip is a worthwhile exception. |
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The ships will berth on the city's quays, allowing visitors a chance to get up close to the world-class vessels. |
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I guess you just each day get up and do what has to be done, and whatever the circumstances are, as things change you just cope as best you can. |
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He had to get up at a ridiculously early hour, before the birds would start their morning song and before the milkman would deliver his pints. |
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When they get up to leave, you notice the little mimeographed magazine they left face down on the table. |
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You don't just get up and do the splits in your late 30s no matter how enthusiastic you are, Laucinda says. |
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Angel smiled, watching Lori get up and start searching around his room for the minibar. |
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An Explorer Day on May 28 will see an activity day for children and the chance to get up close and personal with minibeasts. |
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I resolved to get up at 7am and scrub everything in the house with a homemade paste of bicarbonate of soda and white vinegar. |
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From here on out it's pretty much easy stuff, so just get up however you feel like it by traversing to the right. |
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While the big boys get the five-ring spotlight in Utah, the lads who didn't get a call to national service only can get up a game of shinny. |
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I can't understand why people don't want this thing when the children are so bored and get up to mischief. |
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Until it is developed in some way, it will continue to be a secret little haven where youngsters can gather to get up to mischief. |
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I get up to gather some wood, but the log has caught, with a flame the size of a gas ring, and the billy boils quickly. |
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A waitress walked past carrying two full shot glasses on a tray as one of the girls at the table pushed her chair back to get up. |
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To watch birds, the bird-watcher is prepared to get up earlier than the birds. |
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He showed the way out of our despair and gave us the emotional armour to get up every day and get on with our lives. |
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Barrie Rutter is in his element as a Sir John whose artificial belly means he can hardly get up or sit down, yet is always ready to caper at a lady. |
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I woke up around 8 Friday morning and decided to get up and get moving. |
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There I stayed to the amusement of the class, unable to get up. |
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You eventually regret the day when you finally get up close to one of your idols and see that they have scars and zits and they scowl and curse at the roadies. |
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Feeling like she should get up and do something, other then laze around all day, she arose and wandered about the guildhall's many corridors quietly. |
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Consequently, you get an evening of light, frothy entertainment as you revel in the filthy deeds the schemers get up to and share their delight at the misfortune of others. |
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She said her brother had to get up at 6am to do a paper round. |
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Well I think the most remarkable thing, when you get up really close to them and feel them, is they do have, as we've said, a feel that's somewhat similar to a sharkskin. |
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I get up blindly and leave, and outside spit egg-and-bread into my hands, dry retches of nothing clogging my throat like the tears which keep coming. |
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Likewise you knew when you woke up today that it was Monday and that you'd better get up sharpish because you were expected back at work this morning. |
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They would get up at five o'clock in the morning to milk 45 head of cattle with bucket-style milkers, and then carry the buckets to the milk coolers. |
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He would be sleeping on the ground and we would be snoozing in our vehicles next to him and he would get up so quietly that we were not aware that he was moving away. |
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It seems they're necking on the decking, whispering sweet nothings by the sweet peas and what they get up to behind the shrubbery is nobody's business. |
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The service includes helping users to get up in the morning, bed baths, and other domestic activities that they may not be able to perform on their own. |
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He will get up in Parliament within the next 3 years and demand better roads between Napier and Hastings, and demand a sweetheart deal on an airport. |
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Nevertheless, I have an opportunity to get up on the soapbox here and rant and rave, and a candidate should show an ability to grasp a variety of social issues. |
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Therefore I feel obliged to get up on my soapbox and voice my opinion. |
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No, she didn't even attempt to get up. She was cradled like a baby for four hours and she didn't move except to have hot chocolate and bickies and I fed them to her. |
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I'd be forced to sing Molly Malone or something, my sister and I would have to get up and do a bit of Irish dancing and all the biddies would nod happily and sip their sherry. |
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I was already in my swimmers, waiting for everyone else to get up. |
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Drawn pages were on display as artworks, in their original size so that one could get up close and examine the often bewilderingly intricate line work. |
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We get up to the dance hall but it's practically empty, not even a DJ, just a boom box in the corner of the small room playing some faint Latin beats. |
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Worn with an open collared shirt, a crewneck T-shirt or a roll-neck jersey and slacks or even blue jeans, the get up is informal enough for most cocktail parties in town. |
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The next morning, she woke up to the crowing of roosters at dawn, but barely lifted a hand or batted an eye to get up, returning to the lulling delight of slumber. |
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Even more than staying in a hotel you will have the freedom to get up when you like, stay up as late as you choose, come and go as you please, and eat when you want. |
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Drop attacks where the elderly fall and can't get up without help are associated with arteriosclerotic blood vessel disease at the back of the brain. |
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You have to get up in the middle of the night if you're on call. |
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He laughed at every fall, and tripped him when he tried to get up. |
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She would get up at five in the morning to begin her reading so that she was phenomenally well prepared. |
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Now pilots or crew chiefs moving to another aircraft type will be able to quickly get up to speed on any differences in how the new aircraft operates in a combat zone. |
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Well reckon I should hit the sack else I won't be able to get up tomorrow! |
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I don't doubt that the Times reporters get up in the morning and, as I do, look to see whether a favorite rumor has made it into print or on the air. |
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At the moment, a large proportion of motherhood seems to be spent worrying about the fact that Tommy still can't manage to get up into a sitting position on his own. |
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Since most fighters were right-handed, the stairways were built in such a way that if you were trying to get up the stairs, the newel post is on your right-hand side. |
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I hear her sigh a little and get up to grab the cordless from the wall. |
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I get up at 4 every morning to practice my ninjutsu for 2 hours. |
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Symptoms of diabetes include having to get up at night to go to the toilet, feeling thirsty, lacking energy and getting reoccurring infections such as boils and abscesses. |
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And your ideological compatriots in the media might not be able to get up much of a head of steam banging the table for a bunch of hot dog magnates. |
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You can get up and walk away afterwards, so there's no harm, no foul. |
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Mom was the first to get up from her seat and made toward the door. |
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But they really started to get up a head of steam when the United Nations started to take credit for the work that the American military was doing. |
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No one is questioning the urge to get up close and personal with Bradley Cooper, but this prank feels both invasive and dumb. |
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Barebones is a show featuring contemporary dance and physical theatre, performed in the round, meaning the audience can get up close and personal with the dancers. |
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He immerses himself in his music as much as he can and tries not to get involved in all the ins and outs of what his dad and his stepmum Connie get up to. |
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She struggled to get up but failed miserably as she sunk back down. |
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The scenery viewed from the mountain is fantastic and easily justified parting with sixteen pounds to get up there, it was however flipping freezing! |
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Nestling on the beach, with unbeatable views out to sea, the restaurant is only a short step from the main promenade, but is mostly hidden until you get up close. |
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They bemoan the fact that poker games are too often delayed because people get up to take smoke breaks. |
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Blues music is often treated like a museum piece, a relic from a bygone day, but this band will make you want to get up and dance. |
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Free traders get up and fetch the bottle of scotch so that they can at least caress the neck. |
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Alright, get up here, and switch on the ablative hull armor. |
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Thus if you start playing tennis or jogging, the pacer will sense the motion and up your heart rate, as it will when you get up close with a pretty girl. |
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So it was a privilege for me to be get up close to see the ingenious workings of Harrison's magnificent clock, still keeping good time, nearly 300 years after it was made. |
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And therefore I was absolved from having to get up at a ridiculous time and then pay ten pounds for breakfast given that I'd already taken part in the ritual. |
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I get up, pull on warm clothes, and make my way slowly back to my hummock. |
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But once we get up to speed, we climb upon a chipper wind and flourishingly soar. |
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He should get up, withdraw and apologise, and wash his mouth out. |
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I would get up when she does it and shoot her with a water pistol. |
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The plot is pretty much a bolt-on, of course, and you won't get up from this book and change the world, but it's certainly a nice bit of summer reading. |
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You might as well try to get up a game of stickball on Beekman Place. |
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Spectators will also have the opportunity to get up close and personal with some of the most loved, and best presented classic racing cars in the world. |
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You are told when you may get up, drink water and take bathroom breaks. |
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Because a rider has very little mechanical advantage if the bike is in 15th gear, the bike would be very hard to pedal, and it would take a while to get up to speed. |
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I have wavy, frizzly hair, and on the days when I used to get up at 4am to blow dry it straight, people were complimenting me on it but it also felt like a veiled threat. |
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They languished in nursing homes, too out of breath from congestive heart failure to get up and move around. |
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I had to ride out in the morning, so I planned to get up at daybreak. |
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You'll get up close to the wildlife, including giraffe, zebra, impala and wildebeest, and all riding abilities are catered for, including beginners. |
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I read namaz five times a day and you get up in the morning and pray. |
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I threw all the food on the floor and I had a friend of mine get up on a ladder and photograph me lying in the middle of it. |
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It is published just after Christmas, to boot, when we have all each eaten so much stodgy food that we require four attempts to get up from the sofa. |
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Bailey saved ground as the field bunched into the turn and then urged the son of Hernando clear on the outside wearing down four rivals to get up by a neck. |
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Then on the Saturday night I went to bed very early as I knew realistically I needed to get up at 6am to allow time to titivate myself to get down to Selfridges on time. |
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Gwyneth tried to get up by leaning on her left arm for support, but she winced in pain as she did so, and fell back down onto the soft feathery pillows. |
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But few people realize how long it will take before these directors get up to speed, change a corporate culture, and, if necessary, sweep out the laggards. |
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He said temperatures might get up to 18C tomorrow and Thursday, but things would feel cooler again by the weekend with more north and north-west winds. |
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He started to get up, when he felt a gob of mud hit him in the face. |
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Pliny sat down and could not get up even with assistance and was left behind. |
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No alarm-clock dinned her to get up but the morning light woke her, pouring through the uncurtained glass. |
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New mothers frequently complain that their partner won't get up to change a wet nappy or comfort a grizzling baby. |
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Examples of phrasal verbs are to get up, to ask out, to back up, to give up, to get together, to hang out, to put up with, etc. |
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She didn't need her baby-walker any more and would climb out and use the attached tray to get up on to the sofa. |
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Hardy couldn't get up and down from left of the green, while the smooth-putting Bettencourt two-putted for par. |
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You know usually I take the big guy, which is always something I get up for and you put a shutdown corner on their shiftier guy. |
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You can get up close and personal from Niagara River level for about PS12 on the famous Maid of the Mist. |
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Coming on like some sort of dipso R2D2 it's the ideal solution to the age old problem of wanting a beer, but not wanting to get up. |
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Now teenagers get up with the lark to revise, berate grown-ups for being slugabeds and nick all the green triangles. |
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The girls get up to nothing more naughty than smuggling in ice cream and talking during study hall. |
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