They find a guy and make an effort when they go on a date, and then once they get comfy with him and have kids they let themselves go. |
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Plan A, to propose on Detonator, backfired when she saw the ride on the website and refused to go on it. |
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He is a murderer and a child abductor but he doesn't go on the register for that. |
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Girls leaving school often find work more easily than the boys and go on to become the main wage earner. |
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I usually go on the wagon for January as I am sick of booze after the excesses of December. |
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It's a slow and laborious process and the first British-raised Wagyu meat won't go on sale until the end of this year. |
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Some abnormal smears do in fact revert to normal without treatment, but some go on to become cancerous. |
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Let's help make our beaches safe to go on and take dogs walkies this summer. |
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A lot of people want to wallow like hippos at a waterhole when they go on holiday, and there's nothing wrong with that. |
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Every fall we were allowed to go on the patch of grass around the walnut tree to pick up walnuts and bring them inside for her to bake with. |
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The possibilities go on and on if you start thinking about having an intelligent agent that keeps track of your net wanderings. |
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He said Anglicans would fast and may go on retreats this week, or go on a meatless diet, abstaining from meat on certain days. |
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Many people who go on methadone programmes, the softer alternative to abstinence, remain on them for years. |
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I badly wanted to go on to see the monkey-puzzle forests at the foot of the Andes, to drive the cattle to high summer pasture. |
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It seems to go on for about a quarter of an hour before stopping for a few minutes and then it starts all over again. |
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The film Spark, which has been shot in Keighley over the past four weeks, is expected to go on general release next year. |
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After completing a university access course at York College, he will now go on to study computer science at Hughes Hall, Cambridge. |
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Assemblies would go on far longer than they needed to, so he could get in a few more Sgt Pepper jams. |
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The list seems to go on and is not just limited to my immediate circle of family, friends and acquaintances. |
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I could go on for many more pages in a systematic dissection of this recent work but, it will only weary the reader. |
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When failure has launched a rabbit punch and uppercut combination, can he drag himself back from failure and go on to greater things? |
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Honestly, we could go on about Inferno's nifty fire effect, or Voldo's creepy, stationary strut, or even Taki's newfound jiggle. |
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For classes, some books go on reserve, some materials go into course packs, and some copied excerpts are handed out in class. |
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Many acutely infected individuals will go on to clear the virus and hence may not require any intervention. |
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Studies show most children whose parents divorce go on to develop into well-adjusted adults. |
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It is only natural to hope our sons and daughters will get good marks in their exams, and go on to secure fulfilling and well-paid jobs. |
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Let a child play a computer game with a joystick and he will go on for hours. |
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Because addicts who are sent to the drug court go on a methadone programme immediately, critics say criminals are jumping the queue. |
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I could go on but all I seem to remember the adrenalized racket of guitars scraping my eardrums. |
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No one seemed to realize he was a hero-to-be about to go on his first adventure and should have been greatly adulated. |
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Manu and Nadine meet up, and go on a road trip, picking up men, and killing at random. |
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Ideally, you start it when you arrive, and you finish sometime before you go on stage to show it. |
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I have read the predictable rantings of those who go on about queue jumpers and the fact that these people are not really oppressed. |
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After whetting the whistle at the pub, many will go on to dance at one of London's countless dance clubs. |
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There were many who located in the new city and building began to go on with increasing rapidity. |
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Andersson had created a compact single-seater that would go on to dominate world aerobatics for years to come. |
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Following a karakia the group was allowed to go on to the site where the students were able to touch the investiture pillar Taumakeva. |
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His battery went flat just before the cars were due to go on to the grid and he was forced to start from the pitlane. |
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Ann Coulter doesn't go on television ranting and raving like the liberals do. |
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Tradition normally sees plants used in the show go on sale after the event. |
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So why do we allow it to go on day after day, year after year and never spend time, or money, to find a way to overcome it? |
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Somehow, in the aftermath of this shocking event, life has to go on for the couple. |
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This is the theatrical equivalent of the whodunnit you buy at the airport as you go on holiday. |
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Meanwhile visitors to the museum can go on a historic tour of food and drink through the ages, during this week's Festival of Food and Drink. |
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They spent till midday tying down and securing the lines, making ready to go on land, and preparing for a quick getaway if need be. |
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In the second year of widowhood, Heinz withdrew into her grief and accepted a doctor's advice to go on Prozac. |
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Ten years ago there was outrage when he was released for five days to go on a holiday. |
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A third of the investment will go on the country's rail system, with another third going on improvements to the road network. |
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I thought I'd better go on holiday and take a break before I finally went completely bananas. |
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Feather boas, by the way, and full length evening gloves will be all the go on the social scene this season. |
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If the town council takes the market over there is a good chance it will go on to be a success. |
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He encourages them to study and hopes that they will go on to higher education. |
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In the program, the students spend the first four semesters at UI and go on to continue their remaining four semesters at a university abroad. |
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When I eventually did go on to have a family of my own, I realised that the sickness was, in fact, the sign of a stable pregnancy. |
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They eventually go on to have the baby, and two more children, but years later, deep in the throes of her addiction, Isa does the unthinkable. |
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Of course, things were supposed to go on as normal for the next few hours until she could really ream him out. |
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I can't bump any more but I can manage a sedate wiggle providing it doesn't go on too long. |
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As she listened to Bruce go on and on about his uncle, he sounded wimpier and wimpier. |
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Economists say businesses will want profits to improve and want to feel secure about the economic rebound before they go on a hiring spree. |
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Not only that, we let him go on the last day of the window leaving us no time to invest the incoming funds. |
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Life story agreements generally require the subject to go on a press tour in conjunction with the airing of the docudrama. |
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He didn't go on stage, though, but sang from the wings while Beesley mimed onstage. |
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She wanted it to go on longer, but they were interrupted by the sound of her alarm clock. |
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For those who want to go on and argue this I will refer you to lack of skin pigmentation in albinos. |
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They're supposed to go on financing research until kingdom come, not to increase recovery rates, but to pursue knowledge for its own sake. |
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This winning team will now go on to contest the National Finals in May with all the hopes and good wishes of their fellow students. |
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Needless to say, people refuse to go on the record, fearing for their jobs. |
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Neighbours were today too frightened to go on the record about the trouble he had caused. |
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These measures have the potential to slow down our trade and add costs to traders, unless we go on the front foot. |
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For example a blood stem cell will go on to become a red blood cell, platelet or white blood cell. |
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Or perhaps he will get a red box, in which case, will be asked to go on the Pro-Euro bus tour? |
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They go on to wonder about the logic of Minister McDowell s actions given his stated aim of curbing excessive drinking. |
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I hope as I go on in my career I will be known as a director who can tackle anything. |
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One might expect that Marx would go on to explain in some detail what communism would be like. |
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I will go on trying to wrest the championship from his grasp and I still have age on my side. |
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After levelling the scores just three minutes into the second half, City looked the side most likely to go on and claim victory. |
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Whatever pressure groups and politics decide, the science will go on regardless. |
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And yet he failed to go on to have anything like the success of some of his fellow label mates. |
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This process of climbing up the hierarchical ladder can go on indefinitely, until the member reaches a position where he or she is incompetent. |
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Let American Studies go on road shows to institutions of higher learning both laic and religious. |
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Many people who get an infection that can cause Reiter's syndrome will not go on to develop the condition. |
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I know grown women who, when they don't get their own way, go on a rampage, nearly destroying house and home. |
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When Hindus go on their yatras like the Kumbh Mela, the entire arrangement is done at government cost. |
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The two men were questioned by police in Rome, before being released and allowed to go on to travel to London. |
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Once again tickets will go on sale soon, although numbers will be strictly limited. |
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Everything that is removable, including frescoes, will eventually go on display in a local museum. |
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You can either rent a car or motorbike or go on an organised trip by jeep or minibus. |
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You are led to believe that your baby will naturally latch on, and off you go on a journey of blissful feeding. |
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The outer cells will go on to form the placenta and amniotic sac that the baby will grow in. |
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With Ced back in to start the second half, the Cardinals go on a 19-7 run to make it a laugher. |
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A school headteacher is to go on a mercy mission to Westminster in a last-ditch attempt to save seven of his pupils from deportation. |
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They go on to state that, in the late '70s, punk was more than loud music and T-shirt slogans. |
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It isn't always the case that you have to go on stage, there is plenty to do in the general running of the show. |
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And, although the Artstore is giving me a good price on mounting boards, I can't go on spoiling good card indefinitely. |
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And rather than trust the author to go on developing and learning her trade, they dumped her. |
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Today is a rest day on the trade show here, when the delegates can either go on an organised tour, or can do their own thing. |
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My Lord, I ask for leave to appeal in respect of both of your Lordship's decisions, and with your leave I will go on to say why? |
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The lecture seemed even longer than usual and our convo seemed to go on forever. |
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Celtic go on a rare foray outside their own half and win a free-kick just to the left of the Milan box. |
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Time dragged slowly but somehow the hour passed, and the time came to go on through to the hall where the gig was being held. |
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One in seven respondents says they go shopping for a dose of retail therapy, and another 10 percent go on a vacation. |
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One of the earliest known portraits of the legendary freedom fighter William Wallace is to go on sale. |
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However, the company quickly retracted its statement, claiming instead that the timepieces would go on sale that very month. |
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Shayla followed him outside where he let the spider go on a vine of ivy that climbed one wall of the house. |
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When she was a couple of feet still from the bed she stopped, afraid to go on lest her fears came true. |
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As you can see, all those people will go on to have happy, successful lives if they just follow my words of wisdom and sagacity. |
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He has shown his lethal shooting touch but has yet to go on a tear, creating speculation he doesn't have much left. |
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Herbert still has a year to go on his contract but has signed a binding letter of intent with an English side. |
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I could go on at length about how great he is and how well the relationship works but I'll spare you the rhapsodies. |
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Currently lying 12 th in the league, they still harbour hopes of a play-off push but have been hindered by a failure to go on and win games. |
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After deciding not to go on living a lie, isn't she being a little economical with the truth? |
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If things go on unchanged, by 2007 that disease will be incurable and give the lie to all our aspirations. |
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I could go on and on, but I suppose it would be better for my blood pressure to go and have a lie-down under some nice, soothing, wet newspaper. |
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If you go on holiday or want life insurance, then your insurance is based on how well you are. |
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We descended from the castle to keep a promise to our daughter to let her go on a fairground ride near the town harbour. |
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Just as a rider to that, policing operations, in their widest context, normally can go on for years. |
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I wanted to go on the adventure of a lifetime and remember this experience. |
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He is just about on the right side of 30 but he looks like he could go on for years yet. |
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We know that on our day we can beat anybody, but the league is so competitive any one of the top six teams can go on to win it. |
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I decided last year that I wasn't going to go on applying for just any old office job just because I need the money. |
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We were one of the first bands to go on tour without a record contract or anything. |
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None of that was going to go on tonight, but I guess it was only right to humor my sister anyways. |
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He is treating us like children who won't go on the school trip if we don't behave. |
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He said he would like to go on to university and is considering a future career in accountancy. |
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When an army spokesman was asked on the radio whether our forces could go on holding the ring, he refused to comment. |
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We can't go on tonight without a ringmaster, and your highwire magic show is the highlight of the Circus! |
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Miles resolves to go on a road trip with Jack, and heads up to California's wine region for a journey of self-discovery. |
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Whenever April Fool's Day comes around, my mental antennae tend to go on special alert. |
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The aramid fibers in the bead will stretch a little, typically enough to make a tight tire go on much more easily by hand afterwards. |
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They must now decide if they will go on to form an indelible part of the country's collective architectural consciousness. |
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I was extremely happy to discover that the video she wanted was on loan to somebody else, meaning she has to go on a hike to pick it up. |
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It was his decision to go on loan to Ayr because he wanted first-team football. |
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I could let him go on loan to get some first team football so that he could come back here and play a part in our last few games. |
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Some people will warn you about a poodle's general fragility but I could still rough-house with him and he would regularly go on 3-mile runs. |
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The Varley family finally arrived in Shannon on the Sunday afternoon and Tony arrived in Westport just in time to go on stage. |
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Artwork takes centre stage in Kendal for the next few weeks as the creative efforts of artisans across the region go on display. |
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He promised that once she was well enough they together would go on a search for the long-lost friend. |
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Next year he will go on to take several A and AS levels and hopes to go on to university in two years' time. |
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Youths get to go on an Army assault course and eat in the mess tent, and receive certificates for their involvement at the end. |
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When we're doing maintenance on an airplane, we may need to go on the runway three or four times a day for engine run-ups. |
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Visitors can also elect to go on guided tours of the zoo which include slide shows, drinks, rusks and marshmallows around the bonfire. |
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Naas told me that sometimes you go on the field and you just know it's not your day. |
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If they choose to go on sabbatical for a full semester, they will receive full pay. |
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His speeches could go on for hours and caused great disruption to what were seen to be the sacrosanct ways of Westminster. |
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Here you can go on a ride where you start from the sea, ride up to hill top lakes, and fly down rocky trails to lush green valleys. |
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The can also write a novel, tackle advanced math problems, go on hikes, or even audit classes in college. |
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The new machine is due to go on sale in Britain tomorrow and is expected to be rolled out to other countries. |
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Extra copies of the current issue will go on sale in Easons in June as a test case for the second issue. |
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The Bellamys are being fully refunded and hope to take their chance to go on another cruise towards the end of the year. |
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The signature of a murderer and autographs from the Royal Family will go on sale in Swindon next week. |
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Still, one in the eye for all the music traditionalists who go on about how unnatural electronic manipulation such as Autotune is. |
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When you stare at these sandshoes, remember that while they go on your feet, you are really wearing them upside your head. |
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Make sure that your skin is completely dry before applying or else the tanner will go on unevenly. |
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As with all away match tickets they will be on sale to season ticket holders and members for a period of time and then go on general sale. |
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The best way to involve a reader is to start at the beginning of a story and go on to the end, and not whizz back and forth. |
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But here he is, threatening to go on and on, surrounded by fawning Labour ministers, backbenchers and constituency delegates. |
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They go on to become anti-social scallywags who spend their evenings harassing local shopkeepers, kicking in bus stops and mugging other kids. |
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I appreciate the invitation for the afternoon tea party with Princess Mikasa but unfortunately had to go on to something else. |
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Having given out forms enough to beget activity in human taste, she scants her work that we may go on and exert a creative fancy for ourselves. |
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You don't need to don headgear and go on a rampage through the streets. |
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For all any Union unit on the hills around Gettysburg knew, or any cavalry unit like this one out reconnoitering knew, the battle might go on for days more. |
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I believe there is some merit in revisiting the situation where we actually take all forms of self-defence off people when they go on to an aeroplane. |
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And one could go on and on recounting what flash tourist consultants have thought up as wizard, rabbits-out-of-hats schemes to bring in the visitors. |
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But the fun starts when conservatives stop playing defense and go on offense. |
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Jason was outstanding then, and although he would be the first to acknowledge that he is not yet the finished article, I have no doubt that he can go on to become it. |
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But could that be a justifiable reason to go on and ban pets altogether? |
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This article will challenge the normal grammatical conception of deponency and will go on to examine the problems intrinsic to it lexicographically. |
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At the T-junction of roads, turn right and, almost immediately, where the road swings right, go on ahead along a narrow lane, which is at present lined with summer flowers. |
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We cannot go on allowing drunken yobbos to ruin our town and our lives. |
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I can go on raving about this film but I just prefer to let you guys watch it and lose yourself in one of the most immersive cinema experiences ever. |
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If the attacks on those who have come before are any guide, this will go on for some time and then subside as they find new targets on whom to vent their bile. |
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The lever and quadrant will go on a stand beside the engineers knee. |
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I recommended that he should go on into the night, because the nightlife is what Glastonbury is all about. |
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So I knew that there was no need to go on the lam, and things will be a lot less tense at the next neighborhood block party if I do the right thing as soon as I return home. |
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If the 10,000-strong longshoremen go on strike, ports from Seattle to San Diego could shut down, meaning a big jolt to the already floundering US economy. |
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The problem was that Eric decided to go on a macrobiotic diet to cleanse his system and he lost so much weight you could see his skull under his skin. |
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Even now, with deforestation, there are these areas that go on for miles and miles. |
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The trip culminated with a walk outside to look at the inside of a mail truck, and we had a conversation with a mail carrier getting ready to go on his route. |
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During the day, shops were open and the relatively simple, bucolic life of a farming village seemed to go on normally. |
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The activist was planning to go on a fast, demanding a new law to appoint an anti-corruption watchdog. |
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With that I go on again, begin to build, and fail, and learn another thing, and so it goes on, as bit by bit what I learn rises up like a stone wall. |
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Until now Zak, who can't eat and is fed through tubes in his stomach, only had to go on oxygen at night after his oxygen levels dropped sapping him of energy. |
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Dean Methuen, 57, who was appointed to Ripon in October 1995, will go on sabbatical leave until he officially leaves Ripon Cathedral at the end of the year. |
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In my experience, whether you leave them in the ground or lift them and replant, unlike daffodils, tulips don't go on forever, and it pays to replace them every few years. |
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Educational attainments are also deeply affected by poverty, with poor students more likely to be excluded from school and less likely to go on to university. |
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The foundation and the concealer go on smoothly and absorb excess oil, but they also have soothing aloe and chamomile to reduce redness around breakouts. |
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He is, however, quick to point out the ones losing the friendlies are normally those who go on to enjoy a successful season when the action heats up. |
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When the police come looking for him, he must go on the lam and try to piece together the last two years of his life using only the strange trinkets as clues. |
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The laws carried over to the American colonies, and would ultimately go on the books in 40 U.S. states. |
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Dr. Krishnabai Nimbkar from Pune had wanted to go on a satyagraha in protest against the kind of politics which played one community against the other. |
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Secretly, he wants to give it up and go on the boards as a ventriloquist. |
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A person can go on about sigils, runes and spells for hours in an educated and well read fashion but how far does that match up with personal experience? |
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All they have to do is go on the site, pick a dinner, and enter their credit card number. |
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And you go on this boat because of all the hype and the commotion around it, and the boat is sinking. |
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Anyone who may have been near the anthrax letters was instructed to go on the powerful antibiotic Cipro for 10 days. |
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Few are willing to go on the record about their concerns with crossing over. |
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When I retired I intended to go on working in the traditional way, offering my work through a literary agent and being published by mainstream publishers. |
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What sort of lunatic performer was this, driven to go on performing the same stunt, time after time, finally without any audience at all, entirely for his own pleasure? |
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This appears to support the overall argument that some former stalking victims may go on to victimise others they perceive as threatening in some way. |
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If we have democratically agreed to go on strike, whatever unjust law they want to bring in to stop us will be going against our human rights as workers. |
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He would go on to earn a Masters degree at the Rochester Institute of Technology, in New York, on a Fulbright Scholarship. |
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They both laugh hard, forced laughs that go on for five seconds too long, and Sarah drags on her cigarette and surveys the foggy chateau grounds that will never be hers. |
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Those that persevere and succeed can go on to command six figure salaries. |
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How much longer can the board go on washing their dirty linen in public? |
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A spokesman for the college said that following an access course most students go on to study a variety of subjects at a variety of universities across the country. |
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I knew enough to see that the text was a nest of problems which competent scholars could go on investigating, but I had lost my path through the maze. |
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Not only does the noise go on for hours but these infernal machines kill or maim thousands of hedgehogs, frogs and fledglings every spring and summer. |
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I stumbled out into the early afternoon with my new machine, enough testing strips and pricking lancets to go on with, my marked-up diary and a fuddled brain. |
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I won't be putting any money on him to go on and win the title. |
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And then you would get flown on a private jet up to Alaska and go on his cruise ship for the party. |
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If you go on a college campus today and try to recruit the best students out there, they are clearly not going to work for a company that is not well thought of and respected. |
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As long as they stayed out of NATO's hair, that is, the Russians could go on make-believing that they were playing a crucial role in the occupation of Kosovo. |
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You know, this is really pitching right into the hot days of the general election campaign and the reverberations are going to go on through the fall. |
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As the dawn broke over Paris the sound of the tumbrel wheels awoke the prisoners from their fitful sleep and were soon loaded like animals to go on their last journey. |
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For a cardio bonus, do 30 seconds of jogging, marching, jumping jacks or split-lunge jumps immediately after each move, then go on to the next move. |
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And, for as long as they prefer a conjuror's wand to a handset, they will have to go on reading the runes to detect much of an impact, for IT, on productivity. |
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Neither individual would go on the record due to the sensitivity of discussing personnel matters. |
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Just to test it, they'll go on the computer or meet with friends even when they know they're grounded, counting on our feeble recollective abilities to get away with it. |
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Jason Kingsley, the son of one of the producers, would go on to appear 55 times on the show talking about his disability. |
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Education chiefs have pledged that lessons will go on at a tertiary college despite a damning report which criticised most teaching as unsatisfactory and management as weak. |
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Power would go on to cofound the celebrity fashion site Who What Wear. |
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Now that painting, The Roadhouse Crew, is to go on show at a major exhibition in London. |
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The only downside to me writing the Bueno Texas road trip article is that I didn't really go on the trip. |
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And it emerged the act refused to go on stage because they would only use a specific brand of minidisc player. |
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With little to go on and little interest in truth, they went after Bush hammer and tong. |
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But it was good to go on at half time and hopefully it livened things up a bit in the second half. |
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Yet on beating the corpulent Londoner, Fury believes he will go on and beat Klitschko, as well as Liverpudlian Champ rival David Price. |
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Eighteen Mapuche Indian leaders are scheduled to go on trial in Chile soon. |
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Orpic earlier said that Liwa Plastics Industries, which will go on stream by 2018, will produce polyethylene, polypropylene and butene. |
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The Alex James Presents line will go on sale in Asa stores from Monday, and also includes salad cream and spring onion slices. |
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A PANCAKE inspired by a Georgian cathedral cook will go on sale to mark Shrove Tuesday. |
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She said ten out of the 12 EU countries that use the narcotest go on to confirm preliminary saliva tests with follow up blood tests. |
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On cable, you shake an etch a Sketch every time you go on air. |
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Descent is traced patrilineally, not matrilineally, and Minang men marry late because they go on rantau in order to earn enough money to marry. |
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Ricky Ponting will go on to become Australia's greatest batsman since Don Bradman, according to former captain Steve Waugh. |
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Pop princess Kylie Minogue has vowed the show must go on following her split from boyfriend Olivier Martinez. |
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I have now decided to go on hunger strike to protest at this injustice. |
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The early back of the napkin version of the Laffer curve would go on to become the basis for Reaganomics and supply-side economics. |
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Sneaky Sound System's chief songwriter Black Angus says show will go on despite a studio break-in. |
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Remember that God gives the strength to go on when you would rather collapse. He can save you by the bell! |
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Hedgehunter, who would go on to win in 2005, fell at the last while leading. |
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Medina would go on to have many more tough title fights, remarkably winning versions of the featherweight world title another three times. |
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However, Taylor would go on to dominate the event for the following decade and beyond. |
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The COLREGS go on to describe the lights to be shown by vessels under way at night or in restricted visibility. |
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As they go around the mark they cannot touch it, and then they go on to the second leg. |
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In 1188 Henry II of England and Philip II of France agreed to go on a crusade, and that Henry would use a white cross and Philip a red cross. |
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The nationalist does not go on the principle of simply ganging up with the strongest side. |
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Edward and his successors expanded Alfred's network of fortified burhs, a key element of their strategy, enabling them to go on the offensive. |
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The French would go on the defensive for the following months to avoid high casualties and to restore confidence in the French High Command. |
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Countries meeting none of these criteria, such as Panama, Vanuatu and Lebanon, would go on the blacklist. |
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People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer. |
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The Kelmscott Press would go on to publish 23 of Morris' books, more than those of any other author. |
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Fellow nominees included Morgan Freeman and Denzel Washington, both of whom would go on to win the award. |
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Every four years the British and Irish Lions go on tour with players from England as well as Ireland, Scotland and Wales. |
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Every four years the British and Irish Lions go on tour with players from Scotland as well as England, Ireland and Wales. |
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Every four years the British and Irish Lions go on tour with players from Wales as well as England, Ireland and Scotland. |
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Every four years the British and Irish Lions go on tour with players from Ireland as well as England, Scotland and Wales. |
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Since the 10 century, rulers of Kilwa would go on to build elaborate coral mosques and introduce copper coinage. |
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To remember the 48 American soldiers that died, every night 48 pairs of streetlights will go on one by one, from north to south. |
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David retained the bulk of his army and thus the power to go on the offensive again. |
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Thomas Peter Anderson Stuart left Dumfries to go on and found the University of Sydney Medical School. |
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A further expedition in 1866 managed to lay a new cable in two weeks and then go on to recover and complete the 1865 cable. |
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Donovan, Donovan's session crew during the 60s included Jimmy Page, John Bonham and John Paul Jones who would later go on to form Led Zeppelin. |
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Wihtred of Kent died in 725, and Ine of Wessex, one of the most formidable rulers of his day, abdicated in 726 to go on a pilgrimage to Rome. |
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He planned to go on crusade to the Levant, but was prevented from doing so by rebellions in Gascony. |
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The house is still owned by his descendants today, and you can go on a tour around it for a small charge. |
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These nations, particularly Australia, would go on to excel in the sport and gain significant influence over it over the following century. |
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If we can't figure out how to diagnose this problem remotely, we're going to have to go on site again. |
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Also appearing at the end of the Permian were the first cynodonts, which would go on to evolve into mammals during the Triassic. |
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The nephew and his mother had decided not to go on the voyage across the bay. |
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However, this process can go on for a long period of time, because of the advanced gas exchange system. |
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The wind picked up and the sailing ships were able to go on the offensive before the oared vessels were overwhelmed. |
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After the decision to raise the Mary Rose, discussions ensued as to where she would eventually go on permanent display. |
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Gould played only one promotional gig and did not go on the road for the Forever Now tour. |
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Petter, the chief designer, who left to form a new aircraft division at English Electric that would go on to be very successful. |
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It was the Normans who, two centuries later, would go on to conquer England and Southern Italy. |
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If you just let him know you want him to go on the potty, or anything, he's miles away. |
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He was horrified, since the Inca believed that the soul would not be able to go on to the afterlife if the body were burned. |
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With the king about to go on progress, the trials and executions were deliberately timed. |
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This work, however, did go on to influence the prayer books of many British colonies. |
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If you have a queen-size bed, you'll need some queen-size sheets to go on it, and maybe a queen-size comforter as well. |
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In 1893 and 1894, with the help of their new Maxim guns, the BSAP would go on to defeat the Ndebele in the First Matabele War. |
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The nature of divisions in the House of Commons is one which traditionally could go on well into the night, sometimes past midnight. |
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These cells then go on to form thickened secondary cell walls, composed mainly of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin. |
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After working as a journeyman for a while, a carpenter may go on to study or test as a master carpenter. |
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He would go on to identify several types of gases, including carbon dioxide. |
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Should they go on strike without having declared their intention to do so beforehand, they leave themselves open to sanctions. |
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In 1903, Mathilde gave birth to William Heaton Cooper, who would also go on to become a landscape artist. |
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And trust me, it may take decades, but this woman will get over you eventually, and even go on to live a semiproductive life. |
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Just the fact that I do not chant offenselessly should make me cry tears of remorse, but i go on stoneheartedly in my mechanical chanting. |
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We had a terrible year so we agreed to turn back the clock and go on as if it hadn't happened. |
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A lump of matter flying in space might enter our solar system with such speed as to be able to pass through and go on its way almost undeflected. |
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He feared the police might go on strike and join the protestors. |
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Its intellectual life was thus able to go on amidst the wreck of its political life. |
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I can't go on with this song if there's people in here sitting down unless y'all sitting down because y'all handicapped. |
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But I have no desire to go on casting calls or any of that stuff. |
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As long as no rational person dares utter it people will go on imagining it means stoning us all to death, and the yellow press will have won. |
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But by repotting and giving them more space now, while they're effectively hibernating, they'll go on to really perform. |
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If you let it creep up on you, then suddenly you're having to memorise a lot of scientific bafflegab five seconds before you go on set. |
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Zippos Circus said it was told by council officials that the show could not go on unless the clowns dropped the musical part of their act. |
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