Bird watchers and nature lovers assembled in force at Pairc Cois Feile on Sunday morning to greet the Dawn Chorus. |
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And some poles were placed at boat landings to greet visitors arriving by canoe. |
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The historical landmarks were to them simply places to meet, greet and handle daily business. |
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When the baron's wife resurfaces in the text to greet the king who is de passage, she again drips with disingenuousness. |
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He listens out for the car, hears the door close, sees Daddy walk past the window and then runs to the door to greet him. |
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Our three ambassadors of lovers rock came out personally to greet the audience before starting their performance and the audience loved this. |
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He runs over to the terraces and is mobbed by supporters spilling over to greet him in a spontaneous explosion of relief. |
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I greet you tonight from a new internet cafe, opened only this week and perhaps marginally nearer than my usual one. |
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At that point the sensitive hound ears picked up another presence and he bounded over to greet me. |
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There used to be a young man there who would greet me with a welcoming smile and serve me the food efficiently. |
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Television presenters and radio DJs will also be at the show to meet and greet their fans. |
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All the community of Evesham was there, every monk and lay brother eager to greet their donors. |
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Though a private visit, all along the boreens of Mayo, villagers turned out to greet the royal party. |
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He didn't even object when Mother hung a Stars and Bars banner from every upstairs window, to greet our guests upon arrival. |
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A large crowd turned out to greet the stars who performed a few numbers and obligingly signed autographs for all on the night. |
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Protheroe, in padded dressing gown and tasseled cap, laughed and rose to greet his friend. |
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He heard her move, so he straightened up as quickly as he could to greet her. |
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Adorn your hallways and walls with gold streamers and place red material at your door to greet guests in the proper manner. |
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She could see the light from the station up ahead and feel the subway car slowing to greet it. |
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Like other Hispanic Americans, Panamanians greet friends and relatives more demonstratively than is the custom in the United States. |
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To greet the Labour Day break, Shangri-La, the largest hotel group in China, is launching a special package for holiday-makers. |
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In some traditional families, the elders sometimes wear traditional Chinese formal clothes to greet guests on Chinese New Year's Day. |
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Greg came out of the kitchen to greet him, eating a rice cake with peanut butter. |
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Quickly identifying the venue, I politely greet the doorman, before signing in the guest book. |
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We could not say man waves to greet incoming passenger, because that second description gives a particular interpretation to the physical action. |
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However, none of former presidents or vice presidents arrived to greet the first family. |
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The heavenly powers greet you with sacred canticles and with joyous praise. |
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At each shrine you pause, and you say some prayers and you greet each deity. |
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A dapper man in contrasting winter shades, beige scarf at a jaunty angle, he marches across the nosherie floor to greet me. |
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Known for their hospitality, the villagers and shop owners always greet visitors warmly and loudly in Mandarin Chinese. |
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Casey spun around to see Lori, Jenny and Alex walking up to greet her, their faces beaming and welcoming. |
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Never did she fail to warmly greet people with her engaging smile and lively chat. |
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When the boat docked at the pier in South Pattaya near sunset, there was no ceremony to greet them. |
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But the glamorous trio still made time for a half-hour walkabout to greet the 4,000 screaming fans who had packed Leicester Square. |
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Some 1,000 statues of Buddhas, some dating back to the West Jin Dynasty, greet you in the two-hectare garden. |
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Chilly winds softly tickled at the riders, and five horses whinnied to greet the new day. |
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We'll greet them with a clear soul and with a composure that affirms the dignity of life and unites suffering and knowledge. |
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City police officers who'd been there that day left their outpost to greet him. |
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The young men who'd been hiding in the hills filtered back into the town to greet their new protectors. |
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But there to greet them on the main bridge was the fearless firemen, with hoses at the ready. |
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At Jorvik, spooky characters from the Viking past will greet children aged between five and 11 during a special Hallowe'en tour. |
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He returned to the room to greet his guest, leaving the double doors open to air out the room. |
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A large pink panther, a yellow and green felt parrot hanging from the ceiling and a blue-and-white teddy greet visitors at the reception desk. |
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Usually, someone will greet you at a reception desk and show you where to go. |
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The Cunas respect the different positions that family members hold, and greet each other accordingly. |
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Among some groups it is common to greet close relatives not seen for a long time with a bear hug. |
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Because the dirty little secret is that most Americans still greet the MLS with a big yawn. |
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Huge sticker-boards in bright yellow, blue and red will greet the children as they walk in. |
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Immediately, my Yorkshire terrier puppy Bonbon came bouncing in the hallway, eager to greet me. |
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It is common for two grown men to greet by kissing each other on both cheeks, and for either men or women to walk down the street arm in arm. |
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There was a rumor going around at the meet 'n' greet and then among people going in to the concert that you were there. |
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We stood at their side, silent, until they excused themselves, to greet the next crop of arrivals. |
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As families spread rugs on the grass, or head off to pick fruit, others greet each other like long-lost friends. |
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Crowds of people and predators greet the arrival of many fish spawning runs. |
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The village was empty though, with only the rustle of the leaves to greet them. |
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A cool drink and a hot flannel welcome us on arrival and flowers greet us in our spacious and attractive bedroom. |
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That evening at the ball she watched the formal introductions patiently waiting so that she could go and greet Natalie. |
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Archer was just arriving on the bridge to greet his new commander when the battle stations alarm sounded. |
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The Deputy stands to greet each, dispensing a hearty handshake and a beaming smile. |
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She stood, waiting for the officer to greet her in the manner befitting a princess. |
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The only beings which do expect him and greet him with unbridled joy are the stray dogs. |
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When his aircraft touched down at Shannon Airport he failed to appear from his vodka-induced slumbers to greet his Irish hosts. |
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Women greet each other by ululating, or making a high pitched sound by trilling the tongue. |
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The chirp and tweet of the feathery creatures greet one as one nears this market beyond Laad Bazar. |
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Get past the main gate and well-laid out roads, wide footpaths, neat walkways leading to apartments and clearly painted signboards greet you. |
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Her father had died almost seven years ago now and her heart still twinged whenever the door opened and he wasn't there to greet her. |
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If you enter any big library, in one corner of it, some age-worn, moth-eaten books may greet you. |
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Holding children's coats and mufflers against the cold wintry night, they greet each other and exchange neighborhood gossip. |
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The great outdoors of the Japanese Alps is there to greet you with spectacular views and some still unexplored areas. |
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They're snails when it comes to service. They don't greet you at all and it's just a rude place. |
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A tall, spare man with jet black hair leaned over the counter to greet them. |
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Add two months of nearly nonstop high-calorie party fare, and it's no wonder so many of us greet spring with a spare tire around our middle. |
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Well, when he did greet me on the tenth of April, I don't know, but somehow the other voice was telling my cynical side to bug off. |
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Every sportsperson and spectator owes the official a profound debt of gratitude, but instead we often greet them with jeers and personal abuse. |
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The class stayed in the kind of dead silence that most teachers would greet with joy. |
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A few families were waiting to greet them, but most headed in the direction of the cabstand. |
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What remained of the Orcs stampeded out to greet them, their rusty weapons held high. |
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She comes to greet him at the back gate of a small, handsomely decorated house. |
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Smiles and offers of hot chocolate greet carolers as they stroll through the snowy streets singing the melodies of Christmas. |
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Relatives greet each other with a gentle hug and a kiss on the left shoulder above the heart. |
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But we have the right, or even the duty, to greet many ideas with opprobrium and ridicule. |
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People returning from holidays abroad never cease to be amazed at the prices that greet them on their return. |
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But, to my surprise, there was my dog, wagging her stumpy little tail and walking over to greet me. |
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A guy who looked right out of The Old Man and the Sea darted to greet friends at a back table. |
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I would even greet every single person I come across on my way to the gym, and smile like it was my sweet sixteen today, I'd decided. |
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Going to greet the Commander when he came back was fine and dandy, but work always overrode everything else in importance. |
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Many will greet such noble intentions with two cheers, having heard them before and waited too long to see them put into practice. |
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He loves the wilds of Upper Wharfedale, where the locals always greet him and his crew with a cheery wave and a smile. |
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Good manners include taking time to greet people properly, using conventional oral formulas. |
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My mother would give a gentle honk of the car horn to indicate that we had arrived and Granny Perin would be at the door to greet us. |
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He knows he's a standout, especially as he hugs a purple bag and peers from behind red horn-rimmed glasses to greet a friend. |
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He instead spent a couple of nights in a Frankfurt hotel room when nobody showed up to greet him at the other end. |
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The scorer took off to greet the pocket of fans down by the corner flag, swirling his shirt above his head in celebration. |
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When we arrived, Jill was waiting right in the coatroom for us, and flung open the door to greet us before we even reached the doorstep. |
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It would be mad for people just to run off to the local mosque and expect the imam to greet you with open arms. |
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Then picture him waiting by the window to greet you every morning as you get to work. |
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People began to greet the two of them, and Cally fiddled with her hands nervously. |
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The ice-cold flannels and water that were there to greet us were very much appreciated. |
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I curled myself up in a little ball underneath one of the living room windows and cringed when I heard Luke greet my mother with cordiality. |
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I eased myself on the couch, flipping the on switch and watching the small screen in the center top keyboard light up to greet me. |
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Patricia, his assistant, had flittered across the room nervously to greet him. |
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Wonderful collections of porcelain, pictures and furniture seemed to greet us in every room. |
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Hundreds of North Koreans, including women in red traditional gowns, sang folk songs to greet her. |
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Livingston is attached to its past as an old cow town where you could walk down the street and greet your neighbors. |
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The female pokes her head out of the hole to greet her mate, opening the brilliant crest of feathers on her head like a fan. |
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All that was there to greet him were a few crewmen and a minor bridge officer. |
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He was the first person to greet them when they were finally freed from prison. |
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His eagle frontlet is the first aspect of Native culture to greet airline passengers deplaning in Ketchikan. |
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We greet ministers who can't think of a moral, gagmen who can't think of a joke. |
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They all went down to the quay to greet the boat and the first person to come down the gangplank was a Corkman. |
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The other day I saw the same car at a gas station and pulled in to greet the owner before he drove away. |
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Suddenly, as if on cue, he straightened his shoulders and walked downstage to greet his public. |
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I descend to greet my public at 11 pm and am able to scrutinize at least 6 different chins and sets of grinning teeth at close quarters. |
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But the idea does not seem to be wholly to greet the teams because these companies also publicise their products on these banners. |
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People entering a restaurant will greet fellow diners and, on leaving, wish them a good afternoon. |
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I'm just going over there to greet a fellow student good morning, that's all. |
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Doctors drop in to visit him and when he's out walking down Carter Road, old patients walk up to greet the grand old man of medicine. |
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We now have a Great Pyrenees, who will greet intruders the way her mother, a working ranch dog, greets coyotes. |
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It is with diffidence and humility that I greet the ultimate constitutional power in the Republic, the Presidential electors. |
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Several of the company had smiled at her in recognition and a few were hurrying over to greet her. |
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In the village street, many people stopped to greet me and welcome my brother and his wife. |
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When we landed in Ramstein, Germany, there was no one to greet us or welcome us back. |
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That would be one scientific breakthrough that I would greet with open arms. |
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But they can also make me greet in a manner suggesting I wish I'd been born a million miles from any misty glen. |
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If we were in too much of a hurry to come down, we would greet you with a friendly dip of the wing. |
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It is present in the camouflaged armed national guardsmen who greet members of Congress each day we enter the Capitol campus. |
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Straightening his disheveled appearance, Edmund made his way down to the beach to greet them. |
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For some reason, the editor has started to greet me with a growl, which can be a little on the disconcerting side for an equable chap like me. |
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I slowly limped to the house, rang the doorbell like a shy visitor, and waited for mom to greet me. |
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Certainly those comments ring true for yoga devotee Janine, who is signed up and ready to greet the new year in downward dog. |
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Oh, you're right, they do sound like mindless drones when they greet you, Toni! |
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His designated role for the festival will be to press the flesh and meet and greet as many people as he can. |
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I collect the morning paper and my two mutts greet me, their tails wagging back and forth in a frenzy. |
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A tall, well-built man jumped down from the carriage and moved forward to greet Alicia, kissing her cheek before helping her up into the vehicle. |
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I would like to take a moment to greet the kaumatua and iwi representatives present in the gallery. |
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Cease, then, your wanderings and return at once to Christ, and He will greet you with a word of welcome and cheer, and who knows but what He has some honorous commission awaiting you. |
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By the time I greet the shopkeeper he's filled a bag of bananas posing as a customer. |
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Tavinder, who let us inside the house, went upstairs as soon as Ruby came down to greet us. |
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Now we also have peer counsellors that greet and meet the soldiers on the way back. |
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Club members also make sure they greet all members and guests with a handshake before the meeting. |
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The server greet the guests at the door or at the table according to Scores service standards. |
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Contact Center agents are also provided with additional information, such as the language in which to greet a caller. |
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One must respect and greet one's elders regardless of their social status. |
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These plays were essentially the santons brought to life, unfolding their misadventures as they bumbled their way to greet the baby Christ in the manger. |
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We would be pleased to greet you and your representatives at our National Office in Ottawa or to meet with you in London, if you wish. |
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A lounge, located on level 2 of the terminal, may also be used to greet or send off foreign dignitaries travelling on commercial flights. |
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However, the bad weather caused their flight to be delayed, much to the dissapointment of the press and relatives waiting to greet them. |
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We are soon warmly welcomed by Christophe, our beloved mechanic, on his ski-doo, and I open the door of the container to greet him back. |
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Jaipur's date with the pink color goes back to 1905-06, when Jaipur city was getting ready to greet the Prince of Wales and needed a fresh paint all over. |
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As the music of tween pop stars One Direction announced her arrival, the audience leapt to its feet to greet her. |
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Archbishop Nicola Girasoli, nuncio for the country since 2006, was eager to greet the team. |
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Each day she goes down to the water's edge to greet the sea and to think over her experiences. |
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Warmly greet each participant before the workshop begins and again during your opening comments. |
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That is why we should greet civilised globalisation with open arms in this sector too and harness it for the benefit of our citizens. |
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Later when the lovers, each ravaged by war, are reunited at last, they greet each other in a simple pianissimo, like two stunned sparrows. |
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Cam's own table was at the stairhead, the better to greet and farewell his guests, and to ask a favoured one occasionally to join him for a quick drink. |
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She thrusts her minikin hands through the willow wands to greet me. |
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In the department of customs and immigration the vast majority of returning St Lucians say there needs to be a more friendly face to greet arriving passengers. |
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Well that's a nice way to greet me when I've flown all the way from Perth! |
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You were a smiler but that's not to say you couldn't greet as well! |
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This is why most of them are installed not in the workspaces of the employees, but in boardrooms or conference rooms, where businessmen meet and greet their clients. |
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The entire town comes out from the party to greet the unwelcome visitor. |
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When that brave soldier, Milo Corcoran, ventures out to greet the teams on Tuesday evening, the reception from the stands is likely to be sulphurous. |
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This is why we should greet with interest the news that schools could be allowed to stagger their lesson times to ease the traffic chaos caused by the school run. |
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The first things to greet you are the huge mooring bollards that stick out at right angles, their ropes still wound in a figure of eight around them. |
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The event began with a skater's meet and greet, giving the athletes the opportunity to meet fellow competitors in a social atmosphere. |
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Then, more low growls broke the deep silence of the South African night as the lion's sister walked in front of the 4x4 to greet and nuzzle her. |
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As he approaches the British garrison, troops rush out to greet him. |
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Arriving passengers greet their cabin stewards and table waiters like long-lost family friends with smiling handshakes, hugs and much backslapping. |
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Odds are your suitcases will greet you when you deplane, but those odds lengthen when applied to more unorthodox baggage, which surely will come under careful inspection. |
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In his eagerness to greet us, he tumbles down the steps head over heels. |
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However, custom forbade him unchaperoned access to the infanta, and when he demonstrated his love by leaping over a garden wall to greet her, she ran away. |
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Not there yesterday to greet her was her father, who walked out on the family when Marion was four and subsequently spurned all his daughter's attempts to meet him. |
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But here, the main issue is civilian incomprehension of the horrors of war, as a shell-shocked young hero returns home only to greet news of his DSO with disgust. |
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We can all think of exceptions, like Iran, but we should greet these events with eagerness and hope. |
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When we greet someone we receive them into our presence and take a risk that we will be received. |
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A couple of attempts by isolated guerilla groups around the stadium to greet the haka with boos were hushed by the greater conscience of the crowd. |
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As soon as I opened the door, an uchideshi garbed in a splashed-pattern kimono and hakama came rushing out into the small foyer from the front room to greet me. |
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All telephones in the Detachment have a visual reminder to meet and greet the public in both official languages. |
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If you're a gallery owner, for example, you're teaching from the time you greet your employees in the morning to the time you wish the last customer of the day a good evening. |
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The Fan Fest will be a chance to meet and greet present day Olympians, past Olympians and past Olympic Coaches in the 90 minutes before the start of each session. |
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As the platform drew near and the train started to slow, I looked quickly out of the window to see everyone stood on the platform ready to greet me. |
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One of the most talked-about surveys of donors this year suggests donors may greet these efforts with a big yawn. |
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The meet and greet will include medical information about Aziz's specialization in seasonal allergies, otolaryngology, rhinology and ear, nose and throat illnesses. |
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Church members were waiting to greet them as the vehicle approached through a festive palm-leaf lined arch. |
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Groups of men in elaborate costume go from farmhouse to farmhouse, where they perform a special yodel and greet the inhabitants for the New Year. |
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She'll meet, greet and schmooze you without you even realising it. |
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The Government of Canada has consulted market participants about a Dutch auction but they did not greet it with unanimity. |
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I heard barking and the jingling of dog tags before my golden retriever, affectionately named Sparky, bounded down the hall and jumped up to greet me. |
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About 500 people were on hand to greet them at the arrivals terminal. |
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Friends and family commonly greet each other with the abrazo. |
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When the rooster crowed to greet the morning, Ben thought he sounded awfully close by but to find the fowl on the foot of his bed was closer than he thought! |
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But when that day finally arrives, we know with absolute certainty that she will be there with open arms to greet us, and our reunion as a family will be glorious. |
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That fact alone permits Christie loyalists to greet the new negativity with a healthy degree of sangfroid. |
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A young woman wearing a beautiful satin dress with an orange-red jacket stands to greet him while another woman sits at a table playing a theorbo, a musical instrument. |
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Afterwards many people crowded around to greet the new Master, or to rekindle old friendships. |
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Cassandra is sharp as a tack, awkward, and still young enough to greet her awakening desire and finer perceptions with astonishment and hyperbole. |
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We can meet each other, smile at each other, shake hands or kindly greet each other. |
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What irks me most about this annual ritual of royal fiscal disclosure and the hue and cry that can be relied upon to greet it, is that nothing ever changes. |
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One reason why the army is hesitating is that it knows resistance would greet any move into the red-shirt camp. |
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Otherwise why would Moin Khan, the wicket-keeper batsman of tigerish resolve on the cricket field, greet you with a warm, affectionate hug every time you met him? |
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The consultation provided an opportunity for participants and the staff at LAC to meet and greet each other. |
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Her children politely greet the ladies and quickly scamper off inside the house to watch satellite TV and play the latest Wii games. |
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Captain Val was the first to greet her, his expression bleak. |
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He also campaigned diligently, visiting more than 100 train stops to greet befuddled commuters. |
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Since many Island government officials were busy with last-minute preparations, one of the delegates was sent on a rowboat to greet the visitors. |
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Instead, everyone will greet each day with a cheerful heart and a song on their lips, thanking their lucky stars for living in this fine historic city. |
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Not long before he died he was very glad to greet his former aspirant who was then wearing the cassock. |
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The fumes of the oil used to seal the hold were beginning to rise to greet the morning sun, and in her condition, Miri found the smell overwhelming. |
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In Leeds, the music students greet Miliband's announcement about tuition fees rapturously. |
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The scene of the triumphant general returning to the city with his army and the worshipful women and children swarming to greet them is nothing less than magnificent. |
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Kim Jong Il came out to the Pyongyang airport to greet him, a rare sortie for North Korea's dictator even when he was less frail. |
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Not only had the wind and driving rain made the voyage grueling, but not one single person had been at the finish line to greet them. |
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Those are the first words that slip out of my mouth when I greet Andrew Garfield at a hotel suite in Downtown Toronto. |
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The bellman will greet you and show you to the lobby where you will be met by marble floors, Persian rugs, a magnificent chandelier and on cold winter days, a blazing fire. |
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Shaw put himself right alongside the line and took a minute to shake hands and greet each delegate. |
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In particular I greet Cardinal Bernard Francis Law, Archpriest of this stupendous Basilica of St Mary Major. |
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While he prepares coffee, I say hello to the cat who's come to greet me and gaze at the roofs overlooking the Bosphorus. |
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They advance, impassive and majestic, their long elegant necks bend at time to eat some leaves or greet a spectator. |
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On the Ninth of Av, when the congregation gathers to read the scroll of lamentations, people do not greet each other. |
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Wearing a red hoodie over his baseball cap, Omar, 17, quickly jumped off a tractor to greet us. |
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Joseph – one of several young locals who manage the place – waded out into the water to greet me. |
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Likewise, she had had to greet many young and eligible bachelors, all of whom did their best to impress her and win her over, asking for dances and favours from the princess. |
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Then I found myself falling toward the middle of a small lake in the city of Hanoi, with two broken arms, a broken leg, and an angry crowd waiting to greet me. |
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Coordinate a meet and greet where women could find a buddy or receive a list of opportunities in the community where you could link up with a group. |
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Take time now to regularly go to the park for play dates so that your pup has the opportunity to meet and greet many different types of individuals-human and canine alike. |
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Urbain, the STM mascot, and the team of facilitators on site took advantage of this meet and greet to approach attendees and make a friendly gesture by handing out flowers and other promotional items. |
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There to greet him at the gates is his sister who, not particularly believably, convinces him to spend a night in the old family home. |
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Once the speeches and waiata are completed, the tangata whenua will greet the manuhiri with a hongi, kihikihi or hand shake. |
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Winners, chosen by applause meter, will receive theatre tickets and a backstage visit to Théâtre Jean-Duceppe in Place des Arts to meet and greet actors Stéphane Bellavance and Guy Jodoin. |
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Murre colonies are very noisy places, as neighbouring birds quarrel in deep, growling guttural aargh calls, and mates greet each other in rattling crescendos. |
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It is my pleasure to greet you all, in your many capacities, with your political, administrative and associational responsibilities, and of course to say to Carlos Manuel Cesar how happy I am to be back here again. |
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But I'm afraid the king of smarm, Des Lynam, will be the first to greet you, writes Steve Palmer. |
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Our two dogs race to greet me and I make a fuss of them. |
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Check the tide tables for the area you like and be there to greet the fish. |
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These mouse potatoes greet every decision with derision while telling the world and his wife exactly where McClaren has got it wrong. |
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Crossing the threshold he encountered the tokonoma or alcove that is positioned to greet all who enter. |
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Mr Jeffries had run the clothing retailer since 1992, turning it into a brand known for tightfitting jeans and shirts and muscle-bound lads who greet customers at its stores. |
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It is about to greet the new millennium by forging a new internal order to replace the guiding light of Communism which it extinguished in 1991 after watching it burn for over 75 years. |
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Before you go to bed on New Year's Eve, you can greet the new year by cheering and making noises with your own cool-looking noisemaker. |
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Princess goes 'heehaw' to greet me and to tell me that she is still there. |
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Beaches strewn with driftwood and the odd sunseeker greet us at the shore. |
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Then excuse yourself to greet the next guest. |
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By now they had become old acquaintances, like friends we are used to seeing, whom we greet affectionately but whom we do not really look at, until one day when they shave off their mustache or straighten their nose! |
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A riveting talk, a meet and greet and schmooze with campus media. |
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There's no observation post and no facilities for visitors to do anything other than depart the airport or greet arrivals. |
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Even if he slept in some lonely hut he simply turned them loose at night, well knowing they would never go more than a few yards away and that in the early morning they would be waiting to greet him with a friendly nicker. |
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Roused from his hotel in Mandalay, and chartering a helicopter, he was on hand to greet and astonish the global travellers at their rice-paddy touch-down. |
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Liveried servants greet guests with glasses of champagne. |
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The UN Secretary-General did not greet us with polite and hackneyed words of thanks, no, he really read the riot act to Europe over its immigration policy. |
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Judi and Olav Falsnes' five white huskies from Inuvik have been ideal northern ambassadors, good-naturedly welcoming anyone who wanted to greet them. |
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The women, wearing long brightly-colored sequined dresses, greet the guests as the new arrivals remove their black cloaks, black headscarves and black face coverings. |
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Many cab steering wheels are marked with shiny depressions, where the drivers ceaselessly tap the horn in staccato bursts to warn off errant okada or simply to greet other motorists. |
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What would the lover's tryst without the park to greet him? |
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We would dress up in all sorts of costumes to greet our clients, and at key moments, we would all toot our whistles, which would cause quite a storm. |
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Outside Billy Tallon, the Queen Mother's Page of the Backstairs, went on an impromptu walkabout to greet members of the public. |
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And, of course, we all recall how readily Canadians reciprocated Her affection, when more than 100,000 people came to Parliament Hill to greet Her Majesty on Canada Day, making it the largest national party ever hosted there. |
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They will most likely be the ones to greet members who contact the office in person, by e-mail or telephone call, as they both work in the reception area. |
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With all due credit to upstanding statesmen like Mr Kohl and his ilk, fans should greet these barbarians at the gate with flowers, not pitchforks. |
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Tens of thousands of them filled a football stadium to greet his investiture with raucous cheers and a blaring Hallelujah Chorus. In this section Terrorism's body-blow at peace Who'll impose what on whom? |
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Vasconcelos said, 'Many taxi drivers greet visitors who get off the bus with offers of palm reading or transport to a bruja. |
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Two years after their UEFA EURO 2008 triumph, Spain were once again receiving the adulation of throngs of delirious supporters who gathered in Madrid to greet their victorious FIFA World Cup homecoming heroes. |
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Chris Scott and his side know that North Melbourne, Fremantle and Hawthorn greet them in the run home, so they must get the job done against the Giants. |
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Judging by the cries that greet the new single, King – likely to be the UK's No 1 on Sunday – more than a few people are here specifically to see them. |
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I also wish to greet the international experts and to thank them for agreeing to make their national and regional experience available to this process. |
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I would also of course like to greet all those at our conference. |
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It should therefore greet clients in both languages. |
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Laurel and Hardy were on hand to greet guests at the beginning of the evening. |
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When he finishes in Les Sables after 100 days at sea, all those that turn up to greet him will all be aware of the amazing feat the skipper of Safran has accomplished. |
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As such, many within the disability community greet this development with cautious optimism, hoping it is a sign of increasing dialogue and cooperation with the disability community with respect to all social policy. |
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Instead, you have to greet people in person every now and then. |
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As for aesthetics, hand-carved scrollwork and dentils that had been concealed over the years by paint or acoustic tile now greet the eye. |
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But otherwise, by and large, everyone is in the clear. You might expect a government that was up-ended by this affair to greet such exculpation with gasps of relief, if not joyous incredulity. |
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Electrotyped in the late 19th century, copies now greet visitors to the Victoria and Albert Museum's Silver Galleries. |
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In thinking over my childhood today and the way that I learned to greet people when they arrived and when they left, I would like to invite you to live the experience that we begin today, as an experience of God and in God. |
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The size of wall at which I do not greet the night but inch along after it sentencewise. |
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Finally, may I also say how delighted I am to greet the representatives of the diplomatic corps and many other partners who are taking part in the plenary. |
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When the cibolero returned to the plain, he was received with a fresh burst of vivas, and kerchiefs were waved to greet him. |
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Jon and Tyrion greet each other with the words that have been used against them as weapons, sharing a knowing smile. |
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Lifting a finger to greet is dangerous because it may make us feel guilty about not lifting a finger to help. |
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As they wander onto a heath, the Three Witches enter and greet them with prophecies. |
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Rather than continue his campaign, Vespasian decided to await further orders and send Titus to greet the new Emperor. |
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Gaily decorated native boats come out to greet them, but remembering Gama's experience, Cabral refuses to go ashore until hostages are exchanged. |
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Americans then believed that many men in Upper Canada would rise up and greet an American invading army as liberators. |
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Perhaps, in these circumstances, he would greet his granddaughter as a zayde should, with love and affection. |
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They gazed upon it with the enthusiasm that a naked Amazonian Indian might greet the sudden arrival of a tumble-drier in his wickiup. |
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Our hostess will greet you with a smile upon your arrival and direct you to the appropriate department, whether you're in need of mechanical repairs or a simple oil change. |
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In African countries when people meet and greet each other either they recognize what tribes they belong to or they ask them what their tribe is, whether it is Loma or Mandingo or whatever. |
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Candidate meet and greet evenings, like this one at Coady housing co-op in Ottawa South, were held in different cities across Canada as part of co-op housing's federal election effort. |
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And a record crowd was there to greet stars including Liv Tyler and Sir Ian McKellen as they brought the magic of Middle Earth to a damp and chilly London. |
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Even there, you see poker machines placed in the bar counter to greet you. |
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The First Minister is, though, the first to greet official visitors to Northern Ireland and shares the same title as their counterparts in Scotland and Wales. |
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When Augustine failed to rise to greet the second delegation of British bishops at the next meeting, Bede says the native bishops refused to submit to Augustine. |
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On just about any Saturday at The Pybus Market, ceramic artist Terry Porlier is at the south end of the building to greet you with his stoneware, porcelain and Raku pottery. |
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The clerk pauses to greet two bulkily clad, dot-faced women wary of crossing the slippery road, but ungallantly fails to raise his regulation top-hat. |
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There greet in silence, as the dead are wont, And sleep in peace. |
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Near the church sanctuary, the minister was both surprised and pleased to be able to greet Robert Schuller from the Crystal Cathedral in California. |
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No throngs of faithful followers greet him when he deplanes, though one or two always come up to say a word of thanks or to offer sympathy for his fight. |
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The library provided a place to greet old friends, while the foyer held the white sour cream wedding cake and the TCU Horned Frog purple groom's cake. |
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People have been invited to go to Castle Hill above Almondbury on Saturday August 1 to greet Lughnasadh which was the first harvest of the year in ancient times. |
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