A scattering of greying heads among the youngsters in the crowd show it's striking a chord with those who were there the first time around. |
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By the way, wasn't it obvious that Ray didn't have his hairdresser with him to colour his greying hair? |
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Even so, I wouldn't be averse to a little greying at the sides, giving me a certain distinguished appearance. |
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There's been a lot written recently of the greying of the Canadian population. |
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In his late fifties, his sandy-coloured hair is greying and a thick grey beard accentuates his rounded face. |
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I may be two stone heavier and my hair may be greying, but I've been training for a while now, and was pretty confident I'd be up to speed. |
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Standing bang there overlooking the mirror, he cursed himself, his prematurely greying lock of hair. |
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His greying hair was plastered to his head, and droplets of water ran slowly down his crooked nose, hanging from the end. |
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He described the burglar as stocky with a beer belly, aged 50 to 55, about 5ft 7ins tall with greying hair with dark roots. |
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Beside him sat a jovial fellow in his late forties or early fifties, with dark greying hair which was cropped short on the sides. |
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She looked understandably anxious, her pale face whiter than her greying hair which flopped towards her eyes. |
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When hair starts greying prematurely, it can cause a great deal of anxiety and hopelessness. |
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He's greying, but in a distinguished manner, at the temples and behind the ears. |
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I have a moustache and dark, greying hair and lots of designer stubble this time. |
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His black hair was slightly greying and his leathery face well worn and he seemed quite content to sit on the grass, letting the day pass him by. |
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He appears to be in a vigorous middle age, his black hair greying at the temples. |
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As is befitting of a 46-year-old, he looks more like a greying chartered accountant than a radical firebrand. |
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The greying greenery of the landscape shows that the past summer brought adequate rainfall, particularly for grass and small bush vegetation. |
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Ma came breezing out in some jeans and a T-shirt, her greying hair in waves around her face. |
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Now he was a greying elder, spectacled in thick bifocals, wrinkled in his once handsome features, and knotted and veined in limbs. |
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Martin may have been vilified, but with his greying hair and creaky limbs, he is a pussycat in comparison to triggerhappy Barras. |
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Especially when the greying crims could only be called hard-bitten if they'd managed to apply their denture fixative that morning. |
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Sweeping back his mane of greying hair, the former Boomtown Rats singer shook his head. |
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His greying hair was styled in a comb-over, his brown eyes glowing with kindness. |
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Fade up to a hospital room, greying white walls, a single bed with a little table beside it and a large TV set in the corner, a cardiac monitor blipping away quietly. |
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And the attendant was a thin greying geezer, way past retirement. |
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Spectacles held together with Elastoplast and a curry-smeared tie helped round out the character, as did a pair of greying slacks and lilac shirt that clashed violently. |
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Alice settled in a refugee camp in Kenya, a greying barfly drinking gin and Coke. |
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Between the bushy eyebrows and the unruly thatch of greying hair are two pronounced squiggles that evince a sceptical outlook on humanity. |
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The 36-year-old musician, his crinkly curls prematurely greying, his mouth fast to resolve into a smile, is not bragging. |
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It imparts very good greying resistance to melamine laminates and possesses very good high-temperature yellowing resistance in paper laminates. |
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She ordered wine from a boss-eyed kid behind the bar who had a strange patch of greying hair at the back of his head like he'd fallen asleep against a blackboard. |
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He purred and mewed, his greying whiskers giving his face the appearance of a Cheshire cat. |
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Mr Hunt hardly mentions the far bigger crisis in the NHS: unaffordable rising demand from Britain's greying population. |
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A greying population means growing demand for medicines to treat chronic diseases. |
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They are characterised by a greying population and a historical legacy that weighs heavily on the quality of the environment. |
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Indeed, like many western European countries, the Netherlands currently has to deal with an increasingly greying population. |
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Early on, one of the research projects put its finger on the cause of greying. |
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About 3 o'clock, when the sky was imperceptibly greying towards dawn, they broke out into the normal dawn bombardment. |
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Mr President, as a visibly greying member of the population I have a considerable interest in this debate, as do many others in this House. |
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On the one hand the current secondary school workforce is greying. |
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The day was just on the turn, a little patch of greying twilight here and there, a few over cautious drivers punctuating the steady procession with dipped beams. |
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He was a middle aged man of Chinese origin, his hair greying at the roots and his body starting the road to terminal shutdown many years from then. |
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And when they hit 50, biology kicks in, propelling the greying Lotharios to either fall back in love with their wives or start over again with a younger trophy wife. |
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There was no doubt in my mind that he'd have a toothbrush moustache, his hair plastered back, a fifties dinner jacket, with a dickie bow, and greying temples. |
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At 43, in a blue button-down shirt, with a greying goatee and gentle, unfocused eyes, he looks like any middle-aged man in a Toronto hotel restaurant. |
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His dark hair was greying and his face was careworn and weary. |
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The feminisation of poverty has long been a cause for concern and the greying of Europe necessitates urgent policy attention to improve women's economic empowerment over the life course. |
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Women notice everything and they will be much more impressed with crisp white boxers or jockey shorts than a greying old woolly pair. |
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Effects for prolonged Exposure: Chronic mercury poisoning results in nervous irritability, weakness, tremors, gengivitis, erethism and greying of lens of the eye. |
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When I consider my suppurating private life: my greying hair, my body's abandonment of anything resembling skin tone, I'd have thought I was wracked with, say, inoperable despair, but it isn't so. |
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There is no scientific confirmation to support this, only the opinion of someone whose greying hair gives him a certain ease in expressing himself. |
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Across the region, governments have failed to keep people over 55 in the workforce, an urgent problem because ex-communist populations are greying fast. |
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Whereas China is already greying, Vietnam's post-war baby-boomers are now coming into their prime, and rapid economic growth has been providing jobs for them all. |
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Mr Lota, who lives in Laburnum Grove, Warwick is described as being Asian, 5ft 11ins, slim with short, greying hair. |
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If they are married, their pension entitlements often depend on their husbands' earnings. Japan, which started greying earlier than other developed economies, can be viewed as an ominous precedent. |
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If access were restricted to small independent fishers or those new to the industry, this could stop corporate concentration and bring fresh blood into a greying fisheries population. |
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As more retirees kick up their feet, there will be a shortage of workers unless businesses invest in recruiting and retaining their greying staff. |
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The priority accorded to the greying of the population has paid little attention to the role of rural women in renewing the generations and offering new incentives to keep the rural population on the land. |
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Much attention has been given to greying boomers and, while the actions of that segment will affect profoundly the next decade, younger generations will experience change in an unprecedented fashion. |
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The myth of the greying forty-something male has had its day. |
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The city centre accommodates primarily a population with a high representation of university education individuals and high-status professions, and wherein a certain greying bourgeoisie segment remains strongly present. |
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In his greying vest, worn-out jeans and scruffy donkey jacket, Les Battersby is hardly a picture of sartorial elegance. |
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It will be larger and more lasting than expected, and is hitting the European economies at a moment that the expected risk of the greying population needed to be answered. |
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