Scene after scene I kept imagining some off-screen trainer with a grub in his hand, prodding Link to do his bidding. |
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We wrestled gamely with all this grub, but when the big beef platters hit the table, a few weaker souls threw in the towel. |
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The village was beautiful in a twee way, our room at the hotel was big and plush, and the restaurant welcomed Edward and served posh grub. |
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Beans and franks are fine for some but these staples of campfire grub don't have to make an appearance on your holiday menu. |
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The acclaimed barbecue provides more than your average grub, including griddled lobster and rotisserie poussin. |
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Squash any grub and, if the plant is worth saving, wash the roots and pot up into new compost. |
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More traditional grub, such as a cheese and onion pasty or Scotch egg, follows in the evening. |
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The menu boasts fairly traditional pub grub, but a specials board moves it into gastro-pub territory. |
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The grub at the bottom of one just wouldn't budge so, instead of doing something sensible, I grabbed a newer scrubbing brush. |
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No lawn means there's no lawn mower, no bags of crabgrass preventer or grub control. |
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That and the trailing grub help to hold the spinnerbait higher in the water column. |
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They took over a fish and chip shop, where they mugged and capered while the locals waited long-sufferingly for their grub. |
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Steak, kidney and Guinness pie is just one of a number of tasty and filling pub grub dishes featured on Sean's Irish Pub menu. |
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He was soaked and was in search of a cup of tea and some hot grub, so Anna took him to Bressigarth tea room, and they said their goodbyes. |
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Ever since we first discovered foreign food gastronomes have been rubbishing homegrown grub as fatty stodge. |
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The one thing to remember is not to eat the head, so the grub is held by that end and the remainder is nipped off. |
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Music, song, story and recitation flowed, while caterers saw no one went without a drink and grub. |
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It's not posh nosh, just slightly more upmarket pub grub, so anyone after a real culinary experience should perhaps steer clear. |
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And, in the sincere belief that artists know how to eat well, I was off again in search of grub that would make gourmets weep with joy. |
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Visitors also have a chance to taste tambelo, a grub that lives inside the bark of mangroves. |
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A caterpillar is the larva of a butterfly or moth A grub is the larva of a beetle, but this term too is used loosely. |
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I was at a friend's wedding, where the only grub on offer was a cheeseboard. |
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We were all admiring her British stiff upper lip as she gobbled down a witchetty grub as if it were a bar of chocolate. |
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Such devices include means to inspect cables and anchorages, locknuts, or grub screws for cross arms, pivots, etc. |
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Even if he had a hard race and he was beaten, where other horses would fade away and maybe go off their grub, he would actually thrive on it. |
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This here pub opens at noon on parade day to serve up Irish stew and other good grub, with live, lively Irish music. |
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There are plenty of restaurants and good pubs with good grub in the town and in nearby villages. |
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As for grub, you have your choice of a traditional snack bar, ice cream treats, hot dogs, pizza or a trip to the coffee bar. |
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The a la carte menu's gone and she now serves traditional, home-cooked grub. |
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I grabbed some grub and found a seat, settling in for a three-hour seminar on fundraising. |
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Apparently the place is loved in some circles for its heaping helpings of Greek grub. |
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The CDs were handed out with fast food grub as part of a joint initiative between the two companies. |
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Located near to the town centre, the monastically themed bar offers traditional pub grub from 12.30 pm to 2.45 pm. |
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Lemurs, meanwhile, are usually lefties when it comes to grabbing their grub. |
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He compliments her food but surely anything would taste good after prison grub. |
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If all you want is a plate of grub, there are lots of places you can get food where that's all you pay for. |
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She wasn't particularly bright, granted, but she was unassuming, fun, game for anything, fond of her grub and up for larks. |
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Sometimes only bubbles can be seen on the surface as they grub around the bottom for food. |
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It will do anything you could possibly want, if you are prepared to grub about in templates, add-ons, and configuration files. |
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The alternative is to grub out a well-established hedge and replace it with a fence, thereby losing habitat for birds and insects. |
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For a long time now the place has been well patronised by local ex-pats who are familiar with the noshery's location and the quality of its grub. |
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This is a clear attempt to scratch the itch of racism, homophobia and bigotry and pander to the culturally insecure in order to grub for votes. |
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Food shops line the outer edges selling, for a Brit, remarkably reassuring grub like sausage rolls, meat pies and fish and chips. |
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It's funny, in a way, at least if you overlook the fact that people's lives are being ruined so that he can grub a few more votes. |
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That's why he's willing to use them as an election-year football in order to grub votes from rednecks. |
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The shrimp and crab cakes and seafood gumbo, among many other possibilities, were tasty, but lines to get a look at the grub were plenty long. |
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More best of British grub came in the form of a porky charred Cumberland sausage served on smooth, fresh mash. |
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The bar menu sounded fine with all the usual pub grub favourites including steak pie, grills and fish dishes, but we decided to go for the extra elbow room in the restaurant. |
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Today the tool, described as combining an axe with either a mattock or grub hoe, is sold for gardening and clearing nature trails, as well as firefighting. |
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The bar sells a wonderful array of beers, cocktails and spirits, with an equally eclectic range of superior pub grub that includes pizza, curry and just about everything else. |
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A small kitchen serving good quality basic pub grub completes the menu. |
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Although it is not a food show, local grub plays a prominent part. |
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If a fence be an old bad one, grub it up and raise a new one. |
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He is a born loner used to corrupting words to grub a living. |
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A larva is an insect in a state of development lasting from the time of its leaving the egg until its transformation into a pupa, e.g. a grub or a caterpillar. |
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It has better beer than the Highgate, not to mention an attractive back garden, decent grub, brilliant staff and a proper old-fashioned atmosphere. |
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Then he orders some expensive grub, and a whole lotta liquor. |
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Instead of hoeing, some cultures use pigs to trample the soil and grub the earth. |
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John Romane, a short clownish grub, would bear the whole carcase of an ox, yet never tugged with him. |
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But beyond the lovely grub and the natty gadgets, and the gorgeous gifts and the tacky toys, there is a ghost at the feast. |
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If the wichity grub, water spider or greenback ant had decent lawyers, the makers of I'm A Celebrity. |
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Italian D'Acampo had to eat the foul fare, plus rhino beetles, a witchety grub and meal worms to win a slap-up dinner for his fellow campers. |
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And magnificent Matt's culinary courage proved that he who dares chew the witchety grub wins. |
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I mean a witchety grub, there must be something good in it, so why not eat it? |
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Fit Dutch chow down on the healthiest food based on nutrition and availability of grub, the Daily Star reported. |
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Despite their monkey suits, Si King and Dave Myers have no interest in putting on airs and graces as they continue cooking posh grub on a budget. |
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Nothing humbles an autocrat quite like the need to grub for votes. |
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Shoppers in Church Lane, Belfast, watched on in amazement as the gun-toting actors rifled through the Cornish Pastie shop for some grub. |
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The grub was plain, plentiful and I can still savour the suppers of Spillers hard tack biscuit, with cheese and a mug of hot sweet cocoa. |
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It is a paradise for seafood lovers and while it wouldn't be my first choice, my pescetarian pals ensured me the grub was top notch. |
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Thus, also, you pass from the lumpish grub in the earth to the airy and fluttering butterfly. |
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If critters such as armadillos and possums are digging up the landscape, that's a sign that grub worms and cutworms have infested the lawn. |
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The pension did not make him rich, but it ensured he would no longer have to grub around for the odd guinea. |
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This dish, even when cooked at home, may be thought of as an example of pub grub, meaning it is relatively quick and easy to make in large quantities. |
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Their fellow diners, like their ketchupped grub, were appropriately dashed and splattered with paint and plaster, reading their Suns and Daily Mirror. |
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It is a small black beetle with a short snout that does its greatest damage as a whitish grub living in the soil at the base of its host plant feeding on plant roots. |
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Making tasty and portable grub at home to take to work can be a lot healthier, cheaper and more appetising than buying a buttie from the high street, they promise. |
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But given their reputations for relentless cost cutting, it's only a matter of time before they discover the profit-boosting efficacies of grub nuggets and mealworm burgers. |
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However, when fish are feeding on tiny prey such as glass minnows or are simply in the mood for a subtle presentation, a split-tail grub is extremely effective. |
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They dawdled and did aerobatics and lollygagged lazily until grub got short, things got cold and no grownup birds magically appeared to save them. |
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I'm a fair judge, well used to the good grub and knacky manipulation of sauce and meat by my mother, who cooked at one time for Maud Gonne MacBride. |
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The Cockchafer, sometimes called the May Bug, is the commonest and has the largest grub of the six species, that can grow up to 50mm and has a big appetite to match. |
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No longer will Grub Street scribblers have to stare wild-eyed out the window not knowing where the next sentence is coming from. |
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Many of these writers worked in the shadowy borderland between Academia, Bohemia, and Grub Street. |
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Meanwhile, literary hacks and Grub Street writers produced popular pot boilers for the masses. |
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Walpole's hegemony inevitably drew the full fire of Grub Street on his personal position. |
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He shows how Venice in the sixteenth century had its own Grub Street, like London in the seventeenth and Paris in the eighteenth century. |
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In the Grub Street of the twenty-first century, books are traded on less and less material, and almost never on complete manuscripts. |
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But Grub Street, where Gray is concerned, is in shouting distance of Arcadia. |
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To be sure, there's a lot of cobbling going on in the cyber Grub Street but that's the price we pay for mass production. |
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This is also an envy free zone because I am so far removed from Grub Street with its horrible toxins. |
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Also, and perhaps most importantly, she posed no threat to the denizens of Grub Street. |
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Real-estate expert Julian Hitchcock told Grub Street he expects to see more chain restaurants pop up in New York. |
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Our enthusiastic waitron, Shano, had not been briefed about the Sterling Light Lager Pub With Grub competition so we filled him in then ordered drinks. |
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His line was that there are people living like parasites in Grub Street while other clean-limbed, honourable fellows are trying to improve the world. |
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With the passive agreement of the American press, she managed to escape the attention of the American paparazzi and the US equivalent of Grub Street hacks. |
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Cameron is a good-looking swine and this makes the ageing gargoyles of Grub Street liverish. |
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It was Grub Street literature that was most read by the public during the Enlightenment. |
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We are extremely excited to bring Gamer Grub to market and to launch at North America's premiere video game event, E for All. |
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After an hour, we approach the historical hotel and restaurant Baren in Grub which has been offering hospitality for five hundred years. |
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Upon the occasion of his first publication he quit his day job, only to find that Grub Street wasn't lined with manors and villas but hovels and slums. |
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