All in all he harboured only minor concerns, and these occupied only a small part of him as a whole. |
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Let us have a grown-up discussion, unclouded by the infantile resentment of the USA harboured by Chris Davies and other assorted Europhiles. |
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She had harboured a hope that she could still get back together with Jake, but all hopes of that were dead and buried six feet under right now. |
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If there was anything he harboured a passion for, it was that universal boyhood dream of becoming a footballer. |
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One police source said it was because they harboured deep mistrust of authority, but mostly because of fear. |
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This 16 th-century coaching inn, in the characterful market town of Pickering, once harboured smugglers moving salt from Whitby to York. |
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Historically, the right harboured desires to keep the white working class below stairs. |
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The prosecution proposed that Mr Gassy had harboured feelings of resentment and anger towards Dr Tobin for her part in his deregistration. |
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Jafta said a 45-year-old woman who harboured the three fugitives during their time on the run was also arrested. |
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A flagship Glasgow store would be a snub to Edinburgh which had harboured dreams of attracting the company. |
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Many Quebecois harboured a deep-seated hatred of the English, the people who had dominated them for over 200 years. |
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In February 1992, Rabbi Shach, himself an eminent Rabbi, branded the Lubavitcher Rebbe as a heretic, who harboured messianic pretensions. |
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And any benign thoughts my party may have harboured evaporated when our scheduled, relatively short sail took more than four hours to complete. |
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The girl who once called herself Jill Blando always harboured a sense of puzzlement that people found her clever, talented and beautiful. |
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Anemones, bubble corals, soft tree corals, sea cucumbers and cushion stars harboured tiny shrimps and crabs, while seahorses lurked among algae. |
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The new images showed further details of what scientists believe is the rocky bed of an ancient lake that may have once harboured life. |
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The scaffold harboured stromal cells that had been genetically engineered to release EPO, a protein used for treating anemia. |
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Residual moisture often harboured in the joints and crevices of wooden boats can be dried with hot air before painting. |
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But any nerves harboured by them were swiftly expunged with a brace of gift-wrapped goals against adversaries who were lethargic, lacklustre and terribly out of sorts. |
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The larvae of the parasite are harboured by snails and infect humans who bathe in or come in contact with infested waters. |
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These widespread notions were undeniably important, but they harboured, one imagines, their share of contradictions and matters left unsaid. |
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But some of them harboured Arab nationalist and tribalist arrogance, and others a zeal and will without shari'a aims. |
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However, six farms of twenty screened, harboured susceptible populations of strongyles. |
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In Norse mythology, Yggdrasil was an enormous ash tree that harboured all the life in the universe. |
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And several sea duck species also fed on numerous small organisms harboured by the eelgrass ecosystem. |
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Like many actors, Fassbender, who sings and plays guitar and keyboards in the film, admits he once harboured fantasies of rock stardom. |
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Its deep canyons and dense pine forests have harboured narcos and hidden plantations of marijuana and opium poppies for decades. |
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Although she harboured doubts when she presented her findings to her superiors, they recognised what she had found, and moved quickly. |
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More than three aggressors out of four were known to have harboured animosity toward their targets at the time of the shooting. |
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It did not, however, have the latest 'very long-range' aircraft needed to reach the Black Pit, which harboured packs of U-boats ready to attack. |
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The Lombrives cavern, which for a short time harboured Monségur's treasure, became, almost a century later, the last Tabor of Pyrenean Catharism. |
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My delegation is aware of the fears harboured by some Member States relating to the implementation of the concept. |
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Mention has already been made of the role of stormwater in providing habitat for mosquitoes and pathogens harboured by them. |
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What kind of violence has he or she harboured against parents or relatives? |
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The doctors had been aware that he harboured violent delusions. |
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There is no reason to think she or her father harboured any resentment. |
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Remarkably this German woman, Frau Fuchs, and her husband, an ambulance driver, not only took them in but harboured them until the Russians entered Dresden. |
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But if I ever harboured doubts about why I stayed with the project for this long, then they were blown away completely by the sublime moment last Wednesday. |
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But any nerves harboured by Hibernian were swiftly expunged with a brace of gift-wrapped goals against adversaries who were lethargic, lacklustre and terribly out of sorts. |
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Although the world title had brought him wealth and prestige in his home country, he secretly harboured grave doubts about the Communist system that he represented. |
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Spirit will spend the next three months searching for evidence of past water in the soil and rocks, which if found may heighten the likelihood that Mars once harboured life. |
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Instead, I wish good luck to the club that once harboured my second favourite player outside George Best, England's greatest marksman, Jimmy Greaves. |
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The gunman, Man Haron Monis, who also died, was a self-styled sheik who harboured deep grievances against the Australian government and sought to align himself Isis extremists. |
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He harboured a childhood ambition to be a ballet dancer but instead joined the Royal Air Force and the Merchant Navy as a teenager. |
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After completing medical studies at the behest of his father, who was a doctor, Berlioz rebelliously pursued music and literature, for which he had harboured passions since childhood. |
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The docks, which once harboured tall ships, now harbour only petty thieves. |
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I told him that although I'd harboured ambitions of going to San Siro, I'd probably left it too late now and so I'd end up watching it on the TV at home. |
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Any residual cynicism I may have harboured vanishes in the first 500 yards of my first lap of the sinuously scenic Ascari raceway in southern Spain. |
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And just as it would not have made sense to shut up the high street because it harboured some thieves and rogues, it would make no sense to combat cybercrime by stopping all internet commerce even assuming it could be done. |
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The halo effect of the James Bond movies may also have something to do with it, which is odd given that until comparatively recently the senior ranks of 007's employer harboured a nest of Soviet spies. |
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One of the chromosomes, chromosome 10 according to the recent international nomenclature from the Leishmania Genome Project, harboured the gp63 genes coding for a protease involved in parasite virulence. |
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The Office has not taken a comprehensive physical inventory of non-expendable property because it has harboured serious doubts with regard to the practicality and utility of these comprehensive exercises. |
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This policy reflects the earnest desire of the Vietnamese people, who have always harboured peace but have suffered great losses from wars, and who therefore desire peace not only for themselves but also for mankind. |
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Mills had harboured Derby aspirations for his pounds 100,000 recruit, but a suspensory ligament injury put paid to that. |
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The regular army, which delivered training to the Non-Permanent Militia, harboured a great many former British soldiers who had decided to serve in Canada after their British army contracts expired. |
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For several years now, I have harboured the idea of bringing together a collection of those works which touched me most particularly or which played an important part in my career as a musician. |
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He had mixed feelings about the concept of freedom, whose import from the West was a major issue among intellectuals at the time, for, so he complained, it harboured unavoidable constraints of unfreedom. |
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Those in power harboured a disaffection for Highlanders and their culture, and thought to resolve the issue by eliminating their language. |
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European work for the family went quietly about its daily task, but that daily routine built up the edifice of the grand plan we harboured, brick by brick. |
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From January 1931 it was headed by Ernst Röhm, who harboured radical anticapitalist notions and dreamed of building the SA into Germany's main military force. |
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The paper said that this would also help overcome the complexes harboured by those who swore only by languages from elsewhere, considering their own as mere dialects or patois. |
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While Norway, Germany, Poland and Iceland harboured the largest surviving populations, pockets of reproducing pairs remained in several other countries. |
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