Tying it secure, he thanked the Lord his head was devoid of hair, not having to worry about a bad hair day. |
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Bucks had complained vigorously for having to recall their players who had already gone on holiday for the league recess. |
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I followed Charlie across the room, having to make several stops that required us to make air kisses and comment on the weather. |
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This corset was largely a favor to Jeff, who was sick of having to lace me into things. |
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Imagine having access to a car whenever you need it, but without the hassle of registration, insurance and having to find regular parking space. |
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Thermals save a flyer from having to use precious stamina on wingstrokes to gain altitude. |
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They'll share all this, like winos sharing a bottle of Ripple, without having to get your consent. |
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The back-stabbing in Beverly Hills and having to churn out sitcoms on a conveyor belt did not agree with him. |
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I went for a nice meal with my parents yesterday before having to catch the train home. |
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I recall having to manhandle a heavy garden statue of Hermes, cast in lead, which we had been asked to look after while the owners moved house. |
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It also prevents device driver writers from having to handle recursive interrupts, which complicate programming. |
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Yesterday was a joyful day for anyone whose political alignments weren't causing them indigestion over what they were having to digest. |
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To this practical problem was added another having to do with ideological redefinitions of gender. |
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I find it frustrating having to constantly stop, help, then regather my thoughts to push on with the project I'm completing. |
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I figured everyone else was in the know so I didn't want to come across as an idiot by having to ask. |
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I have a good friend who knows just about everything having to do with airlines and flight schedules. |
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Several passengers were thrown from the carts, with four having to be airlifted to hospital. |
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Directors can get a five-year stay and a work permit, renewable and without having to leave the country. |
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A floor so clean you could sprawl on it without having to coat yourself in spilled booze or cigarette ash. |
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He said he felt sorry for the council refuse workers having to deal with the waste. |
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In a period of 10 years, 18,000 modest citizens of Russia and Ukraine have undergone treatment in Cuba without having to pay a single kopeck. |
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He can then try making an exact likeness without having to worry about being too concerned about how good looking it is. |
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More than half of cancer patients requiring an urgent referral are having to wait longer than two months. |
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The wraparound mortgage is a creative way to allow a buyer to purchase property without having to qualify for a loan or to pay closing costs. |
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Deacon wriggled out of having to make a decision by setting up a group with very limited powers. |
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Replacing software without having to reformat data or change hardware would also be possible. |
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The Prime Minister is having to draw on his last reserves of personal conviction, and convince us that he is levelling with the country. |
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As a result of having to master so many different tasks, business owners should refresh their managerial skills regularly. |
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Your poor pal has just made a terrifying investment and, as you say, is having to shell out for new furnishings and other bits and bobs. |
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All of us in the band are having to learn about this showbiz malarkey as we go along. |
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You might end up having to pay a fine for not having your car properly taxed, and then you might reverse into somebody else's car. |
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Our own cares and concerns suddenly melt when one sees what others are sometimes having to endure. |
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Little white lies could save someone's feelings and prevent them from having to face bitter truths. |
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I would hate having to carry him after the fuss I made about not babying him anymore. |
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You know how to tell a boy baby from a girl baby without having to look at their genitalia? |
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We want to try to make it up to our subscribers for the anxiety and the hassle of having to exchange their tickets. |
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He thanked the players and manager for making time to attend before having to rush off to training. |
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The police must have felt overwhelmed and would naturally need to taser the groom or risk having to use deadly force instead. |
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Dalgleish's retirement makes him the latest in a long line of jockeys having to admit that their avoirdupois is just too great a burden. |
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The clean-up operation took weeks to complete, with pollutants having to be tankered away for specialist disposal. |
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Like other closed systems of thought, Hegel's philosophy avails itself of the dubious advantage of not having to allow any criticism whatsoever. |
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The company brilliantly captures the feel of the master's writing without having to resort to big dresses and gleaming samovars. |
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Retailers can examine the till takings in a branch across the city, without having to lay a cable out there. |
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These disruptions included blocking of thoughts, insomnia, having to stop what she was doing, and embarrassment. |
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The judge said he could take the stand and testify without having to talk or be cross-examined about those alleged armed robberies. |
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A family of five are having to live in one hotel room after a fire gutted their home. |
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It's bad enough having to gnaw on the inedible beef au jus and starchy carrot sticks. |
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The good news is that there's a lot boaters can do to conserve fuel on their own, without having to trade in their ski boats for sailboats. |
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He did not have the luxury of slow-motion replays to examine at his leisure, but was faced with having to make an instant decision. |
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How can I learn to slow my brain down enough to read a book instead of having to do audiobooks? |
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It has been suggested that having to swipe off a safety catch before you fire can be fatally slow. |
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Solid defending from Kate Bugg and Amy Bowler kept attacks on the goal to a minimum with Emma Rowley having to make only two saves in the match. |
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Operating on 6 volts, this light provides 60 lumens of brightness to identify and target, and can subdue suspects without having to fire a shot. |
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Staff were having to lug heavy oxygen tanks up and down and there was a problem with taking food up for patients. |
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The Atkins diet cuts out carbohydrates and boosts consumption of protein without having to avoid fatty foods. |
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But in this day and age, the very idea of any woman having to wait to be asked is intriguing to say the least. |
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I love him dearly but could never contemplate having to live with him twenty four hours a day seven days a week every day of the year. |
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How did your client manage to assign the lease without having to show the assignee's solicitors what was in the lease? |
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They are also having to battle with the dangers of congestion from the sheer volume of traffic created by the morning and afternoon school runs. |
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But, as things stand, I am having to rely on my parents for financial assistance. |
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Indeed, many economies have found themselves having to tighten, rather than loosen, fiscal policy in response to economic slowdown. |
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He can, however, and should spare you having to deal with the lookie-loos because of your feelings on the matter. |
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Some people were having to take their excess rubbish to the municipal waste depot at Thornton-le-Dale. |
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However, Kennelly says those who want to just flirt with the trend can get the look without having to splash much cash. |
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The drawing here gives an artist's impression of how grumpy I am, having to sit in my broken chair. |
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The industry makes lots of money, without having to worry at all about the quality of film as an art form. |
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In the old world, the worst the whips faced was having to push a slurring MP through the right division lobby. |
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The program allows you to customize your user interface without having to root the device. |
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He speaks about penguins having to cease making their rookeries and nests when the wind gusts are really strong. |
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She said she could not even imagine having to live through what she experienced in prison on a long-term basis. |
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But it will be nice to be able to sit back and enjoy the show without having to worry about every little detail. |
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Across the area, event organisers are having to face the consequences of an increasingly litigious society. |
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He apologizes, not wanting to be considered a Rodomont, for having to mention his military exploits again. |
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She is still having to eat liquidised food, but we have been told by doctors she should make a good recovery. |
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In the rural crafts tent, Margaret White was almost having to fight off customers interested in her hand-carved rocking horses. |
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When he reaches rock bottom, Jim faces the possibility of having to send his children to stay with relatives. |
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An anxious headteacher has told how she was having to rob Peter to pay Paul in a bid to try to balance the books at her school. |
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That meant having to hide the cameras to capture footage of the police and military roadblocks that are a common sight across Mexico. |
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The combination of dry bread and endless cheese leads to the diner having to chew away at the food for, oh, several hours. |
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Campaigners have claimed victory in their battle to stop Witham's unemployed having to travel to other towns to sign on. |
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These days, it is questions like these that Chileans are having to ask themselves. |
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And it means that you can move from right-hand drive to left-hand drive without having to make great changes to the car. |
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I'm having to eat it it with my hands now and I'm making a right mess of my keyboard, oh yes. |
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Pip and Lynn were wearing riding habits, Pip complaining grouchily about having to wear skirts, even split ones. |
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The main thing now is that 90 per cent of all lifeboatmen are not seamen traditionally and we are having to train people from the very start. |
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Basic assumptions are having to be revisited, old arguments dredged up, canonical material critically scoured. |
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Well, let me tell you, if I lose this contract after all the work that I'm having to do, then they will be making a mistake. |
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One big daily newspaper here refused to take my colleague's call because she was having to reverse the charges. |
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We ended up having to reverse to do our station work, causing us a slight but necessary delay. |
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But having to break into America certainly is annoying, and it is sort of something I've got a chip on my shoulder about. |
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It has left residents across the city having to retune their equipment to be able to watch a video or satellite channels. |
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The leg rope allows people to fall off surfboards without having to swim to shore to retrieve rock-damaged foam and fibreglass. |
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I wasn't having to stop and count leger lines, and I was managing to maintain something of a pace through it. |
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He expressed his annoyance at the council having to employ a consultant from Britain to advise them. |
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We did not take any pleasure in having to drag the process out until we got the answers we all required. |
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It veers slightly to one side, so I end up with my left shoulder aching after a while of constantly having to correct it. |
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I can't imagine driving alone on the interstate and needing to stop at a rest area and having to use a mixed-sex bathroom! |
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Union bosses are angry that support staff are having to reapply for their jobs at a troubled Bolton school. |
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Instead, he respecified his project at a level of abstraction that escaped having to decide between the two. |
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The intent, of course, is to accomplish the mission without having to resort to lethal force. |
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He faces the significant challenge of having to battle for the puck along the boards against 220-pound defensemen. |
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I can see him having to go to college at the end of his A levels to resit them. |
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On several of the satellites, we wound up having to re-attach the wire leads in order to make good contact. |
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It was by far the busiest bar and restaurant in town, and smokers weren't resentful about having to take regular trips outside. |
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The relaxation of the offside law, for example, means players having to cover more ground at a greater pace. |
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Bachelor life also presented various pitfalls such as having to contend with laundries that insisted on ironing his socks. |
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The organization wants access to a permanent stream of money without having to seek constant replenishment from council. |
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Even in the mixed teams, it's the girls that are squabbling and always having to have the last word. |
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In record time we had changed and were repacking our bags having to leave behind all except the bare essentials. |
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Mistakes would happen, and he might lose time in the field by having to reorder the part. |
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Because of my lapse of memory this morning and the resultant disappointment of having to get up, I have a plan. |
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Fortunately for this judge, international law precludes having to render a verdict on this fiery French citizen. |
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Being sapiosexual often means having to deal with talking with and dating quite a few people that you don’t really connect with. |
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We observed ambulances heading to the hospital having to go very slowly through traffic. |
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Roman troops experienced the humiliation of having to walk like slaves under a yoke of spears after their defeat at the Caudine Forks. |
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For the uninitiated, this book is the closest thing to getting one's sea legs without ever having to leave shore. |
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You know it was bad enough in therapy having to relive my childhood but this is so much worse. |
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Moreover, in social terms he has had to bear a burden the others could not even remotely contemplate having to carry. |
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A school is having to fork out to buy security cameras after yobs broke in and embarked on a spree of vandalism. |
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The professional clubs come in at the third round and this time it will be an open draw, with the amateurs not having to play away. |
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If it comes to me having to totally sell out and bow down, I don't think I'll do it. |
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The Bob the Builder CD has been banished from the car and Akra Jr is having to listen to some of Mummy's music for a change. |
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The system will be one tram short when the stop opens so they are having to bring a tram over from Cologne especially. |
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His voice was dripping with what can only be described as a yinzer's indignation at having to deal with a nincompoop. |
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This will possibly lead to rural clubs having to amalgamate to field a team. |
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Capable of using large amounts of data, without having to be carried over a shoulder or being recharged more than once a day. |
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However, I can resent having to wade through a piece only to come to the end and find nothing of value was said. |
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She made her character seem plausible, despite having to play scenes where she was attacked by yetis. |
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The union works with the Dept. of Labor to provide direct entry into an apprenticeship program without having to be wait-listed. |
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They walk a short distance and enjoy a normal school life without having to worry about the abominable weather, let alone the wind. |
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The first time I went in there I could barely walk and I was having to use walking sticks. |
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The other drawback to having to go to a gym today is that I now have to run out tomorrow which, according to my wallchart, is a rest day. |
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The real punishment is having to sit in prison and watch a TV movie about what a screwed-up freak you are. |
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Freya thought about having to entertain guests every night for an indefinite period of time. |
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There's a huge difference in being a second banana all your career and in being the No.1 option having to adapt to a secondary role. |
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I would have no qualms about people having to take an oath of allegiance on entering the country. |
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It's rotten having to wash in salt water as the soap won't lather in the slightest although it is supposed to be salt water soap. |
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I hated not being able to have a wash, get wet clothes dry and having to walk in mud every day. |
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We will look for more washable fabrics, rather than having to dry-clean with all those dangerous chemicals. |
|
This saved me the trouble of having to source components to squeeze into the case, allowing me to simply customise what we needed. |
|
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Police marksmen are having to make more and more split second decisions on whether to shoot an apparently armed person to protect the public. |
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Walker recalls the major pitfall of starting a new business is having to learn accountancy. |
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They're playing a kind of light jazz, something lively to listen to without having to know the words. |
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We were distressed by the sight of children having to fetch and carry water from a watering hole. |
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The Lewis Revolving Rifle puts the game way off balance giving you six quick-fire shots before having to reload. |
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They are having to ensure that their evidence is more watertight than that which would be expected in a court of law. |
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What a relief that must have been, not having to tie yourself up for life just because you wanted to go all the way. |
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He handled it really well for a man who doesn't have children, is not used to having to think about money and employs a cleaner. |
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Frankly, I could quite happily live the rest of my life never having to contend with that experience again. |
|
They knew he would never jettison anyone short of an attacking pirate, but he did not like having to cater to his former competitor. |
|
She now faces the prospect of having to wean her young boy off a powerful drug, not knowing how he will react. |
|
Young men going out to work were having to stay longer if they were to acquire rural assets. |
|
Imagine getting a door slab, an unassembled door jamb, hinges and door hardware and having to do all the mortising, drilling, rabbeting on site. |
|
Anything having to do with ghosts, curses, eerie phenomena, and unexplained events in ballparks or associated with baseball teams is welcome. |
|
Prevention of disease certainly seems cheaper than having to give remedial therapy afterward. |
|
Cleave is left facing a tragedy and having to come to terms with things failed and half done. |
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I'm having to change phone numbers along with addresses, and the new number won't be active until Saturday morning. |
|
I will certainly never be late again, even if it means having to pack an overnight bag and travel by ScotRail the night before. |
|
Book authors write longer paragraphs without having to give the reader a rest. |
|
I feel like a welcomer at Disneyland, having to stand and smile while untutored children kick my ankles and throw over-priced snack foods at me. |
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As I was watching the money add up I realised I was having to invoke some serious self control. |
|
Because of problems with radiotherapy machines, some patients were having to wait 12 weeks for treatment after first seeing the radiotherapist. |
|
Faced with having to give them a head-start of 7, he called it evens and had them starting at scratch instead. |
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She would be prepared to keep her child out of school in September rather than put her through the upset of having to switch schools again. |
|
No ballet dancer should be in the position of having to unlearn eight years of poor training. |
|
The Tamora is a car in which to enjoy cross country treks without having to push it to the limits of adhesion. |
|
The Admiral remembers all too clearly returning from long Cold War submarine patrols, and having to queue on a rainswept jetty to use a phone. |
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This means it will be difficult for the salary raise to go through without some departments having to make other cutbacks. |
|
She's pushing 83 and having to parent her alcoholic daughter all over again. |
|
Excellent, a whole meal of stomach butterflies, jumpy heartbeats, racing pulses, and having to watch my step. |
|
He pocketed the penultimate race even after having to re-round the starting mark as he had jumped the start. |
|
He glanced back to where his wife was having to use her hands sometimes to scrabble up the steep climb, eyes intent on the rock face. |
|
But something about having to legislate those rules of fair play rankles me. |
|
I was fed up of having to avoid certain foods and when I finished the chicken I felt guilty. |
|
Sharon Leach wrote in the Sunday Observer of the agonies of having to do without water, and she knows whereof she speaks. |
|
The reason why they are having to claim this is because the Government prevents asylum seekers from working. |
|
I am sick of all the whingers writing in and complaining about having to pay a few pounds to park. |
|
She said they were saving the county council from having to landfill a tonne of material every two months. |
|
None of this is to say that I relish the idea of having to pay more money for school. |
|
This in turn may lead to possibly having to make more products later at higher marginal costs. |
|
|
Despite taking on water and having to bail all the way, the trip took only a week. |
|
So the refugees are having to swap some of their meager food ration for other vital supplies that they are not given. |
|
Visitors are reporting all hotels full, with many people having to stay as far afield as Preston and even Chesterfield. |
|
Bennett ends up having to turn his music down, recharge her van's flat battery, and become her reluctant carer. |
|
He is the only person who understands me and can read me like a book without having to turn to page one. |
|
I have found that even small text is readable without having to put your dial right up to the screen. |
|
For an estate agent, having to talk a house down instead of up goes against the grain, admits Craig Grantham. |
|
He was also not put off by the very grown up thought of having to set up his own business. |
|
Or having to push past leather-faced French women and their yappy dogs on the Croisette at 7am. |
|
So we're in the pleasant position of not having to ask anyone for money to support our blogging habit, whoops, I mean to support our blogging. |
|
Longer term, it may mean the couple's children having to readjust to having parents who are famous again. |
|
I am aghast with horror that at this late stage in the day, we are still having to have this argument. |
|
The only good news was that I was able to scooch the wine cooler out of the way, without having to remove all 30 odd bottles of wine. |
|
They now face the prospect of having to clear up their home for a second time when the floods eventually go down. |
|
Epitomizing Sokurov's ambivalence, the narrator scoffs at the film's climactic ballroom dance yet expresses regret at having to leave. |
|
Friends were genuinely surprised when he went through with the challenge, and now those who sponsored him are having to pay up. |
|
With two reams, he wouldn't have to worry about running out in the middle of a good part and having to get up to run to the store. |
|
Imagine putting on your make-up and not having to reapply it for three days. |
|
She had been unable to cope with the humiliation of having to wear a worn out pair of tennis shoes to school. |
|
Disruption is inevitably compounded by having to rearrange the team to change positions and adjust tactics, rather than make a straight swap. |
|
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Once Hathaway took the directing reins, he found himself having to improvise with the script on a daily basis. |
|
Mathematicians have developed algorithms for finding the roots of polynomial equations without having to plot graphs and locate where curves cross the x axis. |
|
I don't like having to reveal personal information when I fill in a job application. |
|
I wish we could just discuss these questions without having to go through all the folderol of a formal meeting. |
|
Attending a Mile High event is akin to being abruptly thrown into an ongoing play and having to adjust your behavior accordingly. |
|
In the winter, they can shield drivers from the annoyance of having to wipe snow and ice off their windshields. |
|
He was treated like an immigrant, working for minimum wage, missing his family and having to move on from his musical career. |
|
Of course it does mean the governor is having to backtrack on yet another pledge he made. |
|
That means visiting Fargo each week from the comforts of your bedroom without having to run any cables from the living room. |
|
A bad day for Mark Francis would involve having to take public transport and having the crusts left on his bread. |
|
We contemplated having to prusik back up the narrow pitch, should the wallows be impassable, and soon persuaded ourselves to leave it for another day. |
|
And therefore I was absolved from having to get up at a ridiculous time and then pay ten pounds for breakfast given that I'd already taken part in the ritual. |
|
Southgate probably represents an area of riverfront settlement providing quayage for boats without them having to travel further upriver to Fybridge. |
|
I remember having to lecture to a group at the Windows on the World up at the very top there, and just being terrified the entire time because my acrophobia went to red alert. |
|
The sport Minister was not put out at having to wait over an hour for the world heavyweight boxing champion to appear at last week's press conference. |
|
Was Franklin only charged with mishandling classified material because a more serious charge would also involve having to charge the guy who put him up to it? |
|
I am about to become an old age pensioner, and am having to jump through hoops in order to get my pension paid into an account at my local post office. |
|
The teenager was shaken by the incident, and his father remembers having to console him for hours that day. |
|
If the demoted tenancy is breached, the council as landlords can evict the tenant without having to satisfy the court that this is justified or reasonable. |
|
But before we organise a whip-round to make up for his shortfall, spare a thought for those who are having to cope with below-inflation pay rises. |
|
|
Teenagers have a natural affinity with the colour black as it saves having to change clothes everyday and time spent on needlessly choosing which outfit to wear today. |
|
Thanks for the nod on the IT assistant job, I know it must be a bit of a bore having to advertise it externally and all the kerfuffle it must cause. |
|
Instead of having to go through medical examinations and being seen by a confusing variety of different people, they get their own one-to-one nurse. |
|
Even in the rearmost car, we ended up having to stand in the doorway. |
|
The new game finds our furtive hero having to infiltrate a diverse assortment of sites such as military airbases, harbors and secret government installations. |
|
One victim was so overcome by having to relive the terror that he broke down in the witness box and the case had to be adjourned to let him recompose himself. |
|
Instead of our bodies having to work double-time to sift out the nutrients from food that is wolfed down anxiously, what if we gave our bodies an easier time of it? |
|
We are having to start up the club from the bottom and work our way up. |
|
But the specialist training required to be the best at the job does not come easily, with each animal having to undertake a rigorous 13-week intensive course. |
|
There's labored tone about Reid's response that could simply be a legacy of having to explain the question many times or it may stem from a genuine concern. |
|
Few schools had a special uniform for summer, so the girls remember having to go tramping in the heat in serge gym frocks and white blouses and regulation footwear. |
|
I tried, I honestly did, for the rest of the weekend, but having to run to the ladies' room at an outlet center really just about cinched it for me. |
|
We left the joint soon after polishing off our free beers, not looking forward to once again having to push our way past a sea of groping ladyboys and crazy hookers again. |
|
If you would just like to ask your solicitor, otherwise it will be a lot of going round the houses to achieve nothing except for saving the defendant having to pay something. |
|
Even though this is not relative to warfare of today, the absence of ships means that fairer battles are guaranteed with each person having to build tanks and planes. |
|
Dragging all the media files to corresponding folders on the big drive means having to relink each media file, since the file location and path has changed. |
|
The nun wrote that she had been fearful of having to live among the poor, but that Christ reminded her that she had always said He could do with her as He pleased. |
|
With the growth of online banking, companies were remitting salaries online and customers were making payments without having to physically step into a bank. |
|
I dozed off twice while watching Zero Hour and kept having to rewind to the beginning to this tepid and snooze-inducing pilot. |
|
I don't think she will be making do on one average salary or having to cancel her baby yoga class because her yoga pants are buried in the laundry basket. |
|
|
The doc fix is an attempt to prevent doctors who take Medicare patients from having to take a drastic pay cut. |
|
You can hide your extreme views and duck from having to answer questions about them. |
|
By having all of the information up front, potential buyers can quickly assess the condition and state of repair of the house without having to engage their own surveyor. |
|
And the insurance fund run by the FDIC is replenishing itself without having to dun taxpayers. |
|
The police are having to take positive action in a bid to stop parents dropping off or picking up their children on the zigzag lines outside three more schools. |
|
The boy was sobbing now as he spoke in disjointed thoughts, tears streaming to his cheeks without reserve, having to catch his breath between sentences. |
|
The limits of armed resistance were demonstrated, but the reputation of the royal house, uncorrupted by having to work within the system, was enhanced. |
|
A democratic culture permits the rejection of extremist ideas and actions, without having to resort to other extremes to suppress such ideas and actions. |
|
I was busy laughing at him as he was having to use all the furniture. |
|
Using a database ensures that we can store and retrieve data needed by our web application without having to create our own persistent storage layer. |
|
Such a decision could lead to lots of bits of paper having to be retyped. |
|
We took the traditional clockwise route thereby having to climb down all the tricky climbs and getting wet towards the end rather than the beginning. |
|
In fact, only once does he cut away to Dee Dee's quiet home life, where the recovering addict ribs his kitty about having to kick catnip cold turkey. |
|
This is a useful skill for rapidly reading rows upon rows of pay and display tickets in car parks without ricking my neck or having to do handstands. |
|
Amused by the tone that he knew held no jokes in it, the ring of the doorbell released him of his job of having to sit around and say nothing out of politeness, he stood. |
|
Additionally, it prevents the camp office from being disrupted because of phones ringing off the hook and from having to call each family contact individually. |
|
It wasn't just the incessant whiners, or the obvious apple-polishers, or having to cover up for the occasional bad staffer that drove her nuts, she says. |
|
Witnesses will be spared the anguish of having to see the suspect in the flesh, even through a one-way screen, in traditional line-ups at police stations. |
|
It helps the vulnerable people in our society who find themselves homeless and having to sleep rough, along with those who are isolated or are trying to rebuild their lives. |
|
She decided not to take the route through the village but to walk the roundabout way along the forest's edge in order to not having to see the horror any more. |
|
|
Everything had shaken into place and everyone on the tour, bands and crew alike, had fixed routines to follow, which saved them from having to think too hard. |
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There's a simple way to avoid having to ask or answer that question. |
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Once again, the citizens of goma may end up having to place their hope in the lesser of two evils. |
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Many of you will have seen some permutation of the mass e-mail joke bouncing around where the narrator is a news photographer, on assignment, having to make a tough call. |
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Savenko has a fine presence, but in these opening acts he seemed somewhat inhibited, perhaps because of having to sing the role in English rather then his native Russian. |
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The days of having to carry bulk film around or switch between different film types and speeds is now a distant memory for those who have made the technology leap. |
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She, with her saffron robes and shaven head, embodies and personifies hard-core Hindutva without, at this late stage of her public career, having to make vitriolic speeches. |
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The Intelligent Key allows the doors and tailgate to be locked and unlocked, and the engine started without having to insert either a key or a card into the vehicle. |
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In addition to their lack of accuracy, sandglasses, waterclocks and candles were also limited in the total length of time they could measure before having to be reset. |
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The trick is figuring out how to hold hydrogen safely and at sufficient density to allow a typical car to go 500 kilometers or so before having to tank up. |
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This means having to boil up saucepans of water to have a bath. |
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Symptoms of diabetes include having to get up at night to go to the toilet, feeling thirsty, lacking energy and getting reoccurring infections such as boils and abscesses. |
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The NHS also unveiled another new initiative known as deferred payment to prevent people having to sell their homes to fund nursing or residential care. |
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I was blackballed and blacklisted, vilified and scarified and was reduced to having to go incognito to Cleary's of Ballycroy to enjoy a pint or three. |
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I spent the first week and a half in pure heaven, at just being able to cut my nails like a normal human being and not having to polish or manicure them. |
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The couple were left on tenterhooks about their grandson's performance after having to dash to a friend's golden wedding celebration party just before the match. |
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During those discussions, the children of parents responsible for terminating employees talked about how their parents were affected by having to lay off long-time associates. |
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Now, some two decades later, de las Mercedes is having to start over once again. |
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When we don the mask of sanity and hide our true feelings from each other, we also avoid having to face up to our moral complicity in the bombings. |
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This resulted in Carrey having to slash his asking price when starring in a more serious picture since his name wasn't as bankable headlining a drama. |
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The canteen was getting more and more cramped by the second and I found myself having to bump and nudge my way through the mass of students crowded in front of the exit. |
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The community are now having to bow and scrape, apologising and reasoning for what four freaks, four statistical anomalies, four twisted and tortured minds have done. |
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Which means girls like me, who like to wear a nice pair of heeled boots and a short skirt, are instead having to wear thermal underwear, thick trousers and snow boots. |
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One master key is much better than having to deal with 25 different keys. |
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As early as Christmas 1534, Henry was discussing with Cranmer and Cromwell the chances of leaving Anne without having to return to Catherine. |
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You start to build a community in which your people can share information with each other without having to go up and down the chains of command. |
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It was a bit like buying a new laptop and having to get used to the shift key in a different position. |
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Always having to look over your shoulder for some prissy little nancyboy from the ACLU trying to get you bounced from the force. |
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This resulted in years of litigation that concluded with Bowie having to pay Pitt compensation. |
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Another multiparter involved Lassie being trapped on a truck and having to find her way hundreds of miles to the Martin farm. |
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The entrepreneurs built traffic to the extent that we are having to build more infrastructure. |
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The tenacious resistance of Kolberg allowed Frederick to focus on the Austrians instead of having to split his forces. |
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So we are having to rely on the bush telegraph to let people know it is for sale. |
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Chords can be identified in any song without having to search for tablatures and sheet music. |
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Advocates of plurality voting suggest that this results in most serious candidates having to present a fairly moderate or centrist position. |
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I admit I felt a flicker of interest, if only as an excuse to avoid ever having to attempt Downward Dog again. |
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Dying patients are having to wait up to 8 hours for pain relief because overworked district nurses cannot get to them promptly. |
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Houses were grouped into twenties for the purpose of naval recruitment, with each group having to provide a quota of 28 oarsmen. |
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But the surgeon found a hole in my cartilage and ended up having to give me microfracture surgery. |
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She had no more than 20 minutes' sleep at a time during the voyage, having to be on constant lookout day and night. |
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