They work at festivals, so there are lots of people that can help out with drumming and energy work while they do their thing. |
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Some broadcast stations even employ cameramen or producers to help out on the shows. |
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My mother always encouraged her daughters to get stuck in and help out around the house. |
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The government wants companies to help out commuting workers by paying their mass-transit fares or their gas money for carpools. |
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This TV mom doesn't bake cookies, drive carpools or help out with the homework. |
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Relatives, if they live close by, will help out, especially during haymaking, but younger people here have left the land. |
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Ann-Marie agreed to help out her little brother despite having a somewhat stormy relationship with him. |
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We need everyone to help out as much as they can because otherwise this all falls apart. |
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He would now begin to join in family activities, help out with tasks in the garden. |
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It used a pair of stout elastic bands, one on each side outboard of the cylinders, to help out on the compression strokes. |
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The charity is run by volunteers who help out year after year for the three months the shop opens. |
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I used to care for neighbours horses when they went away on holiday and travel to shows with them to help out. |
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Catherine's partner Geoff, 41, is a self-employed painter and decorator and can also help out with childcare. |
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If he has any trouble feeding them into the wood chipper, I'd be more than happy to help out. |
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Jerry Travers is an American hoofer arriving in London to help out his pal, producer Horace Hardwick, with a new song-and-dance show. |
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When his father passed away, he returned to the area to help out his mother and be near his family. |
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For the Club to continue more parents are needed to help out with coaching basketball. |
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The USD students meet for games nights, for socials, and to help out with each other's pet projects. |
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She was very helpful and had a great community spirit, always willing to help out at the Church, charitable collections etc. |
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There are a group of community gardeners who come along once a month to help out and volunteer their time. |
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He visits his old office, tries to help out, but feels like he left the work in inept hands. |
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Maybe I was too intimidated to help out, or maybe I was still trying to digest it all. |
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Rather than just running the ball, it's one of the other things I can do to help out this football team. |
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Apparently knives and shotguns had just been wielded during a fracas in the bar and the local constabulary were called in to help out. |
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If we are unfamiliar with a particular gate or taxi route, ground controllers are more than willing to help out with directions. |
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I tried to help out where I could by pre-making meals or helping make suggestions, and it just wasn't working. |
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They are so generous with their time and talent and they are always more than willing to help out with causes such as this. |
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I try to help out around the house, but the family insists that I am in a delicate condition and must rest. |
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His decision to help out jobless workers stands in stark contrast to the many chiefs who grab the golden parachute and merely wave good-bye. |
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If you hamper the war effort on one side, you automatically help out that of the other. |
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His wife is a District Commissioner and his grown-up son and daughter also help out. |
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A couple of friends help out, but will parents and other grown-ups find out? |
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Instead of letting us exorcise him, she makes him help out with the housework. |
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I never dreamt my lifestyle would clash so greatly with the people I'm, bless my soul, trying to help out. |
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It's a farmers' problem and while everyone should feel sorry for them, and give them a help out, we can't all go to the wall for them. |
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Your mother was taking her mother shopping today, and I should have gone to help out with mother-management, but I absented myself. |
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Parents are welcome to help out and new members are encouraged to take part. |
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In whichever way you choose to help out, I'm sure that the tax benefit of giving is the last thing on your mind. |
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It is a real nice setup that works to help out beginners but doesn't annoy veterans. |
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A couple of other band members were hidden in the wings ready to help out if James was unable to complete the hymn. |
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He grew up on the couple's farm in Bugthorpe where he loved to help out feeding the animals and milking the cows. |
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But it was an invitation to help out at a children's tournament which triggered her interest in refereeing. |
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I asked Miss D' Lish to send us a little info to help out those unfortunate wretches who might not be familiar with her life and work. |
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We all work different shifts, so there's always someone home to watch the baby, and they help out with expenses. |
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An urgent appeal has now gone out from the small group asking for others to help out to keep the festival alive. |
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The lucky ones have grandparents living locally who are willing to help out on a regular basis. |
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He appealed for more members to help out on various committees and so lesson the load on directors and staff, if only a few hours per month. |
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We've gone from having local farmers help out with labeling by hand to running automated labeling machines and high-speed rotary mold machines. |
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A new rota is being set up by the club executive to help out with the lotto. |
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Fair Go is back for its 27th year to help out Kiwis who have been ripped off, short-changed or given the runaround. |
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I feel honored to be able to help out these excellent people with such an awesome event. |
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Dora and Boots help out the mail carrier by delivering four special letters. |
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It also enjoys great support from an army of volunteers who help out throughout the year, doing a variety of unglamorous tasks such as mail-outs. |
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I was asked to help out at the time, I agreed to it and ended up running the tea room on a Sunday. |
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And because I am in a good mood, I decided to help out all you poor schleps here who don't know how to properly search for Chelsea pics. |
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I am also a Cub Leader in my spare time, which came about after I finished Scouts and stayed on to help out with the younger kids. |
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I know that there is a shortage of nurses and speech therapists but because of the rules we are unable to help out. |
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She went out to Africa to help out a friend for two weeks and then just stayed there for 21 years. |
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In order to help out I moved from the fines court to the Magistrates Court next door and went up before the beak, or beakess on this occasion. |
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Unlike Northampton they couldn't call even better players off the bench to help out. |
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A local Boy Scout troop adopted the family, promising to help out around the house and raise money for Christmas presents. |
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People often ask what they can do to help out around here. Simple! Get involved in the forum. |
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It can be very demoralising for the people who do help out to have their efforts unappreciated. |
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They would be delighted to welcome any parents who would help out and if you come with some goodies so much the better! |
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They are quite self-orientated usually, but after a week mucking in with their cousins, they help out more. |
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We'd also like volunteers to help out with taking donations and manning the information booths. |
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Yet it is these very same people who have buried the community centre through their unwillingness to lift a finger to help out. |
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There are plenty of soft-hearted guys around who'll try to help out a damsel who's clearly in distress. |
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Websites from Poynter, Assignment Editor, CyberJournalist and many others pulled together to help out our fellow newsies. |
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Players were afraid to take defensive risks for fear that no one would help out, and often no one would. |
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Fair enough, help out people in the Highlands who have no alternative but to drive. |
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Unlike some people I know who simply spent the day off mallhopping, I was cajoled into going to school to help out my mom for five hours. |
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And in a throwback to earlier times former rowing club captain Mike will help out by teaching youngsters about the art of oarsmanship. |
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Even though he worked long hours on the railway, he would obligingly help out with the housework. |
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Doesn't the publishing company have editors that can find someone who knows Canadian French to help out in a case like this? |
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We do what we can when skipper loses her lunch money, pay for college if we can, help out with the first-day-at-work suit. |
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There has been a lot of work done but there is still a lot to do so anyone who would like to help out can join the work group on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. |
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I would also help out indigent inmates whenever I could afford to. |
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It was nice to help out a pal, but life is far simpler as a lone wolf. |
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May I suggest a special detachment of NYC blogfesters to help out? |
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He surely was only offering to help out a student with her dissertation when he gave her his card. |
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His father ran a janitorial business and Tucker would help out by working as a janitor as the local Burger King. |
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Similarly, if a colleague asks you to help out with a project and you're already overloaded, politely defer, offering your assistance at a later date. |
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Today, in contrast, if Grandma Maude starts one in Maine, aunty Carol can directly help out from California. |
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All the money goes to charity and what is not used to help out the less well-off at Christmas is distributed to Waterford charities, so all the money stays local. |
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I'll help out in a hospital, as long as I don't have to do the bedpans. |
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But blandish rice and undressed iceberg salad don't do much to help out. |
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I feel that the club has to write this season off as a dead loss, and try, hopefully with the Evening Press's help, to make some of the above companies help out. |
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The lack of a cannon is a particular problem, as the F-35 is being counted on to help out infantrymen under fire. |
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Daniel Schachner, the actor playing the referee for Puppy Bowl X, waits on standby to help out on the field. |
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I'm determined to help out rather than get under their feet. |
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Perish the thought, for she's having too much fun trying to help out her new-found bessie mate Leyla. |
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In 2000, the NHS boards were starting to help out researchers with their studies. |
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Even though the Uruguayan Coast guard is a Military Organization they frequently help out law enforcement agencies. |
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If the taste of chlorine haunts you, filters might help out. |
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Corey, 41, is a massive Who fan and producers asked him to help out when Slipknot played near the set in Cardiff in January. |
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And, if he does find it knackering, he has the luxury of being able to hire a whole team of people to help out. |
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One day he attempted to help out by leading a gentleman cow back to the ranch, a distance of about a mile. |
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Want to help out a family member who may be in dire straights, but don't feel comfortable making an outright gift? |
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Huddersfield's Julian Pratt was also on hand to help out with the film and man the all-important clapperboard. |
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A jeweller has swapped life on the shop store to help out a children's charity during a secondment with a difference. |
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The museum is run by volunteers and is currently seeking more docents to conduct tours, work in the garden and help out in the office. |
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Sophie, 25, offered to help out Sinead when she heard about the gruelling charity cycle she's planned in Chile to raise cash for the Reye's Syndrome sufferer. |
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They act as meeters and greeters in the hospital reception, help with administrative tasks, assist in running the refreshments bar and help out at patient meal times. |
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I decided to bake fruitcakes and sell them, to help out before Christmas. |
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But Brown also must help out against Cal's two 6-11 down-low players, Solomon Hughes and Jamal Simpson, who tower over Pitt's best inside defender, 6-6 junior Ontario Lett. |
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Children's food guru Annabel Karmel has stepped in to help out with The Fussy Eaters Recipe Book, full of healthy dishes that would tempt even the faddiest children. |
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If you haven't got the self-control to keep the wolf from the door yourself, ask your partner to help out. She'll enjoy being the one in the driving seat for a change. |
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