I always try and take a couple of softback page-turners on holiday with me, especially if I have a long flight in store. |
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And since I was working with the disabled before the accident, I knew what kind of a life was in store for me ahead, which broke my spirit. |
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A real breakaway from their studies is in store for two Killarney students in March as they head off to Helsinki to take part in EU debates. |
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So, whether you're a diehard activist or a political newbie, The Times has a lot in store. |
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So, break out the dice, the tarot cards and the crystal ball, and let's see what Madame Fate has in store for us, what? |
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There are some lovely surprises in store and the last half hour or so of the film is particularly spesh. |
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She used to cry for you, child, because she knew what the future had in store for you. |
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You'll hardly recognise the new-look magazine next week, such is the transformation in store. |
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On a recent visit to Nick's place, I decided to tempt fate and see what the telephone gods had in store for a couple of snoops. |
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But we had a surprise in store for Caroline when we said hello after the show. |
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On stage there was yet another pleasant surprise in store for the audience. |
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The bears will suggest that the Black Cycle is almost a carbon copy of the Teal Cycle and a repeat of the price action in the 1980s is in store. |
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Omphilomancy is divination by contemplating the navel, while haruspicy makes use of the entrails of animals to predict what is in store for us. |
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I am reliably informed however that numerous interesting items from this period are held in store by the museum. |
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What that future holds in store for our planet is up to all of us, reasoning together. |
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But when we booked the holiday, little did we know what lay in store for us once we arrived. |
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He signed a five-year contract last summer but admits he has been left wondering what the future has in store. |
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The forum will give people the opportunity to find out more about what could be in store for the future. |
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Having played four times already this season, there were few surprises in store for either team. |
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For weeks they sweated over their decision, wondering what lay in store for them. |
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I'm 21 years old, in three months I will be graduating college, and I have absolutely no idea what the future holds in store for me. |
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More layoffs may be in store, he said, and those workers unable to stomach additional givebacks should look for new jobs. |
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The picture's title gives the game away somewhat as to whether he makes it to safety or not, but there's a final surprise in store at the close. |
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And it seems admirers have a treat in store this year on Girraween's alpine style heathlands, meadows and high altitude forests. |
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Store bought whole wheat bread also contains the same emulsifiers, and chemical by products that are in store bought white bread. |
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While looking in store windows near the youth hostel where she was staying, Gallagher spotted some funky handblown-glass jewelry. |
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With so much opposition in store, it is tempting to ask why McConnell decided to press ahead with the move. |
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Just one droplet to start with, but the sky was leaden grey and there was much more fallout in store. |
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But, as the names were going up on the leader board, it grew apparent what the day had in store. |
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Throughout the lead-up to the event the different managers and the amounts pledged for each will be displayed in store. |
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The mild tremors that shook Chennai residents from their Sunday morning slumber was just a preamble to the tragedy that lay in store. |
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The report notes the shock in store for families this winter when price increases for crude oil show up in large increases in home heating bills. |
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On rewatch, this feels like a sly joke on the part of Lost's writers, cluing us into what's in store for the audience and the castaways. |
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Believing that easy pickings were in store, the American warships formed up and closed range. |
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She felt a rush of emotions with the anticipation of finding out what was in store for her. |
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He told a Times journalist that he intended to improve living standards for the poor, and that the bourgeoisie had some nasty surprises in store. |
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The developing debate about the genetic causes of disease and impairment is nothing compared to the rows that are in store. |
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I reclined in the back seat and munched on a few tortilla chips while wondering what the day would have in store for us. |
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They pose balletically in studios, chase each other underwater, admire themselves in store windows. |
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Many of the cognoscenti of the arts community were gathered, eager to discover what exactly the minister had in store. |
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The click-and-collect scheme allows customers to buy goods online and then physically collect them in store. |
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This was also the perfect time to take out the togs and find out what's in store at the biggest aquatic pool in Paris, Aqua Boulevard. |
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I did pick up the Le Vernis in May and the Rouge Coco in Paradis, which I totally fell for when I swatched them in store. |
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In fact, not even Jess couldn't even begin to comprehend what was in store for him. |
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Just when you think you know what life has in store for you, it throws you a curveball. |
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And it's not the only thing that be flagged up as a hazard to well-being, alerting people to the perils in store if they indulge. |
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Bargains are in store at a jumble sale taking place to raise money for a cancer charity. |
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This is no ordinary musician and a huge treat is in store for those who will attend. |
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There's a treat in store for chocoholics planning a visit to Manchester Art Gallery. |
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Recently I popped by Burlington to see what they had in store for the season and today I wanted to share my haul with all of you! |
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This is the third year of the festive event and is set to be the best ever with a whole range of surprises in store for visitors. |
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There was a bigger sensation in store in the 66th minute, with Liverpool running out of ideas, they were caught out by a long ball. |
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I am now 60 and I have to start thinking about whatever the future has in store for me. |
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Let's take a look at how the motherboard is changing now and what lies in store in the near future. |
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Whether you're a fan, or largely unacquainted as I was, this CD has pleasures and delights in store for you. |
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We'll just have to see what kind of surprises life has in store for me the next couple of months. |
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Back on the boat George quizzed Toh, our divemaster, on what was in store for us in the coming days. |
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A smug smile sat on her lips as she sipped on her cranberry juice, knowing exactly what was in store. |
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The vouchers are sent to the group who can either use them in store or exchange them for cash. |
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Yet as it respects their peculiar and final flavor, they are untasted fruits, always in store for use, and I know not of their flavors as yet. |
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If you've got chinchillas or hamsters or any other small furry creatures, there is more than a trip to the microwave in store for them when it comes to playtime. |
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While there is no doubt that racing will be the focus of the day, racecourse chiefs have lots in store to keep the younger members of the family amused. |
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Each time I entered the control room to start a new track, I would wonder what treats were in store. |
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To take my mind off what was in store for me, I chatted to the owner of the racing bike next to mine while she efficiently changed a flat tyre tube. |
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They have leaked 24 goals and scored just 10 in just 11 games and unless the former Welsh coach can readdress these problems soon then a long hard season lies in store. |
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If Angelo thought this an unhappy day, worse was in store for him. |
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He, evidently, did not know what he was in store for, because he was regarding her with a patronizing stare, most likely underestimating her abilities. |
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And now, in a small nebula brimming with new lifeforms, ready and innocently waiting to see what the universe had in store for them, an Alpha lurks. |
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If these wines aren't on the shelves in store yet, they soon will be. |
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They are not killed, as are Easy Rider's dynamic duo, but death would seem a mercy in the face of the fate society seems to have in store for them. |
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That's great if you're trying to create an emulsion, but Tejedor had a few other tricks in store. |
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As for how that future might look, Nick is more guarded than others who've recently talked enthusiastically about what possibilities lie in store. |
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More trouble in store for Andrew Neil at the sadly beleaguered Scotsman. |
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A treat is in store for the audience at her breakfast event. |
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Watch video of Zachary Karabell discussing what went wrong at mf Global, and what may be in store for Jon Corzine. |
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In the latest issue of wallpaper magazine, out Friday, the glossy released details of exactly what the designer has in store. |
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But, then again, the changes in store under this papacy have only just begun. |
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Who knows what could be in store for the dedicated, hard rock songsters. |
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We'd sit in store front Thai noodle houses, eating Pad Thai, and drinking mango bubble tea with wide pink and green straws that sucked up the tapioca balls at the bottom. |
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In ancient times the spring equinox marked the start of the New Year and festivities were held to honour the birth of new life and the new beginnings that lay in store. |
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With such a treat in store, it was surprising to see so many empty seats at this second night of the George Piper Dances week at the cavernous Queen Elizabeth Hall. |
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Higher yields could be in store for pea crops as U.S. and Russian scientists cooperatively field-test an experimental inoculant and new strains of microbe-friendly peas. |
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The same, it would seem, could be in store for Ireland's rugby followers. |
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Seeing friends crowd-surfing at their shows in Montreal only hinted at the formative, sometimes frightening experiences that the road had in store. |
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Already I have spotted the first Hallowe'en decorations in store windows. |
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The first attempt to deflect an asteroid should not be when it counts for real, because there are no doubt many surprises in store as we learn how to manipulate asteroids. |
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His choice of language was a bit doom-laden, but his take on the current oil situation appears to justify his pretty grim view of what's in store. |
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However a further enjoyment was in store for everyone, when Mr and Mrs Bartlett were invited to celebrate their golden wedding with fellow members. |
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Mauro Obolo scored for the hosts in a match in which both sides had numerous chances, and another end-to-end game could be in store tonight. |
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A big area is odour neutralisers and we are looking to create an odour neutraliser section in store. |
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Many exhibits, like the astonishing 18th century tilt hammer used for well over a century in Aston, are now hidden away in store. |
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We may be in store for a new era of cybersavvy candidates who campaign well online, limiting the pool of potential leaders. |
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The event key sponsor, Gap, has also arranged for fans to meet the Arrested Development gang in store before the concert. |
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While the ant had enough in store to last him the famine, the grasshopper was reduced to beggarliness! |
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Double trouble lay in store for a firm promoting gender-bender dance troupe the Lady Boys of Bangkok. |
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But when she has an out-of-body experience, she may discover what fate has in store. |
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I had to explain by law, if you buy goods in store, you are not entitled to a refund, exchange or credit note unless they're actually faulty. |
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And for the first few songs, he was encouragingly, overcompensatingly manic, his good leg pumping, talking up the greatness in store. |
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The following Coolmore Stud Horse of Champion Concorde Stakes looks another tremendous race in store. |
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The marble statue, by Albert Joy, was in store until it was recently restored to a prominent position in the Birmingham Art Gallery and Museum. |
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This served as a lesson to the rest of the confederacy of the fate in store for those who dared to stand against Rome. |
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Check out his latest album, the gloriously-titled Lupercalia for a taste of what's in store. |
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Bush to visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki and ''confirm with his own eyes what nuclear weapons hold in store for us all. |
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I beg him to encounter this human legacy and confirm with his own eyes what nuclear weapons hold in store for us all. |
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Increased SKUs means less space for each SKU in store, leading to more frequent ordering in smaller quantities, thus affecting the delivery profile and transport network. |
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But we are not going to leave these two people long in such a low and ungenteel station of life. Better days, as far as worldly prosperity went, were in store for both. |
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The new range of Carling fridges, developed with Husky, uses this knowledge to stand out in store with and includes innovative impulse fridges to generate incremental sales. |
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Our partners The Body Shop are supporting us by wearing wigs in store, having lots of wiggy fun, including free makeovers and hand massages, and fundraising. |
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He's got some bad news in store for us, judging from his mood. |
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Wackiness, humour and light-hearted controversy were in store. |
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Numerous surprises are in store for Kathryn Dance in bestseller Deaver's stellar fourth novel featuring the California Bureau of investigation kinesics expert. |
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The spring 2004 collection is now in store at Adams Childrenswear, and has something for everyone, from the tiniest of tots to the hippest of pre-teens. |
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