But will they be able to keep themselves away from the culture of intimidating and harassing their oppositions? |
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The actions of these youths are very intimidating and we're all sick to the teeth of it. |
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He's forceful and intimidating when necessary, but also convincingly conveys the character's inner turmoils and uncertainties. |
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There was some short guy standing on the right end of the line, cracking his knuckles trying hard to look intimidating. |
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Sanchen was unsure how large this desert was, and looking upon the intimidating sight now, he wasn't sure he wanted to know. |
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Children using the field to play games will find loose dogs trying to join in their game intimidating no matter how well-intentioned the animal. |
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Proud, reactionary, occasionally intimidating, fiercely independent, bloody-minded perhaps, but not sanguine. |
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Scooter-riders and motorbikers are often intimidating to those of us on push-bikes. |
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This was as singular a manifestation of male charisma, intimidating and awesome, as I have ever seen. |
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They put in their mouthpieces and rammed their gloves together and made intimidating faces as best they could without laughing. |
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It has a sweeping main stand, but is otherwise open and uncovered, a pleasant venue incapable of intimidating visitors. |
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I realized I must look rather intimidating so I relaxed and laughed so as not to scare everyone further. |
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Other measures will include judges taking off their wigs and gowns to make the courts look less intimidating when children are involved in cases. |
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Her thick brows furrowed, changing into an intimidating stare-down tinged with contempt. |
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It was intimidating being in the presence of princes and princesses, even though they ranged from Sasha's seventeen to Alois' fifty-nine. |
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Experimental music is a term that is intimidating, evoking unlistenable sonic chaos meant only for academics. |
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I don't much like driving in the dark and unfamiliar unlit open road farmland is pretty intimidating. |
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It's about getting you from here to there without scaring you to death, boring you to tears, or intimidating your socks off. |
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His goal is to find ways to break free from the intimidating complexity of today's technology and the frustration of information overload. |
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For Reeves, a Bowl concert can be intimidating, but the difficulties it presents also inspire her as a singer. |
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Cameron's eyes narrowed and he came to stand over her, his posture intimidating. |
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The intimidating look from Feror grew fiercer as he smirked with a devious smile. |
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It's an hour before the peak of the king tide and the flood is intimidating but by no means terminal. |
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The second came from an intimidating dead-ball delivery by Beckham that Jermaine Taylor helplessly headed into his own net. |
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Inside, a long corridor of dark polished wood resembles a top-class hotel and is rather intimidating. |
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References to Euclid's work on solid geometry clearly no longer looked intimidating. |
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While these types of stores provide a needed service, they can be intimidating for some consumers and usuriously expensive. |
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Its souk, or market, is huge, maze-like and intimidating, but you can pick up bargains. |
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One, by the very nature of theatre in the round, is a sense of the house itself as a gaunt, intimidating presence. |
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He said he had wanted to ask me out on a date when he was between marriages, but nixed the idea because my job made me too intimidating. |
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There's been a recent spate of intimidating text message cases brought up in court. |
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Airline management has been intimidating pilots by permanently demoting captains following accidents or flight mishaps. |
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The kid who was bullied becomes the bully, taunting, beating up fellow students, and intimidating teachers. |
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Big cities are intimidating places even when you speak the language and know where you're going. |
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With malevolent eye highlighted in red and throat feathers raised like the hackles of a dog, he was distinctly intimidating. |
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I was at an age when I still viewed my mother as wise and all-knowing, intimidating in stature and awesome in age. |
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It was a good place to rest, and she didn't feel so intimidating as she did standing over him. |
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Throughout his 13-year career, Taylor was a marauding, intimidating presence who helped transform the Giants from also-rans into champions. |
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You'll usually be given a choice between intimidating the target or hopping into a fight. |
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The most intimidating part of the auditorium was its drop ceiling, a basket weave of 8,000 dissimilar, curved shapes. |
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Back then, his face had been firm and strong and his bright amber eyes had had a ferocity to them that could be intimidating but also very warm. |
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We have seen thugs, employed by powerful people, intimidating and harassing journalists. |
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He was a tall, well-built man, with a strong-featured face and an intimidating manner. |
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In a way, the city is reflected in its people, both seeming inaccessible and intimidating to start with. |
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There are few things more intimidating to most heterosexual men than a gay man who is attracted to them. |
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Her blotter is crisp, doodle-free, as antiseptically intimidating as the crinkly butcher rolls doctors use on examination tables. |
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Although its colours were cool, they were not cold, nor were they intimidating and unwelcoming. |
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Certainly, when she was riled up enough about something she became nearly as intimidating as Jess. |
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He just looks a lot less intimidating now, and more friendly and approachable. |
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The key turning point arrives during a long sequence of Paul learning to climb the rock face of an intimidating cliff. |
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He balls an intimidating fist as tight as he can, then releases it, like a lock in a canal. |
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The clientele is a broader mix than your typical midtown crowd, creating an atmosphere that's more convivial than intimidating. |
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Now that there was a light breeze ruffling through the flags the castle seemed more intimidating now. |
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Because the lunacy of the current course of action is so extreme, the need for intimidating propaganda is concomitantly high. |
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If purchasing and maintaining T-1 equipment is an intimidating thought, consider renting from the long distance carrier or the telephone company. |
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I do not mind the lurkers, I can totally understand how commenting can be both intimidating and redundant. |
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While posing as victims of persecution, the anti-MMR campaigners have proved very effective in intimidating their opponents. |
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Her most vulnerable work to date is a record that lyrically tackles everything from intimidating social gatherings to parenthood. |
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If the environment's intimidating and suppressive, if it demeans, people tend to clam up. |
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Not the least intimidating of the cures for autointoxication was surgery, colectomy to be precise. |
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When they meet, tens of thousands of fevered supporters converge on an intimidating stadium believing it to be the greatest derby on earth. |
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My husband assures me that my moves will probably save me from any danger, so intimidating, he says, is the sight of me doing the African dance. |
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Without waiting for an answer, I turned my back on him again, trying to ignore the rather intimidating presence of Will standing behind me. |
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In fact, they knew full well that they were intimidating and frightening other people. |
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I don't think respect is something that you can get by intimidating someone. |
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Moving from college to career can be energizing, intimidating, exhilarating, exhausting. |
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There are three noun cases and two genders and the idiosyncrasies are intimidating. |
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Together with his unkempt mop of wavy brown hair and his scraggly beard, his appearance was most intimidating. |
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The peasant in charge of laundry duty, a thickset, intimidating woman of considerable age, looked Kelly up and down with a beady, critical eye. |
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The newly revamped quarters are a refreshing change from the usual grungy and sometimes intimidating British unemployment offices. |
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The court heard how he had made people's lives a misery with threats, filthy language and abusive and intimidating conduct. |
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It was an American era of big moustaches, buffed-up barnets, industrial-strength sideburns and intimidating, tightly permed chest hair. |
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The BBC reports that the judge and the barristers removed their wigs and gowns to make the courtroom less intimidating. |
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I was walking in a duffel coat and a meat wagon started driving slowly next to me with all the intimidating truncheons and so on. |
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They were large intimidating black metalic ships with markings on their dorsal wings, like something out of a sci-fi horror show. |
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Though it sounds intimidating at first, Addison insists that river surfing is an accessible sport with the right introduction, which he gives. |
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My cousin was slightly overweight, but the fact that she wore such tight clothes anyway made her intimidating. |
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The latter feeling quickly overpowered the former as the intimidating thought of starting her life over filled her mind. |
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Ian's black hair was streaked through with red, giving him a rather intimidating aura despite his small build. |
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And again, like you said, these are not mega-stars whose celebrity and otherness is intimidating. |
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At the same time in DC, three intimidating looking black guys pulled up in front of a big house on a tree-lined block in a suburban neighborhood. |
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The vast ground features a running track between the trackside and the stands, though, and United do not consider it an intimidating venue. |
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Basic legislative knowledge, while intimidating at times, is paramount to our success at the grass-roots level. |
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They have been miniaturized so as to make them less threatening or intimidating to their small owners. |
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So anything which helps interns find their way around a community which can be very intimidating must, in my book, be a good thing. |
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However, when Bowman does give them their head, the dragons are both physically intimidating and stunningly effective. |
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A business-like reception area sets the tone for a spacious, minimalist style throughout that is soothing rather than intimidating. |
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With an intense look and his eyes shielded behind wraparound shades, he is, at first, extremely intimidating. |
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The devil-may-care driving habits for which Brazilian truck drivers are known make this route intimidating for the faint-of-heart. |
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The man sitting to her left with the black ooze dripping from his pores was quite intimidating with his stolid, emotionless face. |
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Thanks to shows like this, it is becoming increasingly less intimidating to shimmy on down to that dance floor. |
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He is not just a football player intimidating opponents with biceps and triceps. |
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The pistol-caliber carbine, with its light recoil and mild report, offers an intimidating appearance when seen by a burglar at gunpoint. |
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He's just looking for true stories that lie buried in the data that, for most people, are far too intimidating to trifle with. |
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He is also prohibited from assaulting, threatening, intimidating anyone or causing harassment and distress. |
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Second, on an objective standard, Paul was hostile, aggressive, profane, rude, demeaning and intimidating. |
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While networking has triumphed as the primary skill job seekers need, many students still find the idea intimidating. |
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It had been a trouble spot for more than four years with intimidating gangs hanging around. |
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The depth of knowledge required to follow the implications and consequences of such broad and far reaching policies is intimidating. |
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It can be intimidating, but the moderator must keep the debate on track and fair. |
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Spurs mainly played on the counter-attack but after one passing move, Jamie Redknapp delivered a far post cross but the intimidating Atouba miskicked. |
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And not the least haughty or intimidating or acerbic, but helpful, constructive, and conscientious. |
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The pulps brought new readers to serious fiction, making it less intimidating with alluring art and low prices. |
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The mother, Emily Kruse, was charged with obstructing justice and intimidating a witness. |
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Barring Shapiro from entering India was an effort at intimidating Chatterji. |
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Their sole purpose in being at the Old Head is to disrupt our business by intimidating, insulting and abusing our guests who come from all over the world. |
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In this case a lady reputed to be of easy virtue and a girlfriend of one of the local policemen, had made statements intimidating the men for trial. |
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Alice's sharp wit and blunt pronouncements could be intimidating, but if you didn't put on airs and weren't a fool, she was fiercely loyal and endlessly forgiving. |
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Yet the deeply intimidating impact that Dagan aimed to create in Iran seems to be exhausted. |
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Mr. Taniguchi allegedly continued to defame her to clients, intimidating them into dropping commercial deals with her. |
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Four days later, he was standing in front of the Kop, one of the most intimidating spots in football, and again showed an assurance beyond his years. |
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Thanksgiving may be about family, but that comes with an intimidating collection of double-edged swords. |
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Although it might just seem like harmless fun to some young people, this behaviour is antisocial and genuinely intimidating to residents and we will not tolerate it. |
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Considering his height, then the steely look and his rough voice, both of which reminded me a lot of Carey, he was a rather intimidating person, even to me. |
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The magnitude of the task was overwhelming, the costs intimidating, yet even if had they been grasped there was not the talent within government to deliver. |
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The exact nature of U.S. retaliation remains hazy, but no less intimidating for its lack of specificity. |
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Police say he was manipulative, dishonest, cunning and intimidating. |
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Perhaps it makes me seem like an old bag, but it does feel intimidating to face a gang of people, of whatever age, with intimidating body language. |
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Eventually, Scott began stopping by the offices and intimidating editors into covering his music. |
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The group helped set the pattern Bloomberg is using to lend his intimidating campaign some moral heft. |
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With no reception, and an intimidating atmosphere of intense concentration and industry, this is no place to walk into as a stranger trammelled by British reserve. |
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Judges, sheriffs and advocates are to be asked to remove their wigs and gowns and stop using arcane language under plans to make Scottish courts less intimidating. |
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He proved to be a tall man, intimidating the false lieutenant enough that he slithered sideways along the main console like a deer trapped by a cougar. |
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They all have impressive biogs and all in all it's terribly intimidating. |
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Few firearms are as visually intimidating as a double-barreled shotgun. |
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The vote was done by written ballot because some felt it would be intimidating to do it by a show of hands, with people looking to see who voted in what way. |
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Those charged are accused of blockading the lone road into the reserve and intimidating the community to the point where 400 members felt the need to flee. |
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Many Democrats have found the pecuniary power of Republican Super PACS highly intimidating. |
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The first time I climbed these Munros everything was covered in snow and the steep, craggy face of Sron na Garbh-bheinne looked fairly intimidating. |
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Without looking, he has sat down next to Morgana Rothschild, whose unibrow he finds revolting, and Clara Deterdling, whose attractiveness he finds intimidating. |
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The scheme, which has been welcomed by councillors, residents and the police, aims to tackle the problem of gangs of bored teenagers often gathering and intimidating people. |
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Like the fascists that they are, the murderers boast that they love death more than we love life. They imagine that this yell of unreason is intimidating and impressive. |
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Cassie jumped off her stage to land with an intimidating bounce. |
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His long, unbrushed, curly hair and unshaved face let him look kind of intimidating and his fingers bent the wrong way, which always made me twitch. |
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Asking questions of experts in another country, often in an unfamiliar language, becomes even more intimidating when new users encounter netiquette for the first time. |
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A standard radio studio of that era could be a very intimidating place, and a theatre would create a much better atmosphere for radio comedy, variety shows or quizzes. |
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Somehow, the caliginous man's intimidating demeanor always failed to discourage or frighten Josh, much less hamper his cheery, gossiping attitude. |
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Widespread ballot box stuffing was reported, and election observers noted how pro-government forces gathered outside polling stations intimidating voters. |
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Yet in Europe, and in particular France, he continues to be seen as an icily cool champion, his real thoughts hidden behind an intimidating mask of arrogance. |
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Partisan poll workers have been accused of intimidating voters with photographs, heckling, and by challenges to their identity and qualifications. |
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He's not intimidating, though, he's an incredibly sweet guy. |
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Soon it was time to climb up the large stone steps, warm from the Indian summer sunlight and less intimidating now that Elise knew what lay within the labyrinthine caverns. |
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One afternoon I was sorting out the petty cash when I heard the unmistakeable sound of her intimidating gait as she walked menacingly towards my desk. |
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The room has a nice modern decor, friendly and not at all intimidating. |
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According to Moore, the chalkings qualify as defacement of property and harassing and intimidating behavior, both of which are violations of the Student Code of Conduct. |
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His career may be a legacy in progress but he has clearly reached a point where others regard him as a slightly intimidating grand old man of cinema. |
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The intimidating old man stood to his full height, which was tall but nowhere close to Grady's two-meter form, and glowered down at the dwarfish Jerwon. |
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His voice shaking with ersatz emotion, he recalled how three senior boys surrounded him in such an intimidating manner that he has never forgotten it. |
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They are aimed at intimidating the population as a whole through the use of overwhelming military violence and the policy of exemplary punishment. |
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Big, powerful tools such as circular saws can be intimidating for novice DIYers to use, but not the RevoSaw from Worx's new Icon range. |
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In that match, McEnroe had been warned twice for intimidating a lineswoman and smashing a racquet before he aimed his ire at Armstrong. |
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He was temperamental, and this, along with his height, made him an intimidating man, and he often instilled fear in his contemporaries. |
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A couple were intimidating,'' said Holmes, whose name is Cordelia but likes to go by Cori. |
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I prefer using a subdominant buck simply because it is less intimidating, and when conditions are right you can see quite the show. |
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The same streets that are inviting and quiet at high noon may be intimidating at night. |
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Such an environment was especially intimidating to monarchs who derived much of their power from the disparity between classes of people. |
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Nobles engaged many of these to mount raids, or to pack courts of justice with their supporters, intimidating suitors, witnesses and judges. |
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The fleet consisted of Chevys, Drops, Beemers, and buckets, snaking its way through traffic, intimidating onlookers and law enforcement. |
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Nasty, intimidating and puerile, these road hogs are giving hogs a bad name. |
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Warne claimed Hayden's intimidating style would be sorely missed and would be almost impossible to relace. |
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Hopeless adman Greg tries to pitch an obscure dairy product on behalf of an intimidating client. |
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Big, powerful tools such as circular saws can be intimidating for novice DIYers, but not the RevoSaw from Worx's new Icon range. |
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The order prohibits the defendant from assaulting, harassing, threatening, stalking, or intimidating the person seeking the order. |
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Presenting an attractive, well-groomed appearance without wearing pantihose can be an intimidating proposition. |
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Today, the elevator cars of skyscrapers themselves have become the most intimidating nonspaces of the American metropolis. |
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Lowland shepherds imported to work the new sheep farms were subject to intimidating letters and maiming or theft of the sheep. |
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And on a recent trip to Beijing, intimidating Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage did not just soft-pedal America's criticism. |
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He sounds intimidating over the phone, but if you meet him face to face you will find he is a friendly enough fellow. |
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They have cage fighting, boxing and a lot more in there and it was intimidating local residents. |
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Faldo's remarkable composure under pressure and intimidating presence were hallmarks of his game. |
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Sir Alex Ferguson has said that Elland Road has one of the most intimidating atmospheres in European football. |
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Now that all the furious action had stopped, a sudden wave of lygophobia washed over her and she shivered at the intimidating darkness. |
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Deliberately intimidating engine revving and dangerous manoeuvring represent common discourtesies afforded to cyclists. |
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I love the smell of cut grass, the smell of wet dirt, being dirty from head to toe, wearing eyeblack, intimidating people,'' she said. |
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I riffled through the built-in cabinets along one wall and found a stereo almost intimidating in its high-techness. |
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He has made a career of outworking his opponents, outmuscling them and, when necessary, physically and verbally intimidating them. |
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A cold call can be incredibly intimidating for the new salesperson. |
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They defied the intimidating expressions and the authorities of torture and broke the prison barriers with Takbir, poetry, beautiful sentiments and singing. |
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The world's Alberto Grimaldis can fight scrutiny by burying truth in committees, dullness and misinformation, or by intimidating the scrutinizers. |
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Conversely, Loyalists were often emboldened when Patriots resorted to intimidating suspected Tories, such as destroying property or tarring and feathering. |
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However, as the British socialist movement grew it faced increased opposition from the establishment, with police frequently arresting and intimidating activists. |
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Cryptography is one of the most intimidating aspects of computer security, conjuring up, as it does, such concepts as hash functions and public-key infrastructures. |
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Its interior and other environmental features should not give any antitherapy messages, such as signs of hopelessness or negative, intimidating effects. |
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The right-moving trend of the mainstream media, absurdly deemed liberal by successfully intimidating corporatists and ideological aggressors, continues year after year. |
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