If the people speaking Ebonics were all multimillionaires, then it'd be the thing to do to learn it. |
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It didn't look like much, but if it'd get me my car back it was like gold dust to me right now. |
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She seems nice enough, but her English is very poor so it'd be a real ordeal to spend an hour with her. |
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I'm horrendously unqualified for this sort of job, but I reckon it'd be a real laugh having a gay introductions agency. |
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Next time, if and when there is a next time, it'd be a good idea to prepare myself and to have some outings and projects lined up. |
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Still, it'd be difficult for me to fabricate enough new products to fill a whole column. |
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By the next morning it'd cleared up enough to just leave me with an annoying itch in my throat. |
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I realized that if this were a bad horror movie, it'd be a ventriloquist dummy in its little suitcase, urging me to go out and set fires. |
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Rags clung to a frail and bony body, one that did not look like it'd had any nourishment for quite some time. |
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Sure we're at war, but it'd be positively unAustralian if we didn't crack jokes about it. |
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There are others, of course, quite a few of them, but it'd be boring to list them all. |
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And it'd be a whizz around the garden, shifting the compost heap and the like. |
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Remember, that chapter is written straight from his inner subconscious, so naturally, it'd all be a babble of incoherent thoughts. |
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However, as I have no stamina for non-narrative documentaries, by about two thirds of the way through I was bored and wishing it'd finish. |
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One minute I was recording my album not having a clue how well it'd do and the next it was on! |
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No two ways about it, the place was thick with dirt and clumps of dust that had collected over the years it'd been neglected. |
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Ava anguished, stupidly thinking that it'd be easy to just relax around Dianna, but she, Ava was still the prey and Dianna the predator. |
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Love letters would be in some flowery font like, ah, I dunno one of the script ones and it'd be in pretty pastel shades of pinks and lilacs. |
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The impact would be nearly imperceptible at first, but it'd be there, and significant enough to gum things up. |
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It was freezing, and Miel clung on to his hand so tightly, he thought it'd break. |
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If I were responsible for looking after Kent, the garden of England, it'd be full of weeds. |
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I suggested that it'd not stay healthy for long if it had no work to do but he was intractable. |
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So, I took a palette knife to it, scraped all the paint off, and then wetted a tissue with thinner and wiped the canvas as clean is it'd get. |
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Buried among a deluge of mood boards and contact reports, it'd been a few days since I'd enjoyed social human contact. |
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People genuinely thought that after this there would be no more money systems, that it'd all be barter. |
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It reminds me of what it'd be like if one of our probes ever landed on a planet with sentient life. |
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He's playing Atlanta tonight, and I was wondering if it'd be worth springing for the tickets. |
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So I consider a boycott and two seconds later I realise it'd be like taking a pair of shears to my nose. |
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It's the most immediate and vibrant release he's made yet, but it'd be wrong to blankly call it a triumph. |
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I can't help but feel that if you could write a biography of Pepys with only side references to the diary it'd work a lot better. |
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If it'd been silent that would have been weird, so I should probably be thankful for some white-noise. |
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The wind's howl didn't seem as penetrating as it'd been when he wandered the days before, and he found the silence rather uncomfortable. |
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If I'd paid for my subscription, I'd certainly feel that it'd been mis-sold and I'd want my money back. |
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At first glance this cool hipsterish joint doesn't seem like it'd be very child-friendly. |
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If I were laying odds on the division title, it'd be 70 percent, 20 percent, 10 percent. |
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So it'd be on with the party cassock and lead me to the finger buffet and whiskey. |
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Of late, it'd been held together by glue and steel cables and the determination of the people of New Hampshire. |
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But I can't just dump her and find some new friends cause making friends takes time and it'd be really mean. |
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The illusion had worked perfectly, though it'd been hard to keep himself from laughing when he beat the tar out of him. |
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I thought it'd be a bit like an airline with buxom hostesses in short skirts coming round with drinks and stuff on trolleys. |
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Besides, we're heading off for Mexico before long, and it'd be silly to travel all that way with an incomplete kit. |
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I think it'd be a much more traumatic way to go if your head collided with the ballast on the tracks. |
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I thought it'd help us cut through the bushwah and make it easier for me to help you. |
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Computers in those days didn't have a screen attached, all you had was a printer, so you'd type in your moves and it'd print out what happened. |
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Tenchiki cupped his hands into a puddle of water and splashed into her, hoping it'd get her face. |
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I am computer savvy, and had read other blogs and thought it'd be worth a shot. |
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And then I heard her speak, and I thought it'd be good to talk to this woman. |
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This is irritating, and it'd be great if the software could override that somehow. |
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Today I did washing at home in my washing machine, on the off-chance that it'd just been playing possum, and lo and behold, it worked just fine. |
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He was talking about how great it'd be to have a boy for the past 9 months, and they had the boy's name all set. |
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You can fantasize to your heart's content, but you'll probably never really know what it'd be like if you and Dream Boy got together. |
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Nevertheless, it'd be nice if he ushered in a new era in professional sportsmanship. |
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Thought it'd be too easy otherwise, even with this poncho I unthinkingly brought along. |
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If I put borders round every table on here, it'd look like crazy paving, but for me they work. |
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Pretty soon the fuzz would get suspicious or it'd turn itself back on through emergency programming. |
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The cake tin is full and it'd take no more than a few minutes to brew a nice cuppa. |
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You need to make an appointment two weeks in advance, then it'd be the four girls walking into a salon, and they'd have just one nail technician. |
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Somerset looked as if it'd just got out of the shower and wasn't properly towel-dried yet, with trees and copses and hedgerows on all sides bedraggled and uncombed. |
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So, it'd be hard for me to commit to a flexitarian lifestyle. |
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It was as though it'd been written by someone other than Barbara. |
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I liked the penthouse immediately but thought it'd be far too expensive. |
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Otherwise it'd be the most embarrassing thing ever, you know. |
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In fact, I think it'd be a downright brilliant idea if done properly. |
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If I did have a favourite it'd probably be my Abyssinian male. |
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All it'd take would be Apple, Google and Microsoft agreeing on a norm to dump on drive makers. |
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Without his puckish verve for disruption, it'd become a show about technical adequacy and endless piano ballads. |
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I thought it'd be a dangerous person and stronger, but I see you're a weakling who can not not even herself. |
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I had no mortgage or outgoings or financial dependencies, so I could just experiment and create things without worrying if it'd make money. |
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When you'd switch on the pump, it'd take fake blood in a tin can on one side and would expel it on the other side. |
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With Azrael around and herself under surveillance, it'd be impossible to get the coke and keep it on her person, much less sell it to any given buyer. |
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If it weren't pinned down by buildings, maybe it'd raise a hand in welcome. |
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But at the same time it'd be nice if, just for once, TV could discern the tipping point between respectful and off-puttingly vulturish. |
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But it'd turn up at film festivals and cinematheques, and you'd suddenly have to figure out how to shoehorn ten hours of moviegoing into two or three days. |
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But if we're destined to spend the next several years watching movies about mutants, musclemen and assorted other misfits, it'd be nice if those movies were good. |
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Some kits are so pointlessly expensive that it'd be more cost-effective for you to stitch your own footwear from fairydust and unicorn pubes. |
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I added more insane giggles for effect hoping that it'd do the trick. |
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So the knuckleball was his way of trying to tire me out, 'cause I didn't want to have to catch it — it'd go by me and I'd have to go pick it up. |
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Then it'd be game over for those left at Radisson who, without supplies, would be left defenceless in the menace of her 6 month long winter. |
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And all the influence that I had upon the people, then you see where it'd be, I'd be an antichrist. |
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I don't think that was the intention, but I can imagine it'd make a great slimline dessert for January entertaining, too. |
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At least it'd take some of the useless gits out of the system. |
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Except I saw a woman picking up some dog poo with her hand in a plastic bag today, and I thought that it'd still be warm and all, and I nearly gipped! |
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And I don't think it'd be fair to remove him at this point in time. |
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It was at least eight shades lighter than his real hair, and it looked like it'd spent several months in storage at the bottom of a kitty litter box. |
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Perhaps it'd once been a balcony around the edge of the courtyard, now it was opened out, floored in polished wood, roofed over, and provided with an ornate balcony rail. |
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His eyes burnt and his throat hurt, but if he didn't speak it'd be okay. |
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Without the help of the songwriter credits, it'd be hard to glean what songs are the traditional folk standards and which are 50s country two-step. |
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They'd torn my shirt off and used rags of that to staunch the blood trickling from the remaining stump of my little finger where it'd been severed at the last joint. |
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And maybe she's lovely, but the article was so fawningly, nauseatingly dazzled by how much money she's got, it'd be impossible for any sane human being reading it not to thoroughly despise her by the end. |
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I figured it'd be some studio dump, all beaten-up bedbuggy Ikea sofas and dust bunnies. |
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I'd love to come and visit you but aviophobia means that it'd have to be by boat, and that just takes too long! |
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Whether it'd be one of the classics, such as coconut or red velvet, or one of the innovative signature flavours, like the B-52 or chocolate chili lime, you're guaranteed to have a taste at the best cupcakes in Montreal. |
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For Trotskyism, it wouldn't be that many volumes, but, well, if one compiled a dictionary of the tendencies, heresies, schisms, etc., it'd be a rather huge one, too. |
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Each digit is a beat in the bar and show it'd place in this bar: 1 for the first beat, 2 for the second beat, 3 for the third beat, 4 for the fourth beat. the left hand will paly one or many beats on the snare drum. |
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I'd moan about how unbearably smug this must make all those stupid optimists, but my time here is limited and it'd probably only slash a couple more months off my life. |
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Given the concerns at the back, it'd be no surprise to see us throw caution to the wind again at West Ham. |
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We used to say that our gunners got so good, you know, that if they could dissemble a gun, put it in a scoop shovel and throw it in the air, it'd come down assembled and shoot. |
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Actually, on a day when your sciatica is acting up or your head is streaming with cold, you think how nice it'd be if you didn't have to work anymore. |
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But what reassures me is that these new boats do go so much faster. And with SAFRAN, we have a new project, a new boat, and it'd be difficult to claim you can go faster in an old boat. |
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But it'd be a shame if you had to give up going to something your son enjoys because of these two floozies. |
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Should he fall off the wagon, it'd be the buffet trail. |
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You could slop it on with a wire brush, and it'd still look great. |
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He's such a persnickety guy later on – he always has to have the best of everything – so I thought it'd be great if when he was a kid, he was an absolute slob. |
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At last I understood it'd been Mother, that old eighty-five-pound Denver boot, still holding me back — her scoldings about manners and the standards required of a family fine as ours. |
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We've enjoyed seeing Simon Cowell's emerging touchy-feely side and the acts so far, but it'd be great to crank up the excitement with a few more big hitters. |
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Even so, it'd help if the stories weren't so predictably convoluted. |
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If there's any '70s drug of choice you'd associate with the album, it'd have to be Quaaludes, given the semi-glacial pace at which all 15 songs move. |
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