| Russo, forty-four, is thin, long-faced, ferret-eyed, with boyish brown hair. |
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| It was not a pleasant experience, driving along the road along with dozens of other long-faced motorists, all obviously suffering from post Bank Holiday blues. |
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| Journalism may need some long-faced fellows to look backward and tell us how things have gone badly, but that species is in more than adequate supply. |
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| In the popular Apollo version, Buddha is long-faced, long-nosed, and has wavy hair. |
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| Forget lumbering animals or long-faced clowns. |
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| These days, though, long-faced Islamists are surprisingly subdued. |
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| Shouldn't we all be a bit long-faced about a funeral? |
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| He was long-faced so we knew she'd turned down his proposal. |
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| Long-faced, often sporting four horns, it resembles a creature in a medieval bestiary. |
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