Village children yell the names of the Noronha girls, their long-lost friends. |
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That's why her eldest son, Patsy, was determined to find some link with his long-lost Spanish cousins. |
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He'd walked into Hanson's office to be greeted by Oldfield as a long-lost friend. |
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After some investigation, she becomes convinced the stranger is her long-lost father. |
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The claimant knows all the things he ought to know, and talks convincingly to the long-lost heir's friends. |
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They are also perfect settings for a reunion of long-lost friends, or a quiet rendezvous of two loving souls. |
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He promised that once she was well enough they together would go on a search for the long-lost friend. |
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As families spread rugs on the grass, or head off to pick fruit, others greet each other like long-lost friends. |
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We were greeted like long-lost friends and ushered to our table, where we received devoted service for the rest of the night. |
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I was actually put back in touch with my two long-lost half-brothers because of all this. |
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Pat spent that evening and night with long-lost friends and had the time of his life. |
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Since his arrival he has been searching for his long-lost relatives and for the next four weeks he will be documenting his search. |
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A former East Lancashire woman who now lives in Mexico is trying to get in touch with a long-lost friend from Darwen. |
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I've found a foolproof way to make long-lost friends come out of the woodwork. |
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Simon's temporary return as a supply teacher was a welcome relief, providing a long-lost focus to the cast's squabbles. |
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After Odie is dognapped, Garfield sets out on a journey to find his long-lost canine cohort. |
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It's no longer just the randos or long-lost childhood acquaintances who show up on your FB feed. |
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Finding natural remedies that are unknown today, almost like an archaeologist discovering a long-lost temple. |
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Double-check where you're meeting your friends tonight or chat to a long-lost travel buddy who's just signed in from the other side of the world. |
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Poland, between the long-lost blocks, is playing a key role in this process. |
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Every object is an invitation to discover a long-lost era and teaches me about the history of the place. |
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The thrill of discovering a long-lost work by a famous composer resides in the heart of every musical scholar. |
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The distant clatter of a milk van revives a long-lost, though momentary, reverie. |
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Leave the long queue for the short one and you get the supermarket assistant chancing across her long-lost sister. |
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She should have been able to see through this outrageous imposture, but she needed this man to be her long-lost son. |
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A former Surbiton resident is hoping to fulfil her mother's dying wish by finding her long-lost brother. |
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It took Rhea almost an hour to finally locate this long-lost friend and guardian, and she restrained herself from running into the room. |
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Here you can see reconstructed Inca ruins evoking a long-lost past. |
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I bet long-lost relatives are already lining up to hail their cousin! |
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It turns out it was his day to visit with a few other long-lost friends. |
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Then you can meet your long-lost friend, one who is supposed to be dead. |
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We went ice fishing and Mrs. Rocket caught one of the all-time lunkers, only it turned out to be a long-lost fishing rod. |
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A York man has finally found his long-lost father after a tireless search that took him to the other side of the Atlantic. |
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Further west of Sydney, out the back of Bourke, they are also looking for a lot of long-lost teams. |
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Jake is the spitting image of his long-lost twin brother, who was killed on a recent mission. |
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Their songs were born to dwell in long-lost cabarets and quaint bars that fall just short of seediness. |
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When he goes back to his hometown for Alfredo's funeral, he hooks up with grown-up Elena, his long-lost teenage love. |
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It is also a rediscover, of a long-lost state of grace, a carefreeness, perhaps. |
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An earlier post mentioned this long-lost cartoon from the pre-internet days, and Mudville readers were quick to respond to my request for a copy. |
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Amidst this revelry the Prince of Bohemia falls headlong in love with the long-lost Sicilian princess. |
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But this is not a long-lost idyll and I didn't need a time machine to transport me there. |
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But while his parents and brothers are dead, five cousins have now been contacted, allowing the long-lost airman finally to be laid to rest in Scotland. |
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Kaplan, who was covering the story for the Boston Globe from the press table, says Powell hallooed Woodward as if he were a long-lost frat brother. |
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Arriving passengers greet their cabin stewards and table waiters like long-lost family friends with smiling handshakes, hugs and much backslapping. |
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The Return of the G'psgolox Pole, is a documentary about the Haisla community in Kitimaat Village in Northern BC and their quest to bring home a long-lost totem pole. |
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When he returned after winning the contest to his one-bedroomed home in a government building in central Dharavi, he was treated like a long-lost prodigal. |
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The long-lost doily is due to make a comeback, but not beneath cakes. |
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It might look like a long-lost exhibit from a medieval torture chamber, but this chair is designed to ease away the stresses and strains of the working day. |
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According to an old myth, everyone's got a long-lost twin. |
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Watermelon radish, meet your long-lost cousin, watermelon! |
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Slowly, Dummy regains both his voice and his confidence, and finally, in a fairy-tale ending, even his identity when King Richard recognizes him as his long-lost godson. |
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She shot the breeze with him as if they were long-lost pals, but Sy was a little leery at first. |
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I am not claiming it is a long-lost golden age, say in Europe between 1815 and 1914, that we ought to yearn for in terms of reactionary nostalgia. |
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Visiting singers and musicians were welcomed like long-lost friends and the mix of African and local acts certainly proved a big hit with audiences in Saint-Calais. |
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A delicacy rediscovered from a long-lost tradition. At the peak of ripeness, the figs are picked and immediately soaked in a bath of sugar, Maraschino and a little wine vinegar. |
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By 1629 he had begun a reconstruction of the long-lost Plane Loci of Apollonius, the Greek geometer of the 3rd century bc. |
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Today, Mykaƫl has found the long-lost ray of sunshine that used to illuminate his face before his life was turned upside down. |
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Emperor Zurg plays catch with his long-lost son, Buzz Lightyear, in Toy Story 2. The ogre in Shrek is a big softie. |
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It is certainly perceived as one of the scourges of humanity, and every civilisation and religion has strived constantly for peace, in quest of a paradise lost or long-lost golden age. |
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As Nathan and Bill's quest unfolds, and the story about long-lost romance quickly descends into a series of bunko schemes, Bill's feelings for Frances come into question. |
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But when the prince's love helps the young magician on stage and a long-lost love is rekindled, the illusionist must face off in a challenge of wills to determine the boundaries of reality and magic. |
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Saved by amazing coincidence the wife of a trapper hired at Fort Mandan turned out to be the long-lost sister of the nervous Shoshone leader they found their most bitter disappointments ahead. |
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A NETWORK of pruners has been set up to help regenerate long-lost orchards in Powys. |
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Not only can you find replacements for those long-lost user manuals for older equipment, but EBay, as an example, has an amazing range of techie things for sale. |
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While for many of them the event was an opportunity to hook up with long-lost friends, others seized upon the occasion to meet long-held music idols or exchange riffs and ideas with artists from the other side of the world. |
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After she won the lottery, Marge had long-lost relatives she didn't know from a bar of soap come up to her to ask for money. |
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My long-lost brother showed up, borrowed money and vanished again. |
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