Mr Wade said he had never experienced anything like it and pleaded with owners to look after their dogs. |
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Millions of children, mostly girls, are pulled out of school to look after sick relatives, do back-breaking paid work and run households. |
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We can look after the company cars, the laptops, the expenses and the telesales. |
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I recall having to manhandle a heavy garden statue of Hermes, cast in lead, which we had been asked to look after while the owners moved house. |
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Family members can look after the property if maintenance or tenancy problems arise. |
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After jumping bail to look after his terminally ill girlfriend, things change. |
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He'd triple checked the plants in the terrariums and assigned a couple of servos to look after them. |
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Amy decided to cut Jan's hair shorter, making it more textured so that it looked tidier and was easier to look after. |
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Never any trouble to look after, he was a great little pet with a personality to match. |
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Forest companies are naturally inclined to look after the state of their forests as a natural instinct to self-preservation. |
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Many are retired or semi-retired former dog owners who are happy to look after pets in their spare time. |
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Because if there is one thing a government servant cannot do, it is look after anything under his charge. |
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There were also two attempts to return the girls to their mother but these fell through when she failed to look after them. |
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She always put other people first which made me quite nervous sometimes because I was worried she mightn't look after herself. |
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As the bird could not fly properly she thought it best to take him in and look after him. |
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They have a legal obligation to look after their shareholders so money out ought to mean some benefit in. |
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There, smaller children can enjoy the thrills on this mini version and maybe even look after their less adventurous parents as well! |
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There was a small area for common pasturage where a shepherd would look after the town's sheep and cattle. |
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Saturday shopping can be a nightmare, especially if you have a baby to look after. |
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Vets have the responsibility of ensuring that we look after the animal welfare, biosecurity, and food safety of this nation. |
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If we have serious drug misusers, basically, we have to try and look after them and improve their health. |
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She is a very young girl as young as twelve, who is not old enough to look after herself yet never mind a child of her own. |
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I told my SIL if she were to go through the operation I would take time off work to look after her and her children. |
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Ever since the age of two, Mary has been helping her mum Rebecca look after the rest of the family. |
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Some mouthbrooders deposit their eggs on the substrate where they look after them until the Larvae hatch. |
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I found letting my son look after his own money extremely hard as I was sure he would make a muck of it. |
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He sold the watch at an undervalue to Trevor and asked William to look after the lighter for him until he wanted it returned. |
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It seems that these businessmen on the chamber are looking after what they look after best, the bottom line. |
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Sometimes it's like being a school teacher with a multitude of naughty children to look after. |
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Volunteers are needed to look after some of Wiltshire's most popular historical sites. |
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I am 74 years old and felt left alone with nobody to look after me in my hour of need. |
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We can look after you, and make sure that you face no problems because of your unusual talents. |
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Their hidden belief is that if they remain insecure, dependent and needy their partner will look after them. |
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Councillors are there to look after the interests of all members of the community and that includes people requiring social housing. |
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Both characters are on their uppers and Anna's way out is to find someone to pay for her and look after her. |
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Scientists needed to come up with a new generation of computers, networks, and storage devices that would look after themselves. |
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Everyone works flat out when the grapes are being picked and there could be nobody to look after you. |
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Nearly every calamity and malady known to humankind has a saint to look after it. |
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She called on the council to employ someone, even for two or three days a week, to look after the cemetery. |
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Regarding the workplace, it may be necessary to get a nutritionist who will look after the nutritional welfare of employees. |
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When a parent hands their children over to the school it is the school's responsibility to look after them. |
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The Trust has more than 43,000 volunteers helping to look after the organisation's castles, stately homes, cliff tops and moorland. |
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Donna has been ill through all this and Emily can't work as she has to look after her. |
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And on the odd occasion Redfearn escaped the clutches of Bauress, Steve Hollis was on hand to look after the ex-Premiership star. |
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However, to avoid paying strangers to look after their offspring, should parents be forced to ask such a task of their own parents? |
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But my stepmum has just had cancer and my dad went part time half way through the year to help look after her and my two younger sisters. |
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The house is not in good condition because my father hasn't been in a position to look after it. |
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The villagers will look after their own cattle, make their own dairy produce, grow and preserve their own crops and do their own haymaking. |
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We have welfare officers who each have a dozen headless families to look after. |
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During these five years, the child builds up a store of knowledge about the environment, masters motor skills, and learns to look after itself. |
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I assume, since you've chosen to look after this pet, that you have in your heart some compassion. |
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She charms humans so effectively that we have two different sets of cat-sitters eager to look after her when we travel. |
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If the ceasefire is broken then we will not be able to go there, look after our crops and harvest. |
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They must give them clothes, look after their garden, herd their cattle, sheep and goats, build their grain stores and houses. |
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We need people who are fair and not just out to look after their personal interests. |
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I'll be a young granny, but if my kids have kids in their 20s and think I'm going to look after them full-time, they're on a hiding to nothing. |
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The decision forced the council to pay hundreds of thousands of pounds to look after the British passport holders, who arrived in October. |
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The very idea that we could look after her sooner without the benefit of hoists and medical equipment to get her moving, is absolutely stupid. |
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She was sworn to look after me, an honourbond, but she also had to find you. |
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I do go away a lot and have invited various people to house-sit and look after the cat. |
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The staff have worked incredibly hard to look after them humanly and with care. |
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Remember, the more you look after your carriage the better price you will get when you come to re-sell or part exchange it for another one. |
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He was hoping to take a part-time job to look after his mother and will now have to find another full-time job. |
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To look after them properly, as instructed by the experts, I have to feed them hazelnuts, sunflower seeds and unsalted peanuts. |
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The advice to look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves has obviously been taken to heart. |
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Always use the venue coatrooms or ask the bar staff to look after your items. |
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A child of her own, even children of someone else's to look after, had been beyond her imaginings. |
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Two years later he persuaded her to move from Queensland to his home town of Melbourne, where he would look after her and her career. |
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If there is a colostomy, a colostomy nurse will give advice and answer questions about how to look after it. |
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At the inception of the welfare state, people were prepared to believe that the government would look after them in old age. |
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When travelling by train do not agree to look after the luggage of a fellow traveller or allow it to be stored in your compartment. |
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I don't feel proud going on sick leave, using workers compo but I have got to look after my health. |
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We had fiery carbide lamps, trusty tyre inner tubes and a reputation to look after. |
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Staff at the school have innumerable anecdotes about how the children they look after take every meaning literally. |
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To look after the wheelchair-bound at matches, you might think that only tolerant, placid individuals need apply. |
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The nursery started with just six babies and now some ten staff look after around 30 local children up to the age of five. |
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Staying at base camp, Deborah would look after the dogs while Jerry and I attempted to climb one of the mountain's flanks. |
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Captive-bred birds are easy to come by now, but the time needed to look after and fly a bird is still a rare commodity. |
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It enabled the marae to extend its reservation in order to look after its flounder and oyster beds. |
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Leaders who do not look after the interests of their followers are not only unethical but ineffective. |
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Experts say one mistaken belief is that the state will look after you if you are forced into taking a long spell off work. |
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A pet care firm is seeking animal lovers in Swindon who would like to look after four-legged friends while their owners are on holiday. |
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Athena gave earth-born Erechthonius two snakes when she handed him to the daughters of Aglauros to look after. |
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Below is an image of the view across the main cabin, showing how the panels below the deckhead look after the job is done. |
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The couple said they were getting on, and they thought they'd better move near their daughter so she could look after them. |
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Carers' Week supports the UK's six million carers people who look after a sick or disabled friend, partner or relative. |
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The numbers can by consent, pretty much look after themselves, with some tender loving care from propeller-heads. |
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Yet personal demotivation problems aside, how easy is it to look after your place when you live on your own? |
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Your dentist or health visitor can help you look after you child's teeth if you are not sure what to do. |
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Check with your dentist or health visitor if you are unsure about how to look after your baby's teeth. |
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She had to give up work for a year to look after Emma full-time, leaving her exhausted and the family coffers seriously depleted. |
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We were gonna go off to church again tonight, but there was no-one to look after Boo. |
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There are good arguments for sharing her health data with the social care staff who look after her. |
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We say goodbye, demanding that each other look after ourselves and the best of luck. |
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Mrs Browner's love of perennials and petunias began when her gran gave her a patch of garden to look after as a child. |
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I ran across to my daughter-in-law to look after my grandchild and started running down to the field. |
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George Bush has primarily directed his attention to school reform, leaving higher education to look after itself. |
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It can also help to look after the long-term health of the teeth, gums and jaw joints, by spreading the biting pressure over all the teeth. |
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We elect a district council to look after the local population's interests. |
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She says that more and more, charities end up doing the tasks the state is supposed to look after. |
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Through the building durwan I found Anita, a girl of nine or ten years to look after Smriti and do the housework. |
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I soon go look after the errands and I will try to see if I can post before I flash out of here for Tobago tomorrow. |
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So why should the ordinary person not need an experienced professional to look after their investments? |
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Police plan to take weekend binge drinkers and drunken down-and-outs to the facility until they are fit to look after themselves again. |
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The wound is covered with a sterile dressing, and the surgeon or nurse will tell you how to look after it until it's healed. |
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The party also included two flagmen, two chainmen, three axemen, a cook, and a teamster to look after two wagons and a pack train of mules. |
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The real expat deal means astronomical salaries, a large pad in Azabu Juban, nannies to look after their two kids, etc. |
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This new scheme has a more thoughtful design and it is also a walk-through development that will be much easier to maintain and look after. |
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He was involved in his collection, sorting it, cataloguing it, wallowing in it, trying to store, organise and look after it. |
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Another specialist was the quaestor, whose duty was to look after all the money matter. |
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And special squads of doctors are being set up to go out to the scene of road traffic accidents to look after crash victims. |
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Every client should have their own account executive from the web developer who will look after the customer's interests. |
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While the focus at the moment is on conserving water, it's important to remember if we look after the environment it will help the water cycle. |
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The Minister is a racing fan and he is obviously anxious to look after those involved in the sport. |
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So your job or your responsibility is to look after creation as if you look after your own family. |
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People living in the northwest are in poor health, live out of wedlock and look after sick relatives, according to the latest census. |
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In a time when they were trying to look after their own people and welcoming tourists, they were going about it the wrong way. |
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I have put my clocks forward, apart from the three that are radio-controlled and should look after themselves. |
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They had to preach, administer the sacraments and look after the spiritual welfare of the people. |
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Those arrested included Mr Rihal, on his way home to look after his wife who had just left hospital. |
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After all, the whole principle was to look after members and not just shareholders. |
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The beaches are always kept in a pristine condition by the many vendors who are there to look after all your needs. |
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He keeps pigs, cattle and sheep and does not look after the animals himself, contracting out all the mucky work. |
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This way the government will still receive money for the NHS but wouldn't have to look after ageing people with all their health problems! |
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Clients of this firm should not panic as we have appointed an agent to look after their interests. |
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While the mother Cougar will look after her kittens for up to eighteen months, they are solitary animals and only come together to mate. |
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He wrote to my wife, Jeanette, while I was in prison, reassuring her that he would look after me, and he was as good as his word. |
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Flexible working rules allow an employee to look after a child up to the age of six. |
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Some may argue that we should look after our own before we go off trying to save the world. |
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She was concerned in a variety of other ways to look after his welfare, both spiritual and worldly. |
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The usual distinction does not apply when the relationship between the parties obliges them to look after the patient. |
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He said he and his partner had a five-months old baby to look after and the cat was ignoring the litter trays and relieving itself in the house. |
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Yesterday someone in the IT dept brought me up a yucca plant to look after. |
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I've got a big orchid plant which is lovely, a yucca and some peace lilies because they are so easy to look after. |
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The Fijian way of life is glorified as the kind of life where people look after you if anything goes amiss. |
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Yep, it's her daughters who are pawning jewellery, working extra shifts and using their holiday time to look after her. |
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We have enough resources in the country to look after our people in times of hunger and in times when they have plenty. |
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The holidays will also offer the children, many of whom are from urban areas, the chance to look after animals and even ride horses and ponies. |
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The gate lodge is to be turned into accommodation for the full-time caretaker who will look after the site. |
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He and his wife have shifted from the City to this lonely place just to look after the garden. |
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We care for and look after all our customers especially the elderly and disabled. |
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I and my sister drew lots to decide which one of us would stay at home and look after the children and which one would go out and find work. |
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This could happen if we do not look after our health service and stop running it down. |
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She has 14 dogs to look after, although she now receives some home assistance to help her out. |
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But when people come out of hospital, the people who look after them if they need care are home care assistants. |
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With a 15-year-old to look after and a demanding job, I can't afford the luxury of slowing down. |
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I had to feed the chooks each night, help with making the butter and look after our tame pig. |
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The sand wasp works hard to look after its young but the female is too busy to guard all her nest sites. |
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Once again the kettle will be on the boil and the ladies committee will look after the guests. |
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It is part of the bilal's duties also to look after the mosque. |
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He was an engineer by profession, and used to look after the engines and trucks which ran on the light railways out to the more distant parts of the opencast mine workings. |
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With this level of fear it is questionable to what degree today's working class children are becoming streetwise, and able to look after themselves. |
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Now I watch the second hand on my analog clock swoop around with the tiniest of pauses, and I wonder how it will look after another thirty years goes by. |
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In some cases even wards such as teachers who are supposed to look after children abuse them and many parents are now in perpetual worry over the safety of their children. |
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Your body is your temple and, as such, you should look after it. |
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Here the servants of the customer, an old woman who was too frail to look after her affairs, forged her signature on cheques drawn on her account. |
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He called up his mother, the dowager countess, and asked her to come over and look after the children. |
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Dean with the way a standard rose should look after it has been pruned. |
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John was a dedicated family doctor who, I later learned, was too busy looking after the many people sick with influenza in his practice to look after his own health. |
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Each will look after their own, and never the twain shall meet. |
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I was old enough to take care of myself, the life insurance made sure that I was fine to look after the house and I had a decent job and I was okay. |
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Head teachers look after the day-to-day running of a school. |
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Then they said if he was a friend they would leave him to look after me. |
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My dad was busy as ever with work, so the family drafted in a distant cousin to help look after me, my brother and my sister during the summer holidays. |
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Later, one of the council dog wardens brought in to look after animal welfare arranged for a slice of chicken to be pushed through the letter box of the front door. |
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It is much easier to look after Sally, a comparatively inexpensive labrador, on a farm than it is to dogsit a whippet with a fine pedigree in a busy city. |
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We can conclude that it is in everyone's interest for the vast majority of our kids to stay in school and mature into self-financing adults who can look after themselves. |
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Urbane, unstuffy and unperturbed by your story of heartbreak, the Black Dog's barkeeps know how to look after you AND keep your lips moist with a minimum of fuss. |
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Some members have purchased their own boats and the club staff helps to wash, repair and look after the maintenance of all the boats moored at the marina. |
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Children go into care when their current parent or guardian is unable to look after them, or if the child's health, safety or well-being is at risk. |
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Carers often feel stressed and isolated and some have given up their own careers and friends to look after a sick or frail family member, friend or a child with disabilities. |
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Not necessarily, but even Barrie enthusiasts might hesitate before allowing someone like their idol to look after their own children unchaperoned. |
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A girl is regarded as grown up when she can cultivate food gardens, hew wood, carry water, and look after her family and family members even when her mother is absent. |
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Everyone knows that using gas appliances is better for the environment, and now there's a local business that can look after all your gas needs with a minimum of fuss. |
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Each box of mice I look after has bedding, cardboard tubes and wood chews. |
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Three children who have helped look after their wheelchair-bound mum have been honoured with a prestigious school prize in recognition of their hard work. |
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With the weed-spraying business she had to cook and wash and iron and generally look after hordes of itinerant workmen, as well as her own sons and husband. |
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The junta reportedly has appointed a six-member advisory board to look after security, the economy, and laws. |
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He would look after his friends with rather touching solicitude. |
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Each first-class cavalryman, three or four second-class cavalrymen and sixteen infantrymen had a slave or paid servant to look after baggage and perform menial chores. |
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In such cases, the parent-teacher associations should arrange a watchman or a caretaker to look after the children till their parents come to fetch them in the evening. |
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They can really look after a player and make sure his future is secure. |
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I met him once, when he came in for a development meeting at a tv production company I used to work at, and the whole office fell over themselves to look after him. |
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Anna bridled at the implication that she couldn't look after herself. |
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Therefore your cow is a valuable commodity and you need to look after her. |
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If you look after your tools, they'll look after you and maybe some day, you can pass them down to the next generation of enthusiastic gardeners like family heirlooms. |
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One night my mother must have arranged to pay her a visit, but must have been unable to arrange for someone to look after me, so had to take me with her. |
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He helped look after the sheep of eight farmers which meant early starts and braving cold, biting winter winds, often with only the company of a sheepdog. |
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So look after all your tawas and kadais and use them regularly. |
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I thought it was a pretty useful word that allowed New Zealanders to talk about how they would look after their kids in the event of a relationship split. |
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So Hitler told the German people that they were wonderful, that he would fight their enemies, and that he would look after them in the usual paternalistic socialist way. |
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For seven years the organisation has offered information, advice and support to carers of all ages who help to look after elderly or disabled relatives and friends. |
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Find the right spot and it will be easy to look after and self-seed freely, but can look nasty once past its prime, and should be chopped down or pulled up. |
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In contrast, about one-quarter of nonworking mothers say that they would like to have a regular paid job, but are prevented from seeking work by having to look after children. |
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There was a lot of disease, it was noisy and cramped but they took me under their wing, they were intrigued by me and they did their best to look after me. |
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Boys and girls have their own separate sections of the ship, with matrons and masters-at-arms to look after them, in addition to the educational staff. |
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But they also are charged with preserving native species within the boundaries of their parks and I guess they're pretty keen to look after purebred dingoes and not hybrids. |
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Rumors that Carole Middleton would join the Australian tour to help look after Prince George have been scotched by the palace. |
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You already protect you, and look after you in sickness and in health. |
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In the mean while, as our apartment was a corner one, and looked both east and north, I ran to the easter casement to look after Drummond. |
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Earlier when joint family was the norm, children used to find time to look after their parents. |
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If she were injured or abused in her marriage her relatives were expected to look after her interests. |
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My subject does not oblige me to look after the water, or point forth the place where to it is now retreated. |
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Baby Richard joined them there, and Eileen gave up her work at the Ministry of Food to look after her family. |
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Men were expected to go out to work and women were expected to stay at home and look after the families. |
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The camp monitors look after the children during the night, when the teachers are asleep. |
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George employed a housekeeper to look after his son and went away for three months to look after a Watt engine in Montrose, Scotland. |
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Neither myself nor Alan thought we were signing it over to a board of trustees who would look after it like it was the Dead Sea Scrolls. |
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They are now protected by legislation in many countries to look after these ecologically important habitats. |
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Both my husband and I are on a 3-month parental leave while we look after our newborn baby. |
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As they would be away for years at a time it was vital that somebody could look after their land with the authority of the original owner. |
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As the woman of a family usually worked at home, someone was often there to look after any children. |
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Little things, Master Mally. Look after the pennies, Master Mally, and the pounds will look after themselves. |
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The 22-year-old went for the string vest look after he was snapped with new flame Gigi Hadid. |
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After supporting Liverpool's acoustic tunesmiths The Coral last year they were quickly snapped up by Ignition management, who look after Oasis. |
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Thirdly, all shirts, skirts and trousers are easy care or noniron to make them easier to look after. |
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The event was organised by charity groups that look after the welfare of Filipino workers, including SWAK, which means Friends Forever. |
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Hamburg's Alster Lake swans are rounded up for the winter by swanherd Olaf Niess, who will look after them until spring. |
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During a trip to Ireland last year, we couldn't get a house-sitter for him, and a neighbour offered to look after his needs. |
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Translation can be tricky, so I explained that in America a baby-sitter is someone who is paid to look after a child. |
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Numerary assistants are full-time workers who look after the upkeep of the Opus Dei centres. |
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Shania, who is half Ojibway Indian, was left to look after her three teenage brothers and sisters. |
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They are saying there is no problem with latchkey kids and that you don't need to be around for your children they can look after themselves. |
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As the new PCSO for Corley Service Station on the M6 motorway, the uniformed officer will have two million customers to look after each year. |
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Caiman facts Female caimans are excellent babysitters, and are known to look after their own young, and those of their neighbours. |
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Surely if you're taught to look after your milk teeth, then you're much more likely to make sure your big ones last the distance. |
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Or you can hire a petsitter who will look after your pet in your home for about pounds 18 a day. |
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Having to find a care home to look after a parent or relative can be one of the hardest choices any of us make. |
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Until then they will be cared for by volunteers who look after pregnant guide dogs and their litters. |
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By having a regular manicure and pedicure, your nail technician or beauty therapist can give you advice about how to look after your nails. |
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The new groups and specialist sales team will look after business ranging from school and college groups to hen and stag weekend celebrations. |
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On top of all that, we need to educate these people about how to look after dogs to get away from them being used as status symbols. |
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I have three physalis bushes that have fruited well but now I don't know how to look after them. |
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Boys were educated for work and the girls for marriage and running a household so when they got married they could look after the house and children. |
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The most effective plants for cleaning the air are the rubber plant, ivies, pygmy date palm and the Boston fern, all of which are, helpfully, very easy to look after. |
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Use the buddy system so that you can look after each other on the trip. |
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Offshore, on the Skerries, RSPB wardens look after one of the largest tern colonies in Britain, where a roseate tern has again paired up with an Arctic tern. |
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Grade 12 students Mike and Bob look after the coffee urn, stack and unstack chairs and tables, or do whatever needs to be done during the evening. |
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Don't worry about your boys and the Suks we will look after each other. |
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Beauty expert Anastasia Soare, who has shaped and tweezed brows belonging to Madonna, Avril Lavigne and Jennifer Lopez, believes that it's vital to look after your eyebrows. |
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However, the helicopter is low on fuel and the royal flies off to refuel, leaving behind winchman and paramedic Master Aircrewman Richard Taylor to look after the 15-year-old. |
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A fusspot chef's precisely organised life turns topsy turvy when her sister is killed in a car crash, leaving her to look after her nine-year-old niece. |
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If you don't look after our children, they will turn into ignorance and want, the two ideas, like thuggishness and greed, and he personifies it in these two waifs. |
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A civilised society should always look after the old in the community. |
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He said the Spences had agreed to look after the dog at their flat. |
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In an interview shortly before his death he admitted to being a compulsive gambler all his life, although he claimed he always had enough money to look after his family. |
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Matthew, who initially gave up his job to look after his father, said he was looking at possible care agency work now his mother is able to be dialysed in the nursing home. |
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They've got everything to make life less complicated for the green-fingered from make-your-own hanging baskets to ergonomic toolto look after your posture while you dig. |
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Dressing myself as quietly as I could, and leaving Peggotty to look after my aunt, I tumbled head foremost into it, and then went for a walk to Hampstead. |
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The on-track tamping machine will be primarily used by Nexus to look after Metro's 50 miles of of track, keeping them level and meeting UK rail industry standards. |
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No. 2 shows a boundary-rider. This out-back servant of the State has about 70 miles of fencing to look after and inspects the whole every six days. |
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In her will, Mary requested that Charles look after William's interests, and Charles now demanded that the States of Holland end their interference. |
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We remember the mealymouthed words when even Cameron was saying we will not leave Iraq until we've trained up its forces and Iraq can look after itself. |
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Tina, who had worked on British Army bases for the NAAFI, applied for a carer's allowance after returning to look after her 78-year-old dad, who had lung cancer. |
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And to tackle the growing horse crisis the RSPCA has launched the Stable Future appeal to find fosterers to temporarily look after those too young to be ridden. |
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