But under these were three wooden caskets, so neat it was clear that someone had looked after them. |
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When my Mother was 10 years old, my Grandmother returned to visit the family who'd looked after her. |
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I'd also looked after an old gent called Jack who'd been a sergeant in charge of a bunch of Irish lads. |
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No matter how much you looked after your body, with age mental and physical abilities start to deteriorate, no fault of your own. |
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The Fleet Aviation Officer, CMDR Andrew Whittaker looked after contacting pilots, aircrew and maintainers. |
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Faro looks poor, and poorly looked after, there are numerous buildings which are little more than broken-windowed shells. |
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The cheerful little woman cooked, washed, ironed, cleaned, looked after the children and waited on her husband. |
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Primary care trusts are now charged with explicit responsibilities for all looked after children resident in their boundaries. |
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There was a tearful reunion with mum Sue and foster mum Margaret, who looked after Kerry at the age of 13 with husband Fred. |
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She also looked after and nursed her mother for many years up to the time of her death. |
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Patients will be treated on a day care basis and be looked after by a team of specialist eye nurses. |
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There are about 60,000 children and young people who are looked after by local authorities in England. |
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Tobermory looked after him for a quizzical moment, then turned his attention to the malodorous bundle. |
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The quizmaster for the night was Michael Martin and the scorekeeping was looked after by Michael Morrissey. |
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Her father was a bandsaw operator, and her mother looked after Mrs Austin and her two sisters. |
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This was much appreciated and thanks once again to the ladies who looked after the catering. |
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The fans at Victoria Park looked after each other, as they would in any tight community. |
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The young men were well looked after by George, who took them on tiki tours and even arranged a visit to a Waihi gold mine. |
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Delia and Jimmy were farming people who tilled the land and looked after the livestock. |
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Its merchant marine was the largest in the world as was the navy that looked after it. |
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Oyster beds where young oysters are matured are as carefully looked after today as are game preserves. |
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He looked after the mares until she got settled, branded the colts with his brand, and gave her a bill of sale. |
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Mother was a very keen gardener and under her supervision we grew all our own vegetables and looked after the flower garden and shrubbery. |
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In any case, these teeth are replaced by a second lot, endowed by Mother Nature to last a lifetime if looked after. |
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You were always looked after well, not just a cup of tea but more often than not a sit-down meal. |
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The boa, which could grow up to 13 ft, or four metres long and live to be 30, is now being looked after in an animal haven in Surrey. |
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Fortunately this example has been well looked after, but after 30 years the underseal has failed. |
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He, therefore, knew very well that his body would be mummified like those of his predecessors whose royal relics he had looked after. |
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The couple's two dogs, a border collie and a springer spaniel, were in the car but were unhurt and are being looked after by friends. |
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He was looked after by two young brothers from a religious movement just outside Rouen. |
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She owned the wild animals, both prey and predators, and looked after them. |
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Never ever from that day to this has anyone else looked after a child of mine when they were sick, new job or no new job. |
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The book recounts memories of former staff who speak of being very well looked after by the firm. |
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She has already taken in budgies, dogs and parakeets and in the past she has looked after ducks. |
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And if properly looked after, the big V8 is a lovely motor that will behave itself and deliver a low, buttery burble as you cruise along. |
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There has been widespread public concern recently about the abuse of vulnerable adults who are being looked after by social services. |
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I have been looked after in an exemplary fashion and I have nothing but praise for them. |
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I also looked after a teenage boy who was having his tonsils out and signed his consent form forbidding us to give him blood in an emergency. |
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We need to be looked after, pampered, and allowed to breed in captivity with nubile young women. |
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Many people with dementia end up being looked after in nursing homes and long stay wards. |
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There, the dogs are bred and looked after by the handlers who take the dogs in charge of them to their homes. |
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In an attempt to create a corporation where stockholders' interests are looked after, many firms have implemented a two-tier corporate hierarchy. |
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We'll be sad to see them go into the cattery during our honeymoon but we know they'll be well looked after there. |
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They'd long since outgrown his father's minuscule house where they looked after his sick mother. |
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Rosemary speaks highly of the nurses and doctors who looked after her there. |
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If each neighbourhood looked after its own area, then the overall effect could be very positive. |
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A lot can go wrong with a building that's empty and not closely looked after, especially within the stagnant water of an air-conditioning tower. |
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Her in-depth study of Polynesian art will ensure that the shop's section of Polynesian art will be well looked after. |
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Potential donors need to feel confident that their possessions will be properly looked after. |
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The women built the houses from cowpats while the men looked after the herd. |
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She looked after her father and brothers from the age of fourteen on the untimely death of her mother. |
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Amy has a lurcher, who I've looked after on occasion, and she takes my crotchety terrier. |
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I am currently looking for an answer to ensure the staff and kids are looked after. |
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Mohan's thoughts have drifted back to India, his homeland, to Kaveri Amma, the woman who was his dai and looked after him when he was growing up. |
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The place is looked after well with public restrooms, rustic eateries and a good transport network. |
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For about a half century of Sikh rule, the Sikhs practised their religion and looked after their sacred places with devotion and dignity. |
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Within the castle walls, within the precincts of the castle, that's looked after by the Metropolitan Police. |
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Current costs consisted of provender, i.e. fodder and bedding, the pay of the workers who looked after the horses, and shoeing. |
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Tamryn and her brother Matt, five, were being looked after by their granny on Wednesday night. |
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As someone born in 1948 who has always been looked after by the NHS, I am a great fan of it. |
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During the last two decades these two men have looked after youngsters from the ages of eleven up to sixteen. |
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This is also because the interests of young farmers and new entrants to farming must be looked after. |
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We want everyone to enjoy and appreciate them and for them to be better looked after. |
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While raising her family she also used to board dogs and looked after injured animals for vets. |
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Does anyone remember that fly on the wall documentary on channel 4 where some teenage kids looked after real children? |
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We looked after it in the wardroom, fed it and it gradually got its strength back. |
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Many members looked after oiling the floor, calcimining the walls and varnishing the benches and woodwork, even refinishing where needed. |
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All the families of the O'Reilly's Club kept a player each in their home, cooked for them and looked after them well. |
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I looked after the house and created the most outstanding garden in town. |
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The animals are looked after by a network of volunteer fosterers across Swindon, and currently include rabbits, dogs, cats and degus a type of rat-like rodent. |
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Thankfully, my father took up the torch and left no doubt that we were looked after. |
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Our cathedrals and abbeys are better looked after than ever. |
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The shop assistant continued to assist Molly, while I looked after Elsie. |
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Some 12 or so young people from the Fagley Youth Club waited on table, served our food and generally looked after us to make it a wonderful party. |
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He also has a great scene when his foster sister tells him to buzz off, an argument which degenerates into a furious row about who looked after who in the foster home. |
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Waiters looked after kids and pinched babies' cheeks, laughter flooded from the open kitchen and plates of food shuttled back and forth with incredible regularity. |
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She is to be looked after as a mother and respected as an elder sister. |
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A special thank you also to the parents who supplied the many refreshments available on the day and who made sure that every child and parent was well looked after. |
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To me, I am pro-life because I respect the fact that a child should only be brought in to a world where it can be looked after and provided for sufficiently. |
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He did GP obstetrics and looked after patients with tuberculosis at a time when there was neither an obstetrician nor a chest physician on the island. |
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The fragrance of the facilities has been looked after with air-freshener. |
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He didn't want anything extra in return, just to feel safe in the knowledge that if something did happen to him while playing he would be looked after. |
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Cats are looked after at volunteers' homes until they can be rehomed. |
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When we learned that the lads and lasses who had looked after us so well were away in the Gulf, we wanted to show them how much we care and wish them well. |
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Anyone with a problem getting to the golf club is asked to get in touch with any member of the social services committee and they will be looked after. |
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She and her brother also spent time at their father's wood yard in Chiswick, where they looked after the family's nanny goat and white-haired terrier dog. |
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Traces of cough linctus suggest that he was being looked after. |
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While some front gardens are overgrown, untended and filled with litter, others are carefully looked after with window boxes, flowers in bloom and neatly trimmed hedges. |
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She did the fine laundry, and looked after 'his' clothes, and valeted him. |
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Birks' brother Walter looked after the dairy cows and the milk. |
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Tash looked after her, wondering what she could have meant by her words. |
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Once given an appointment the client is looked after by a vendeuse, an important saleswoman responsible for customers, their orders and supervision of their fittings. |
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While a small number of the men looked after the reindeer, the majority, including Sakariassen, were living in tents and employed in erecting the buildings of Eaton Station. |
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He attends a school for special educational needs in Spilsby and is looked after by his general practitioner and paediatric services from Boston Hospital. |
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I cleaned and cooked and looked after our daughter like a cavewoman. |
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When it comes to pressing the flesh and ensuring the small nations are looked after, the president knows on which side his breakfast toast is buttered. |
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During its operation as a function centre, night spot and disco, it has been looked after cosmetically, but beneath the surface expensive restoration work is necessary. |
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There was an apartment block near the Foodtown in Customs St, and there were a couple of guys in there that made sure the towies were looked after. |
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And the harmless snake, nicknamed Spooner, is now being looked after at a rehoming centre while staff try to find his owner. |
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All he knows about the person who took the dog in was that he had previously looked after springer spaniels and is believed to have lived in Ely. |
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If you can play the perfect game then the processes are looked after and the result will come your way. |
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An arborator looked after trees, a vinitor cared for vines, and a topiarius was expert in clipping hedges and looking after pleasure gardens. |
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His mother Dawn had been out and Dylan was being looked after by a lodger, William Hutton. |
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I promised to return the Zimmer frame to Fiona Daglish, the senior physiotherapist who looked after me. |
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Claire was sent away to a subcamp, and another camp mother, called Rosanne Lascroux, looked after Stella for a time. |
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Old Mattu, the Hindu durwan who looked after the European church, was standing in the sunlight below the veranda. |
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And when Matt married his longterm girlfriend Vicki in Kempston, Beds, it was Kev who greeted guests and looked after the rings. |
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Externally, the communal gardens are well looked after and there is secure offroad parking with access via a keyfob. |
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The humble rabbit or Oryctolagus cuniculi, just to inject a little science amongst the poo, can be very badly looked after. |
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They'll be well looked after, however there won't be the kind of hedonistic freeloading we have seen in the past. |
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I've repotted it and generally looked after it really well but it hasn't flourished at all. |
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A particular success story comes from children who are looked after, doubling the success from last year. |
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The altar was hidden behind an Iconostasis. The church was looked after by an old sacristan who lived in a cottage on the shore of the lake. |
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She often looked after her younger brother John, who was born with a mental handicap. |
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At Carn Kez, the First and Last Inn owned a small house which looked after the horses while visitors roamed the cliffs. |
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Each Giudicato saw to its own defense, maintained its own laws and administration, and looked after its own foreign and trading affairs. |
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There was a separate Royal Navy Ordnance Inspection Department that looked after the Royal Navy's interests. |
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The horse had been looked after by one of the Colonel's neighbours, Silas Brown, who had found him wandering the moor and hidden him in his barn. |
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Her young daughter, Alita, is about to move into the crowded home after being looked after by her grandparents. |
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The crew are all buried in Amersfoort and their graves are lovingly looked after by Dutch civilians. |
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We were looked after by local company Fundy Adventures, who helped us learn to dig for clams with seasoned clammer Terry Wilkins. |
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The area's electricity, formerly looked after by MANWEB and NORWEB, is now looked after by ScottishPower Energy Networks and United Utilities respectively. |
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The bones were considerably older than the antler picks used to dig the ditch, and the people who buried them had looked after them for some time prior to burial. |
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In human form, she looked after the children playing on Punalu'u beach. |
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Some players are getting too well looked after by colleges, and are far too quick to walk away from their counties when they don't get everything their own way. |
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Within an MSC Aurea Spa, guests are looked after by expert Balinese masseuses, beauty therapists, manicurists, pedicurists, hair stylists, and a dedicated spa doctor. |
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The former electricity company for the area, Eastern Electricity, has the area's distribution now looked after by UK Power Networks at Fore Hamlet in Ipswich. |
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After leaving Leipzig in 1888, Delius moved to Paris where his uncle, Theodore, took him under his wing and looked after him socially and financially. |
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He was initially looked after by a wet nurse called Ellen in the south of England, away from John's itinerant court, and probably had close ties to his mother. |
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Paul Semmens, the Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust's onboard marine guide, identified the animal as a shrew about two months old and looked after it for the night. |
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