We no longer have to make do with the grubby white plastic garden furniture and collapsible click sun beds that were so popular a few years ago. |
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Many live either in accommodation not fit for human habitation or are without housing entirely and have to make do living on the streets. |
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The French make do with a Gallic shrug, the Italians employ animated arm-waving. |
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They had to make do with a walkover in their final match of the season when opponents Victoria failed to show. |
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As we shall see the grazers, browsers, and mixed feeders all learn to make do with what's at hand. |
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Oh, I'm sure it's nothing like that fancy ducal estate you have, but we'll make do. |
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He spoke to me in chaste Urdu and I had to make do with my ungrammatical Hindi. |
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We should not be endorsing an official policy of make do and mend as this will only cost us even more in the future. |
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When the club failed to find the right incentives to lure a world class striker, the manager insisted he would make do and mend. |
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Mark and I have also developed many skills over the years so make do and mend is a bit of a family motto. |
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People with learning difficulties no longer have to make do with what is available. |
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Many more channels are available nowadays, even if some of us still make do with the five. |
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In one canvas palace, beautiful people loafed around on pouffes, while those outside had to make do with slightly damp grass. |
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And if they had hoped to tidy up their beards they would have had to make do with a blunt razor they should have changed weeks ago. |
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The combination makes it very unlikely so you have to make do with just this! |
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They make do with pine-needle tea, roots, bugs burrowed under bark, and if they're lucky, roadkill. |
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From now on, you'll have to make do with a saveloy 'n' chips with mushy peas. |
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Photographers had to make do with a dramatic face-plant when he lost his footing running into the box. |
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Until he deigns to bless us with his musical insights, we must make do with the old. |
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But the mainstream curry shops make do with jarred curry pastes and powdered food colorings. |
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It would never fit again and he had to make do, most unwillingly, with a borrowed panama. |
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He rode a hard race in 2003 for victory but had to make do with third place this time around. |
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His projectile weapon was hardly in a class to combat Graham's, but he had to make do. |
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I quit consuming music products a number of years ago and make do with what I had legally acquired by then. |
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However, in her absence, I'll just have to make do with thinking about it myself. |
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Seals and seams are known to be less than watertight, and many divers make do with damp suits rather than drysuits. |
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Hollywood executives and other interested parties had to make do with a live webcast as he took the stand in the long-awaited trial. |
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Anyway, you will have to make do with the random mad musings of a manic middle aged munter today. |
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While they're gone, employers are expected to make do, whether by shuffling personnel, hiring temporary replacements, or training new workers. |
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The captain says he ought to flog all of them, but because they surrendered early, he will make do with just a reprimand. |
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In the meantime, we must make do with his second indie single, the rather wonderful If You Want. |
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Like all sharks, dogfish have no true bones but make do with a cartilaginous skeleton. |
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They had to make do with kitchen tuffets, orange boxes, a piano stool and a rocking chair borrowed from next door. |
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Although we knew the tone of the evening when someone forgot the caldron and we had to make do with a fondue set. |
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Sadly, there may be many cases where we have to make do with the lesser of two evils rather than a positive good, but there is always a choice. |
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If necessary, the murderous self-murderer can even make do without such second-hand justifications altogether. |
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While guests in the elegant but cramped cabin will be eating off finest bone china and drinking out of crystal flutes, they will have to make do with plastic cutlery. |
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Richer folk lit their homes with candles made from beeswax or whale oil, whilst poorer folk had to make do with smelly, smoky tallow candles made from animal fat. |
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It has often puzzled me why modern Germanic languages lack future tenses, and instead make do with an impoverished selection of auxiliaries of indeterminate meaning. |
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Starved of ale there were grumblings of mutiny from the crew but we had to make do with a few beers and some boxed wine before collapsing into our bunks. |
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Now if I'd managed to say all that off the cuff then I would be a genius comedian, but as it was I had to make do with experiencing esprit de l'escalier on the way home. |
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Having forgotten his baseball cap in a hasty exit from his home after siesta, he has to make do with a flimsy local newspaper to fend off the Mesopotamian sun's hot temper. |
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Such unlooked-for artists learn to make do with their situations, with the rough materials at hand. |
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Alban Varutti lost ground in Race 1 after falling foul of some jiggery-pokery in the pack, and had to make do with 8th place. |
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Until the late sixth century, informed guesswork must make do for history. |
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There is a fall in real wages, fewer full time jobs, and more families having to make do with part time or temporary work. |
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In summer the two sides were having to make do with the go-between shuttle diplomacy of U. S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher. |
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But a Briton doing business in London might well have to make do with something less salubrious. |
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To compete, they cannot make do with less than perfect functionality, attractive design and top-quality packaging. |
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But at least they have a bed and a shower, unlike the majority of young pilgrims who have to make do with sleeping bags on bare ground. |
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Anyone who wants perfect entertainment at home these days doesn't have to make do with TV channels alone. |
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Until then, manufacturers generally had to make do with numerical simulations, or even do without tests. |
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Like the Civic EX-L, the Si gets four-wheel disc brakes, whereas other trim levels make do with rear drum brakes. |
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Interviews with LEEP managers and staff in the regions reveal that they try to make do with the resources available to them. |
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But we cannot be content with incomplete successes and we cannot make do with incremental responses to the shortcomings that have been revealed. |
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In a world where at least two billion people have to make do with inadequate water supplies, this is an unattractive phenomenon. |
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Researchers and users are visiting the library less, tending to make do with materials freely available on the web. |
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During the downsizing of the 1990s in both the public and private sectors, many internal audit organizations had to make do with fewer resources. |
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However, once again, the racers will have to make do with the postcard picture of the islands they can only get a quick glimpse of. |
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For the moment, it has to make do with an English-Italian dictionary, which makes it software of fairly limited use. |
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For protective gear, many make do with long-sleeve shirts and long pants because thick overalls, gloves, boots, and masks are expensive or not sold in the markets. |
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I never have been able to find the full range of punctuation marks on the silly little keyboard they give you on a cellphone, so I make do with the few that I know. |
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The Asian and African sailors had to make do with greasy spoons and pubs which it frightened me to walk past as much as it must have frightened them to enter. |
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Zamir had to make do with observing events from afar, and what he saw was totally unsatisfactory. |
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The West Country is the part of Britain most visited by walkers and nature lovers, but until now they have had to make do with a patchy network of footpaths and coastal walks. |
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I just don't have anywhere to hang a cat hammock, so my kitty will just have to make do with all her other many many many many MANY resting places. |
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The British are well known for being able to make do and mend, but there has to be some remaining substance in the damaged article, upon which to make the repair. |
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Should the suspected hamstring strain rule the player out for anything up to six weeks, we will have to make do and mend with those currently at the club. |
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I can make do with that, if we mix it with a caffeine-sugar sludge combo. |
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In the meantime, Alam Faizad is ready to make do with what's on hand. |
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He also decided last week that circuit judges must forfeit the right to be driven to court in expensive limousines and make do with modest people carriers instead. |
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Children's choirs make do with simple folk song harmonisations, while mature ensembles perform sophisticated stylisations of folk material. |
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There is barely enough money, so we will have to make do with what we have. |
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He therefore had to make do with using brass to craft these exclusive mechanisms, whereas the cases and dials were exclusively in platinum and gold. |
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Therefore, experts suggest it is unlikely the corporation will ever get any real cash from the region, and it will be forced to make do with blocks of shares from a few companies. |
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And to sustain us while we watch or read, we go to the freezer, take out a frozen pizza, bung it in the microwave and make do. |
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Safran led throughout the race and has extended her lead over Movistar, which up until now has been in third place, as this time she had to make do with finishing sixth. |
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By saving on 1,000 parking spaces thanks to the CCP we have been able to make do with the spaces we already have and have had to extend very little. |
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If banks simply make do with maintaining minimum standards in this area, there could be an adverse effect on visibility for markets and other stakeholders. |
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In the early days the cowhand had to make do with what he could carry with him. |
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For documentation related to different meetings, it is in the final resort up to the participants to make do with situations not in line with the principles in force. |
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Despite the cheap equipment and modest facilities they had to make do with, the boys found the experience so rewarding that they threw themselves into it. |
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They have to make do with low fixed incomes and deal with steady increases in the cost of rent, energy, drug insurance premiums, communications and transportation. |
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Those who chose it did so out of love, because they had a dream to build a life and were prepared to suffer, to forego sun and heat and make do with very little, but always with a great love for the land. |
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Those wishing to prise the coveted guestbook from the hotel's grasp will have to make do with trying to decipher the autographs scrawled on the piano which sits in the 24-hour private bar. |
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Some women continued to make do with separate seamless nylon stockings, as they were considerably cheaper than pantyhose and offered the option of replacing only one if there was a run in the other. |
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As the soldiers are called upon to make do with scarcer resources, it is the families who suffer as they wait for the uncertain news of whether their loved ones will be returned to them safely. |
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They make do with the sycophancy of the public media. |
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I was, however, persuaded that this debate will return to this House, because the pharmaceutical industry no longer wants to make do with placing new bogus treatments on the market and overprotecting them for years. |
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We have not been able to get a good syce for our animal, and have had to make do with a young and inexperienced fellow. |
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He had to make do with the conflicts of peace. He first took on the French when he was 40, convinced that this was what he was born to do: Calvinists believe in predestination. |
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It is not just urban students who do drugs, for imaginative students in rural areas and small towns also make do with controlled medication like Dormicum, codeine or Nospan. |
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With a kazillion guns already in circulation, Brady Bill or no Brady Bill, I'm afraid we'll never see the day that criminals have to make do with rocks and sharp sticks. |
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Before this, one has to make do with what Tom Dunne has called the 'secret sigh' in the obliqueness, the paratextual spaces, and the silences in their writing. |
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Destiny, by contrast, performed her athletic feat away down in the bush leagues, and so had to make do with the insults of a PETA farm club, the Animal Activists of Alachua. |
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