The Australian Competition Consumer Commission will be on to monkey business concerning any price-gouging like a rat up a drainpipe. |
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He now looks back on his past monkey business with a keen sense of revisionism. |
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But you're a different story, you can keep an eye out that the three of them don't get up to any monkey business. |
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I felt that it would have left things open to what Dan called monkey business. |
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Like most people in the town he is, surprisingly perhaps, proud of the monkey business. |
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That's right. I'm a social deviant, I was born with a special talent for monkey business. |
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Now go take a shower, and no more monkey business or you'll be late for school. |
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There have been no allegations of monkey business at City Hall since Miller has been mayor and that's good. |
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After the boy gets booted out of the house, I reassure Dad it was a totally innocent peck and that there was no monkey business going on. |
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It seems that 2003 is off to a good start as, this week, DJs big and small will provide many a chance for tomfoolery and monkey business. |
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A quick glance at last week's papers reveals that it's monkey business as usual on Wall Street. |
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Much more of this monkey business and every riot in every corner of a foreign land will be blamed on provocation by racist locals. |
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When you look at these pictures, you know there was no monkey business, and that I was not sneaking around trying to steal pictures of people. |
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You can easily arrange to have whatever files you want turned over in case there's any monkey business. |
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I think that when you have the television screens in the courtroom, less monkey business goes on. |
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Both Max and a persuasive emailer with firsthand knowledge have convinced me that there was no monkey business with the economic assumptions. |
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Both allege market monkey business by packers who use captive supplies. |
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What monkey business are you two doing in the middle of the hallway? |
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Well, his monkey business is perfectly acceptable without it. |
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Meanwhile, the precocious Sara engages in her own monkey business to grab the attentions of her teenage cousin Sebastian, the babysitter, with whom she's in love. |
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He wrote for the New Yorker, most famously scripted for the Marx Brothers on Horsefeathers and Monkey Business and for Mike Todd on Around the World in Eighty Days. |
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