The nation continues to mourn the loss of the Community Police as a functioning unit. |
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Many people had come to mourn the quiet woman who had taught literature at the college. |
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Those two survivors will need to live with their loss and their sorrow as they mourn their colleagues. |
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Dressed in widows weeds to mourn her beloved husband, her black clothing merely enhanced the strict lines of her face. |
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We mourn them also as fellow citizens, killed because they belong to the greater whole to which we also all belong. |
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Engineers will mourn the first nick and scrape to their DMX-P01, much like a scuff on a cool new pair of shoes. |
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Of course, the Poles are probably more entitled than any to mourn their most famous countryman's mortal remains. |
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Of course she is entitled to mourn her late husband and the other thousands of young men from Britain who gave their lives. |
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If a warrior didn't return for a very, very long time, about ten years, then the family would mourn and give them up for lost. |
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His disciples and many animals gathered around the bier to mourn his passing. |
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With his death the true loss to mourn is not that of the celebrity designer, but of the outstanding theatrical costumier of his age. |
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Clubs have a habit of recording their histories, usually to celebrate jubilees or centenaries, though sometimes to mourn mergers or closures. |
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I mourn for the loss of my beloved wife, but I rejoice over the birth of my son and heir to my throne. |
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To mourn the unfateful event, they do not celebrate the festival anymore. Since the hubbub of the villages. |
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And it's easy enough to dismiss the blue-rinse ladies who mourn the passing of the queen mother. |
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By ones, twos, and threes her descendants came to mourn over their progenitress. |
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Personally, I gave myself a couple of weeks to mourn, and began directing my thoughts towards who he truly was and what he'd shown me. |
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Women and their partners may experience intense grief as they mourn their loss. |
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So, in his honour, we take time out today to mourn his passing and celebrate his brief but glorious career. |
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The new font is easy to read but I mourn the passing of Helvetica and Garamond. |
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Cameras follow childhood sweethearts Amy and Nobby Newell as they visit the cemetery and mourn the loss of comrades and family. |
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But right now, Dan was bawling like a baby, as the news reporter announced that the family-less old lady died, having no one to mourn over her. |
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The world continues to mourn this man, a torch-bearer of peace and a bridge-builder between faiths. |
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We care for the same reason that we love okapis, delight in the fossil evidence of trilobites, and mourn the passage of the dodo. |
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Forty years later, and again we mourn the victims of man's never-ending quest to discover the Earth and what lies beyond it. |
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At about the same time thousands of Austrians with unattractive mutton chops, beer bellies and thick sunglasses will mourn their leader. |
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Although most individuals did not mourn its disappearance, there were some that did. |
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As a lapsed protestant agnostic with Buddhist tendencies I cannot overly mourn his passing. |
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We all have fond memories of Sharon and her zest for life and we hope that such memories will in some way console those who mourn her. |
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She could not mourn or say her final goodbyes to her child, as every mother should. |
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He also commanded all his Thessalian subjects to mourn for her. |
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Before the Long Beach, California couple could mourn the first baby, another was coming, and fading, and then the next. |
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A team that was already depressed over its dreadfully dismal season now must mourn the loss of its very popular owner. |
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Followers had traveled many miles to mourn the loss, and aid in the ritual washing, dressing, and honoring of the body. |
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So while mourning the closing of De Robertis, consider that we might someday mourn the bankruptcy of whatever chain replaces it. |
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But, much as we might mourn the losses, why should the United States be in the business of trying to hold it all together now? |
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More than once the Iraqis we worked with postponed our engagements so they could mourn slain colleagues. |
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Usually, in an accident of this kind, we mourn the people who have died. |
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I don't think we should mourn the demise of our deeply-flawed nations. |
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We extend our deepest sympathies to all those who mourn her passing. |
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You could rip the throat out of some dead broke docker, drunk on his dole money, and there'd be few to miss him, fewer who'd mourn the loss. |
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In disobeying the most basic Confucian precept that places ethics above economics, many mourn the pricelessness of who — and what — they've lost. |
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Alcohol is for every occasion: to toast, to mourn, to oil the wheels of a fight. |
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I can hardly think of a more tragic accident than when a person is killed in the prime of life, leaving parents as well as children to mourn. |
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The War Resisters League and the A. J. Muste Memorial Institute mourn her passing and condole with her family. |
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As a process, memorializing is marked by activities and actions done to mourn and remember people, places and things of importance in society. |
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She may enjoy some of her newly found freedom, but may also mourn the passing of a very intimate phase in her relationship with her child. |
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As the country pauses to mourn the dead in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, now may seem more than usually inapposite. |
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At that time the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and all the nations of the earth will mourn. |
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Sometimes they wished they knew the loved one had died, at least they could mourn or grieve the loss. |
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All they yearned for now was the truth, for a way to bring this to closure and to allow them to mourn their loved ones. |
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Compassion challenges us to cry out with those in misery, to mourn with those who are lonely, to weep with those in tears. |
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We join all those who mourn that wise man, a prince who gave selflessly of himself to his country throughout a long and distinguished reign. |
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As everyone else started to mourn summer's loss, I found myself secretly willing it away. |
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Related: Kenyan families mourn their best and brightest after Garissa attack Each tweet paints a powerful portrait of loss. |
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The rules of half-masting the national flag of Canada allow the government and, indeed, all Canadians to mourn such a loss collectively. |
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While we mourn for those who have been killed as a result of injury or illness, we must always fight for the living. |
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Just imagine how difficult it must be to rejoice and mourn at the same time. |
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To properly mourn the dead and respect the potential of the living, we need accountability, not blame. |
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During this session we mourn that enormous loss for humanity and pay tribute to the memory of the victims. |
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We mourn the 3 million children who, over the last 36 years, have been refused the right to life in this country. |
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We had to mourn the product of our labours before it could even reach the courts. |
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Through the ages funeral ceremonies have helped families and communities to mourn a person's death. |
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They do not know if their loved one will ever return, so they cannot mourn and adjust to the loss. |
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He married in May 2000 and left to mourn his wife Tina and three children, Matthew, Kristopher and Madison. |
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To do that, we need to locate the problem on a societal and collective level, rather than obnoxiously berating those who display a French flag or mourn the Parisian dead. |
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The Rugby League community will mourn his loss and I wish to extend our deepest sympathies to Danny's family and friends at this incredibly sad time. |
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No-one will mourn the final shipwreck of a text that went from concession to surrender, ending up as little more than the shadow of a common policy. |
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We join the people of Monaco as they mourn this great national loss. |
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Perhaps it is too late to wallow in the futility of nostalgia or to merely mourn those who deserve a lot more than condolences and commemorator. |
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No more deaths to mourn, but instead, lives to enliven, support and encourage, so that, through persistence and perspicuity, we can win through words that which bloodshed might not have accomplished. |
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And now we have a clinically dead woman being ventilated and fed for the sake of an insentient foetus, while her heartbroken family takes legal action in order to mourn her. |
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What Manhattan bars do you mourn most deeply? |
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They have made many sacrifices on our behalfs and we mourn for them and their families. |
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In contrast to the burning desire and hopeless self-gratification on display are two naĂŻve characters who mourn the absence of spiritual connection in the private universe behind closed doors. |
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Louise had to mourn the loss of the joy of studying science, philosophy, sacred history, but also the loss of the atmosphere of reflection and prayer that reigned in the monastery! |
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As we mourn those who lost their lives, we must, as Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon noted, reassert our commitment to human rights, which was desecrated at Auschwitz and by genocides and atrocities since. |
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Those of us following after learned at their feet and mourn them. |
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It was a shock because families suffered so badly as a result, and because we mourn the loss of human life, but it was also a shock because it revealed a flagrant disregard for safety. |
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We still grieve for the innocent men, women and children aboard the doomed airplanes and we still mourn the thousands who perished in the collapse of the Twin Towers and in the fires at the Pentagon. |
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After a ceremony to send the spirit away, the family would mourn at the scaffold for four days. |
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For example, if a child has an important relationship with a grandparent and that relationship is ended through passing away or through some other process, the child will inevitably be affected and will have to mourn that. |
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At a time when we mourn the victims of war and commemorate the end of the conflict, we must pledge with greater conviction than ever before that it will never be repeated. |
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As all Canadians join together to mourn the death of Corporal Dubé, we are eternally grateful for his sacrifice for this country, while helping to ensure a brighter future for the Afghan people. |
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Many Somalians used the occasion to complete their Friday prayers and mourn the death of one of their own. |
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Even as we mourn the felling of Spain, let us celebrate the Dutch. |
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It is Easter, an indescribable joy for all who believe in the Risen Christ, who is our justice and hope for all who mourn because of death, desolation, and misery. |
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We mourn the loss of Amiri Baraka, who was a very influential man in the African-American writing world and internationally. |
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So let's mourn Peggy but celebrate Babs and hope she's back on our screens soon. |
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Lamenters draw upon a stock of images and metaphors, coined by the most prolific members of the profession, to embody and mourn the deceased. |
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If then we believe this unfailable word of truth, who would not be content to mourn awhile, that he may rejoice for ever? |
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Everyone who loves India should mourn this abomination called Telangana. |
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Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted. |
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He expressed his filial devotion when he took three years leave of absence from his official duties for Qi to mourn his mother's death. |
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Through a network of spies and informers, hardly a family in Flanders did not mourn some member arrested or killed. |
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Now a kind of network exists in a Washington Heights building: a tightknit group of older residents refuses to let one another live, or mourn, alone. |
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How, against a contemporary background, do you mourn an octogenarian father, nearly blind, his heart enlarged, his lungs filling with fluid, who creeps, stumbles, gives off the odors, the moldiness or gassiness of old men. |
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The Chinese mourn in white, and some of us in Harlequin-like patchery, as though believing motley to be the only wear. |
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In direct violation of the dynastic instructions, the Prince of Yan attempted to mourn his father in Nanjing, bringing a large armed guard with him. |
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Step in your foot, come take a place and mourn with me awhile. |
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Mourners arrived at Prague Castle to mourn the loss of the shy but iron-willed Havel, endowed with a playful sense of humor and a powerful moral compass. |
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North Korean envoys are to meet Lee Myung-Bak, the South Korean president, during their visit to Seoul to mourn the death of the South's former leader. |
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But I, for one, mourn the passing of the summer and the more relaxing days when I'm not doing the homework nagging or rousting children out of bed early in the morning. |
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It would not bring their victim back to life and there would just be one more death to mourn. |
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In Ferguson, Missouri, the bullet-ridden body of Michael Brown lies on a slab somewhere, and his parents await justice, and mourn. |
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