It isn't much fun in the dive boat with people throwing up all over you, and they can get narked on their cocktail of anti-emetic pills. |
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Reviewers, for instance, were narked that the special effects were not all that special. |
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I'd put in eight weeks of training, but the controversy has narked me a bit. |
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Now turned 70, he says he passes for mid-50s and is narked that I've pointed out a stiffness in his gait. |
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Working it out isn't that straightforward and I get narked when things interrupt the flow of the book. |
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There were still narked at what the weather had done to their tracks and overhead cables and were holding up the commuters. |
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Blair was particularly narked by its stinging criticism that his Government had been playing to its masters in Washington. |
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Ever the consummate professional, I turned up late, couldn't find the bar and was expecting Miss Vass to be a little narked by this. |
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I was a bit narked that the Italians didn't really do Pepsi, being monopolised by Coca Cola instead. |
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So I get a little narked and start going for my ear with the scissors in the same manner as one might angrily grab for a fly. |
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The introduction of tabs was the point where I started to get a little narked. |
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At that point I had yet to meet an atheist who wasn't narked by the whole thing. |
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Already narked off at having his progress interrupted, he would be angrily declaring that he definitely had had a travelcard. |
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This narked a few people, including his apparently unpaid vet and a group who claimed that the animals on his ranch were being treated cruelly. |
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Admitting to being narked appears to be another matter entirely. |
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I'm going to die, and I'm probably going to die before you, and I'm slightly narked off about it. |
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But many establishments get narked enough by criticism to call in the lawyers. |
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This accolade was accompanied by the wonderful spectacle of dweeby scientists getting narked because they invent everything yet remain unloved and unglamorous. |
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Divers even pick up these dozy little sharks, but if you do that you will find yourself with a suddenly alert fish that is probably a bit narked at being disturbed. |
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After a few moments the problem was obvious and proved that the 1996 team hadn't been totally narked when they reported that the rigging was still upright and intact. |
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The NSA is particularly narked about the availability of super-strong encryption software, which makes its job of sticking its nose in everywhere much harder. |
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And the Czechs are narked because Mr Orban has implied that the decrees whereby ethnic Germans and Hungarians were expelled from Czechoslovakia and had their property taken after the second world war may need revocation. |
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Maybe the home side was narked by the dogged last-wicket stand between Clarke and Boyd Rankin which expited the monumental moment. |
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And blimey, were they all narked about something. |
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But prepare to be narked by all the queuing, the number of your fellow ascenders and the extraordinary lack of signage and clarity about where you should go and how much it will cost. |
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Peugeots, Porsches, on patched up pavements parked, Beetles, Beamers and Bentleys getting pretty narked. |
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He wrote in the email that Queen was so narked that she started marking the bowls to see when the levels dipped. |
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Richie Brittain narked the ref, narked his team-mates, narked the opposition, set the tempo and scored. |
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So by the time he strapped on his guitar, punters were a little narked. |
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Again, jolly decent of you, I'd have been a bit narked if you where trousering my Council Tax, and then using it go and cut the grass in Nottingham or Surrey. |
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