The overall pace is so even you scarcely notice when the odd rocker slips by, creating a slightly flatter feel than the songs deserve. |
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That's perfect for me because I can walk at a good pace, and he can drive like a madman. |
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Jack and Jason slowed their pace as the trickle of people began bunching up. |
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His pace and score-taking ability impressed many in the final games of the season. |
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I continued to walk, my pace quickening once I was in a somewhat safer place. |
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I got really excited and I started to walk at a faster pace to catch up with the procession. |
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She walked at her normal pace ignoring those behind her wanting to go faster. |
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Holmes though was not in the mood for praise and walked at a pace that I struggled to maintain. |
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I was almost too scared to leave the flat, and when I did I walked with the pace of a 90 year old. |
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Jude tied his three gourds to his belt, then walked with a measured pace downstream. |
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It looked up at me and meowed again, and when I started walking, it kept pace with me. |
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She walked at a comfortable pace until she was about two yards away from Jen. |
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With that I sneered and walked off, my pace quick with the heat of getting myself angry again. |
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As he quickened his pace to a jog, he saw a swift shape dart up a curling stairway. |
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There are the people who walk three abreast and really slowly forcing you to lower your pace until you spot a chance to get around them. |
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Perfect wedding music, though at a pace that'll be a bit tough for waltzers at a country wedding. |
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The pace is languid and events too abstract to be a children's movie, yet corny stunts alienate mature viewers. |
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One of the most frightening prospects facing any wannabe chef is the frenetic pace of the modern day professional kitchen. |
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The synchrotron can accelerate electrons from a mere walking pace up to almost the speed of light. |
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Just before twelve I hopped into the shower and suddenly the pace of the day accelerated to warp speed. |
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Doesn't a warrior pose in the park breathing in fresh air sound like a nice change of pace from the hot yoga studio? |
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Starting to feel desperate, she opened the water bag and drank heavily as her pace quickened. |
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The pace is dictated by the early morning quiet of a misty golf course laid out along Georgia's ocean coast. |
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She stood up and began to pace up and down, jerkily, as though her muscles hadn't been used for a long time. |
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We kept a good pace and started using our own routes to make our way to checkpoints. |
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Certainly the tone of her letters changes and the pace of the relationship becomes more settled, albeit fiery and sometimes acrimonious. |
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The change of pace from topwaters and jigs dredged up memories and fish, good on both counts. |
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With only eight horses in the race, though, I don't think the pace will be a big factor. |
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Of course she used to pace up and down the paddocks when she was turned out, too, but she didn't weave in the field. |
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A jink, a change of pace and it was to the endline to hammer across balls the sort great headers dream of. |
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Admittedly, the tackling was suspect, but the searing pace and impossible jinks demonstrated by the winger would cause problems for any defence. |
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Dogs make great companions for strolling, race-walking or any pace in between. |
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At the sight of this event, the opponent became worried and quickened his pace into nearly a jog. |
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A thumping in the distance made him tense with fear and he slowed his pace to a jog. |
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In fact, she almost seemed to increase her pace to a jog, with Becky following suit a moment after her. |
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He picks up the pace to what would be a comfortable jog for him, but in reality, a really, really painstakingly fast run for me. |
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Even though she was running flat out, Seung was able to keep up with her pace at a brisk jog. |
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He's still not well but the slower pace of life is getting rid of his stress. |
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It is all part and parcel, it seems, of the slow pace of the hearing of proceedings in the federal judicature of this country. |
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Base your decision on pace depending on what will happen to the ball after the hole. |
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It is a nice change of pace from what have normally seen from Western Europeans during the last year and a half. |
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The story is gripping and, although the pace is less frenetic than other genre outings, there are plenty of shocks and scares. |
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However, Gareth has rallied in Ireland in recent times, so he is certainly familiar with pace note asphalt rallies. |
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Solberg set the pace for the first two days of the rally, winning five stages in a row. |
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The supercomputing crowd tends to set the pace for technology adoption across the server market. |
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The mortar can also be mounted in a vehicle, firing through the roof hatch, to keep pace with a mechanised advance. |
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The action moves at a fast pace from beginning to end, complete with cinematic camera angles, wherein lies my biggest beef. |
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Her staff began to spin at such a rapid pace that it began to light up with blue fire. |
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Music itself had acquired the potential to quicken the pace of an eventual rapprochement between the West and its colonies. |
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Modern life whizzes by at a frantic pace and we mere mortals find ourselves in a constant whirl trying to find ways of catching up. |
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Once we're into the second hour, Pollack ratchets up the pace a few notches and we notice a quickening of the pulse. |
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The final promised to be a quality affair and as matters unfolded it proved to be one of pace versus pace. |
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When Elvis Hunkee and his white-bread family come strolling in, bumped onto NWA's maiden flight, the pace picks up again slightly. |
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For example, the coda of the great Schubert B flat sonata was played at a breakneck pace and was technically perfect. |
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The figure kept, exasperatingly, just out of their reach, always a pace ahead of them. |
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It must reacquaint us with the characters without bogging the pace down with exposition. |
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It is all done with a flowing pace that keeps the interest level up, managing to be both educational and entertaining. |
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You need to refine your stroke length and pace to maximize your hydrodynamic efficiency. |
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With the pace of the second set of new balls Udomchoke strokes back Henman's first serve with venom. |
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Access to advanced medical devices is key to ensuring that the nation's healthcare system keeps pace with a population that is growing and aging. |
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While aggression is a common virtue among champion pace predators, Walsh was adept at putting a lid on his temper. |
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Is it possible to get a realistic idea of the team's pace relative to the opposition? |
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Alaiah started to pace again as she watched the news, filled the bath tub with water, and boiled more water in a kettle for tea. |
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Add Bellamy's searing pace into that attack and it makes for a stressful afternoon for the Rangers rearguard. |
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The pitching staff has hit enough batters and thrown enough wild pitches to be on pace to set major league records in both areas. |
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More than that, though, it has laid a marker for a style of game which has innovation, pace and persistence as its keynotes. |
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She seemed to know the pace at which to proceed the unpicking and reassembling that is our culture's particular road to wellness. |
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As for the pace of this preparation, the aides are saying the president is comfortable with him. |
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Now, aides say the president is comfortable with the pace of his debate preparations. |
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Smartly turned out in khaki uniform, the women kept pace with their male counterparts. |
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For many, the north shore still holds the allure of country life with historic towns, cleaner air and a slower pace of life. |
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You get pace notes before the event to assist you, but you are not allowed to recce the stages, so in that sense it will be new to all of us. |
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In another attempt to keep the pace moving, the committee voted to kill radio and television timeouts in overtime. |
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Staying here is a journey into a bygone era, when life moved at a gentle pace and communion with the self was as easy as winking. |
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The light recoil and modest slide pace lull the shooter into a false sense of security. |
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Yet despite maintaining a slow and meditative pace throughout, The Consequences of Love is peppered with moments of understated wit. |
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McGovern gives the story believable characters, a cracking pace and draws out themes that make it relevant for today. |
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Giving it their all the Czech Republic took off at a cracking pace in the first of four heats. |
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The Army side played at a cracking pace in the first half and were up 8 nil at half time. |
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Even so, the Americans set off at a cracking pace northwards towards Baghdad. |
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Once the breakage was fixed, four of the five boats took off at a cracking pace with Germany in the lead. |
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Howard, a lively 65-year-old, sets a cracking pace for the nation and is renowned for his brisk morning walk. |
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With this in mind Switzerland's Stephan Steiner took off at a cracking pace in heat one and never looked back. |
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What's more, the narrative has pace and is injected with witty dialogue and humour. |
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He stated that the cart had speed control settings that permitted Nelson to operate the cart at a pace too fast for the path terrain. |
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The surfaces must have the maximum possible pace and bounce with a reasonable covering of grass. |
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He was not at all inconvenienced by the furious pace and hardly put a foot wrong over the Prestbury Park fences. |
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The combination of percussion and reeds, and the frenzied pace of some of the pieces, creates some uncanny parallels with Moroccan trance music. |
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This pace is broadly comparable with the trend in manufacturing workforces in America, Britain and most other western economies. |
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Although unemployment is still rising, this is only because job creation is not keeping pace with the population of working age. |
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The return to running should be gradual, starting at an easy pace on a level surface. |
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He wrong-footed fullback Sean Barnes with a clever change of pace and dived over in the corner. |
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It has some glimmers of interest, and some diverting visuals, but really nothing makes up for the laborious pace and risibly bad writing. |
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The extent of the economic regression for many countries is astonishing, as is the pace of economic advancement for a small number of countries. |
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They stand up, slowly, then pace their dispassionate bodies toward those two coffins, coffin-like boxes. |
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He carried the ball at pace from halfway towards the box before cracking a right-foot shot from 20 yards out. |
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Simply plant the accelerator, try to keep pace with the gearchanges in the six-speed box and soak up the noise. |
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The system of public education has not kept pace with the progress of the country, so that it is, relatively, falling behind. |
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It's not just that the pace of basic innovation has slowed in your field, although it has. |
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The instruments trudge along at a snail's pace and the recording quality is poor at best. |
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The game is being played at walking pace at the moment and if the Italian players were ambling around any slower they'd be stationary. |
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His usual pace was about that of Alec Bedser, with a faster ball and a slower one, in well-concealed reserve, and the ability to bowl a yorker. |
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The yuan is pegged to the dollar and has not kept pace with the country's expansion, so making goods even cheaper. |
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Not a vast change from the last album, but in a picking up the pace of my favourite tracks and staying on that track kind of way. |
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Ludovic Giuly beats John Terry for pace and tries to latch on to a long ball played from the back. |
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I slacked off a bit on the viewing in July and August, but I've been picking up the pace lately. |
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This hectic pace at which we all apparently live leaves little room for lateness. |
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Twyla, after scowling at her replier, started to pace the length of the room. |
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At the other end, even though mistakes began to creep in, there was enough pace and verve to gee the crowd up if not break through. |
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The Texan's voice upped a pace and softened slightly, as the guitars zinged with country spice. |
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His contribution has been to deploy the team in a setup to maximise John's pace and direct running. |
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She twiddled her thumbs with a contemplative frown, stood to pace for a moment, then reseated herself and cleared her throat. |
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Even for lead-footed teams, the pace will pick up because the 10-second rule has been cut to eight seconds. |
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Deaths don't cause downtime at least, thanks to the instant respawns which keep the pace moving smoothly. |
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I was always regarded as a slow learner, but if I was interested in a subject, I believe I could keep pace with any of my schoolmates. |
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A leash also lets you control the pace so your dog doesn't sprint ahead at the beginning and wear out. |
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The drag about this pace of life is I really can't remember anything I want to talk about. |
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The whole thing bogs down to an annoyingly slow pace and then just confuses us with a weird ghost story. |
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Our politics continue to shift leftward and away from its conservative groove at a pace that has defied predictions. |
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I wasn't having to stop and count leger lines, and I was managing to maintain something of a pace through it. |
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Priory opened with a mix of pace and leg spin which was to prove a formidable formula. |
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Here is a a more leisured pace of life and courteousness that are only a memory in the frantic bustle of Kuala Lumpur. |
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We took the walk at a leisurely pace and spent about four and a half hours. |
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It's not done at such a leisurely pace now that the temperatures have dropped. |
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It can take off from a relatively small runway and cruise at the leisurely pace of a car. |
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They kept a leisurely pace on the walk up to the restaurant, admiring the scenery as they went. |
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The walk is taken at a leisurely pace and is a very pleasant way to spend a summer's evening. |
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They walked at a leisurely pace through the rest of the battlefield and into a wild forest. |
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That leisurely pace is what makes a balloon ride such a satisfying experience. |
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Almost 17,000 overs bowled when nowadays a county pace bowler having played three consecutive games expects a testimonial by return of post. |
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The pace of the novel is simply breathtaking, with no let-up between one earth shattering event and the next. |
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The dizzying pace of this financial revolving door is the essence of globalization's entanglements. |
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The only sound I could hear was the steady pace of my own breathing, which along with the rhythmic escape of air bubbles was quite hypnotic. |
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The narrative is artful and rhythmical, maintaining a fast and steady pace throughout the movie. |
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The monologue continues at a rhythmically controlled pace with no emotion or tension in his voice. |
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Heskey's got the power and pace to frighten anyone but must remember it's not a crime to use it. |
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The pace of reforms has not increased since it came to power last year, and is not likely to do so anytime soon. |
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If a left-arm pace bowler is to have any consistent success in test cricket he needs to be able to swing the ball back into the right-handers. |
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She changed her pace now to a run as the cry of a frightened horse broke the air. |
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For me, the turgid pace and uneven writing muted any appreciation I might have of what it offers. |
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They walked at a wearisome pace across the trembling peat bog, knee deep in flowering ling, bog cotton and black slimy mud. |
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Eve quickened her pace as she heard the distant roar of an engine pulling up into the driveway. |
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The signings, although no huge names, appear to be pretty decent players and seem to have fit into the pace of the English game well. |
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Meurig Raymond, whose enterprises include arable and beef production, warned that world grain output had not kept pace with consumption. |
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At my first appointment with the Rolfer, I pace the room in my underwear while she studies my movements. |
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In the first period of extra time both teams played at a frenetic pace with tenacious defending keeping Keighley's hopes alive. |
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Those sharp dips mainly reflected the pace of technological progress and faster productivity growth. |
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In perfect conditions for rugby football, the team was playing with pace and precision, looking to move the ball at every opportunity. |
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My eyes followed his steady pace around the room as he tore at his hair and swore under his breath. |
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So, after a peek at the paintings and assemblages in the local art gallery we set off at a steady pace half-expecting to meet them. |
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But he will be 32 in October and unless he picks up the pace he could be in danger of running out of time. |
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As the run-in approached Bertogliati's Lampre team set a fast pace before the Telekom team took over. |
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Basically, it is mainly pace and turbulence that determines whether a traditional stick or a wire stem is used. |
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Modern astronomical research proceeds at a rapid pace due to the application of new technologies in astronomy and astrophysics. |
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Its lethargic pace and surprising lack of experimentation render it a boring and predictable lowlight. |
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If we continue along the pace we are now, it's unsustainable and there will have to be some day of reckoning. |
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The story is interesting, and remarkably lucid given the rapid pace of its telling. |
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The real question at issue was the pace at which gradual democratization should proceed. |
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He is quicker than most of the attackers he marks and pace is essential in modern day football. |
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He clearly possesses pace but did not have the stamina to complete lung-busting raids. |
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The change in pace is subtle and almost negligible, and yet its mellow lure propels the song beyond the gloom. |
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At one of the recent public meetings on sustainable development, a member of the audience lamented the rapid pace of development in Bermuda. |
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It's a real four-seater saloon car with serious pace when you need it, rather than a supercar draped in a saloon's body. |
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But as I stated earlier the pace of the show was rather too slow and this, I believe, was due mainly to poor blocking. |
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During the madding pace of the night, Father De La Cruz managed to slip into the hotel unnoticed. |
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This would include bowling changes, field changes, shuffling the batting order, speeding up or slowing down the pace of the game, etc. |
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He hasn't looked happy so far in the championship at centre half-back and was miles off the pace in the frenetic first twenty minutes. |
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They are demanding pay increases to keep pace with inflation which is currently averaging 3 percent a year. |
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No doubt, it is the bazillions of lights, taxicabs, shadow-casting skyscrapers, and bustling pace that incite my heart to pump a little faster. |
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Once the data is backed up to disk, business operations can proceed at a normal pace and important data protection operations can take place. |
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A bit of an unknown quantity for GB, Brent has plenty of pace and is a prolific try-scorer. |
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Futurologists have noted an exponential acceleration in the pace of technological change. |
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He can roll or slice his backhand, hook his forehand short, or hit it with a mix of pace and top spin that is formidable. |
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The inter-county hurling and football championships have been gathering pace this past few weeks. |
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The battle to secure a household recycling centre for Westbury gathered pace this week as senior councillors were urged to back the plan. |
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Slowly at first but then gathering pace the 4,100 tonne warship began to sink. |
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The prog rock revival gathered pace last year when they toured Europe, South America and South East Asia. |
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The quest to find one of Croydon's best known independent stores a new home gathered pace this week. |
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He carted pace bowler Shane Bond for a huge six over his head before being dropped at mid-off by Mark Richardson. |
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The Christ Church player, whose pace carried him behind the backline, stumbled as he stooped to finish, bumping the ball out. |
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The artistes had become more confident after the rehearsals and this had a telling effect on the pace of work. |
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Down the back straight for the last time the pace quickened again and I started to row in rhythm with the horse. |
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He went to the front with 700 metres to go and wound the pace up over the penultimate lap before kicking again on the back straight. |
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With a balanced attack, your team can maintain a higher pace using frequent platoon-style substitutions. |
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Watson set a hot pace from the outset, over the type of Yorkshire terrain that suited the York rider. |
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The software sector lends itself to mergers and takeovers as firms scramble to keep pace with market changes and shifting demand. |
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Good distribution allied with his pace and defensive qualities mark him out as a fine prospect. |
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Horne in particular was able to use his pace to get beyond his marker but his final ball was met by Beckwithshaw's solid defending. |
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The dominant industries are textiles and light manufacturing, as Guangzhou feverishly tries to keep pace with nearby Hong Kong. |
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The Glasgow plan aims to quicken the pace of development at Atlantic Quay and surrounding land on the north bank of the river. |
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He had walked away from teaching in 1984, opting to leave the slow pace and banker's hours for a graduate assistant's job at South Carolina. |
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Now the search is on for a new seamer to work alongside the pace bowlers Andrew Harris, Greg Smith and Ryan Sidebottom. |
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As far as pace is concerned, I don't think I have seen a single team that could match up to what we're doing. |
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The crew may not be able to operate at the pace you would expect from a more seasoned crew. |
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Ms Finnegan said another factor underpinning the pace of inflation was the limited stock of second-hand property available for sale. |
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They would like to maximize the potential of their pace battery which is the engine which drives them on a cricket field. |
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He was dictating the pace and tempo of the fight in these rounds. |
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Reports are filtering in this week of an increase in pace and tempo. |
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He operated both round and over the wicket, varied pace and spin and generally looked a genuine spin bowler with an international career beckoning. |
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Many of our classmates related to Robin by doing bits with him, attempting to keep pace with his antics. |
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In a computerized society, the pace of technological innovation helps shape nearly all our day-to-day habits. |
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And the plodding pace of the French justice system has a way of interfering with career plans, no matter what the ultimate ruling. |
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If Agathe's delivery matched his pace he would truly be an awesome player. |
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After a few lessons in steering and stopping this grey beauty, she lolloped off at a leisurely pace through coastal dunes and down on to the beach, which we had to ourselves. |
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We started out at a jog, trying to warm up and pace ourselves. |
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Everything zips along at a brisk and comedic pace for the first half hour, with an elaborate scam to rip off a load of smuggled goods being set up. |
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The most difficult match in any competition is the first, and nothing can prepare a team for the change of pace required at international level like a test match. |
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The pace of light infantry is limited to the speed of a soldier on foot. |
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Models moved down into the audience, working the aisles at a busy pace while wearing these new incarnations of the Chanel look. |
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Others have focused on beefing up new product categories to keep pace with the changing times. |
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Her face automatically brightened and her pace increased into a jog. |
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She approached it cautiously, slowing her pace down to a jog. |
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Sadly, the pace slows down considerably at the one-hour mark, and the film has a hard time recovering the sense of rollicking adventure supplied by the first half. |
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The often glacial pace of change can prove particularly frustrating to former clerks who return as justices. |
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Being reminded that economic and social conditions are not improving at the pace one expected can be a powerful motivator. |
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She is so buoyantly energetic that she takes two-mile walks on the Rockaway beach at a pace that exhausts her grandchildren. |
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Because of the fast pace of the game, catching a reneger is difficult. |
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It took the entire day, but the slow pace indicated that it was probably a test to gauge public reaction. |
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Slowly, his strides lengthened without his pace getting quicker. |
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In the 1990s, his pace began to slacken, and eventually the hits evaporated. |
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It has scenes of animals being forcibly fed arrack, non-stop beating to accelerate their pace during the race and other shocking images from the muddy tracks. |
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Back in New York, the slow pace and inward focus of her yoga practice was less fulfilling. |
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When the Spanish speakers pick up the pace and the volume, it's an auditory cue to stop reading your newspaper, balancing your checking account or writing your article. |
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Today, the pace of leading-edge research with compounds in the cannabis plant is accelerating. |
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Notwithstanding the potential fall-off in the pace of growth, the demand from both local and international retailers remains strong, with new lettings achieving record rents. |
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As the novel unreels at a pace fitting for a neighbourhood of fly fishers, Gary's adolescent yearnings and religious fears become the frame for a deeper story. |
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Perhaps a radical change of pace is exactly the stimulus this brilliant musician needs to help him realize his full artistic potential before it atrophies altogether. |
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Where citrus County felt like a coiled spring, the pace of A Million Heavens is sedate, diffused among a dozen or so characters. |
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She also urged Japan to quicken the pace of a project aimed at disposing of the huge stockpiles of chemical weapons left in China by retreating Japanese armies. |
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In the second half of the race, the pace quickened and the attacks began. |
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The novel's leisurely pace picks up tempo and tension towards the middle. |
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I notice he moves at a slightly slower pace than everyone else, and keeps his gestures compact. |
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Winger Michael Blackwood used his pace on the left to aggravate the Reds' defence, but Jonathan Smith's return to the heart of the rearguard gave them aerial protection. |
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He said the slow pace at which the deal was being negotiated was retarding the development of the park, which he said had remained closed to tourists for sometime. |
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After a somewhat awkward first 15 min, the film gathers its pace and form, touching greatness on many levels, not least the performances and camera use. |
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They were marching steadily across the marshy northlands, their pace slowed by the necessity of watching their feet for sinkholes and mud puddles. |
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While the pace contingent is threadbare, the spin section is overmanned. |
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She took one pace forward into the gale and six paces back into the warm. |
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And if he doesn't play in Melbourne, the 35-year-old pace warhorse certainly won't play in the third Test in Sydney, just days after the Melbourne Test. |
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By rolling the jack and concentrating on the feel of it, you will find the real pace of the green and have a better chance of putting the first bowl close to the jack. |
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In the first innings Lee had been erratic and expensive, like Warne conceding more than 100 runs, but yesterday he sustained a decent pace and allied it to accuracy. |
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His pace is quirky and his direction of the actors inventive. |
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Sand Springs set the pace before fading late to finish seventh. |
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Abbondanza set the early pace in the Sprint before fading to finish 11 th. |
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Ian Hare resisted the temptation to over-play his hand at the start, keeping a firm grip on the music's architecture with a fine control of pace and registration. |
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She looked up to the sky and felt her pace slow to a lethargic walk. |
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For me, the slow pace of our walk had not just meant taking in all that I came across, but also trying to retrace those steps I had taken with my grandfather. |
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As the site is a protected scheduled monument, work will progress at a carefully managed pace to ensure as much as possible can be learnt about the site. |
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Slick stage management in the hands of Dave Bedding ensured the show moved at a pace and strong chorus work and pit singers meant each number was given the full treatment. |
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In four years he had gone from nobody to totemic figure, each new direction he took wrong-footing fans who were desperately trying to keep pace with him. |
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Just get out and start walking, increasing your pace and distance as you get fitter. |
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In this view, Americans' obliviousness ended with an outbreak of nostalgia at the turn of the century, fanned by general concern over the heedless pace of industrial society. |
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It has set a scorching pace in a bid to remain York's greenest company. |
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Because of the slow pace and small scale of most of those lumber operations, loggers often selected only the most merchantable trees, leaving the rest for future harvests. |
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If you are unable to see the clocks due to poor vision, use a digital wristwatch or a smaller pace clock that can be placed at the end of your lane. |
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It's being played at a terrific pace by two teams intent on attacking. |
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Dolores has abundant gripes, late arrivals, and a sluggish pace among them. |
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You are free to tour the premises at your own pace accompanied by an audio cassette containing commentary by friends and family of Elvis including Priscilla, his former wife. |
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No English daily is expanding at the scorching pace of these. |
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Valery represents the circularity of both the sunset and contemplation in the pauseless pace of lines two and three, and by his emphasis of particular rhymes. |
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Throughout the 1960s and '70s, Lundeberg kept pace with her husband, who had developed his own manner of reductive abstraction based on forms of the human body. |
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The instability inhibited Spain's development, which had started fitfully gathering pace in the previous century. |
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This enabled factories to be sited away from rivers, and further accelerated the pace of the Industrial Revolution. |
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Some dancers were also associated with a tradition of mumming and hold a pace egging play in their area. |
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In addition to setting pace for the line, the caesura also grouped each line into two couplets. |
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Kipling kept writing until the early 1930s, but at a slower pace and with much less success than before. |
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The rhythm of the song served to synchronize the movements of the sailors or to pace the labor as they toiled at repetitive tasks. |
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The dormouse scolds Alice and tells her she has no right to grow at such a rapid pace and take up all the air. |
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When the receiver is ready, the server will serve, although the receiver must play to the pace of the server. |
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Variations have been developed to increase the game's pace and appeal to a wider audience. |
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Etiquette guidelines cover matters such as safety, fairness, pace of play, and a player's obligation to contribute to the care of the course. |
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Jermain Defoe's drive appeared destined for the net but Ince's slide tackle took the pace off it and Schwarzer held on low to his right. |
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More bad luck struck him in Spain where he kept pace with Prost for most of the race only for his engine to fail. |
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After the race he made a public apology to his team for the penalty he received, but also raised concerns over the pace of his car. |
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He eventually finished second behind Vettel, whose race pace he had been unable to match. |
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The pace of growth slowed during 2007 and led to the burst of a major property bubble which had developed over time. |
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Although the recession reached its trough in June 2009, voters remained frustrated with the slow pace of the economic recovery. |
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During the period of parliamentary enclosure, employment in agriculture did not fall, but failed to keep pace with the growing population. |
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Military tactics developed before World War I failed to keep pace with advances in technology and had become obsolete. |
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Soon German aircraft production could not keep pace with losses, and without air cover, the Allied bombing campaign became even more devastating. |
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Dye contends that not only was British aircraft production replacing aircraft, but replacement pilots were keeping pace with losses. |
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Three more weeks of such a pace would indeed have exhausted aircraft reserves. |
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Nurses' pay has not kept pace with inflation and their real pay has fallen while people wanting to become nurses lack training bursaries. |
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The study found that even very low concentrations of crude oil can slow the pace of fish heartbeats. |
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He considered that parochial organizations had not kept pace in the city with the growing population. |
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The surrounding scenery and wildlife are regarded as attractions of the village, as is the slow pace of life. |
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With the outbreak of war in September 1939, the pace of providing shelters increased further. |
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He is one of the quickest players I've ever seen, but he has another gear and the ability to find that extra pace within the next stride. |
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As the rounds went on, Calzaghe continued to push the pace and began to get his rhythm going by landing combinations at close range. |
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The pace of oceanographic and marine biology studies quickly accelerated during the course of the 19th century. |
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Like a small farm, the lighthouse compound had its chattering of chicks, pace of donkeys, troop of horses, and fold of sheep. |
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Even though farm and industry output expanded, the economy could not keep pace with the population boom. |
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The home side's goalkeeper Asmir Begovic managed to palm the drive on to the post but the sheer pace of the shot forced the ball into the net. |
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From the 1850s onwards, the pace of colonization shifted to a significantly higher gear. |
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Russia and Qing Dynasty China failed to keep pace with the other world powers which led to massive social unrest in both empires. |
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Private consumption has fallen during the crisis, but it gained pace again from 2010 onward. |
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In my last paper I dwelt chiefly on the remarkable phenomenon of pelorism and what can be learned from it as to the pace of organic change. |
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He asserted that the pace of globalization was quickening and that its impact on business organization and practice would continue to grow. |
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Global travel and migration in general developed at an increasingly brisk pace throughout the era of European colonial expansion. |
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Ward showed good pace to beat the advancing Reina to the ball and poke a low finish into the corner. |
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