Richardson held out the ball, with outstanding generosity, like someone trying to placate a recalcitrant child with a gobstopper. |
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Instead he denounced them and tried to placate the army, thus digging his own grave. |
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Which are deserving and important welfare issues or just the easiest to pick on and likely to placate a few voters? |
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She attempts to placate him by giving him something to eat, but he sets the food down behind him because it is too hot. |
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Even though he and I didn't get along, I definitely did those things in order to placate the family. |
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Such an answer cannot hope to placate the war's opponents, let alone satisfy the conspiracy theorists. |
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This seemed to placate her, and I finally won my release with a promise to pay next time. |
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People think that if they can placate the violent persons in their midst, then they won't get hurt. |
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I managed to placate both physician and parent by saying I would transport her to hospital myself. |
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Here's a picture from our visit to the Eden Project a couple of months ago to placate me for a little while. |
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It took a lot to placate him but finally I did and promised I would print a correction and apology. |
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She said her colleague said she could not deal with him that day and was eventually able to placate him. |
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In the meantime they can placate their opponents on the left and reward their supporters in the state sector. |
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She eventually storms off into another part of the house and he follows in an attempt to placate her. |
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The whole affair was cynically intended to placate the reform party, while the real abuses continued. |
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He is wandering around with the phone in the crook of his neck and shoulder, gamely trying to placate an obstinate interviewer. |
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This stuff doesn't merely placate the listener with predictable, danceable nursery rhymes but lashes out and lacerates the eardrum relentlessly. |
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He didn't want to argue so it was easier just to placate her until she went away. |
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You will only placate them until you are finished with the days, the dawns, the dusks, the sky, the moon. |
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It is true, however, that most politicians, and those men who need to please and placate their electors, love to bloviate. |
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He can placate all those prying legislators who keep embarrassing MLB with hearings on Capitol Hill. |
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As a still dutiful, if mature daughter, she still tried to placate rather than confront. |
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Michael began to whine when he dropped his stuffed animal and she quickly moved to placate him. |
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It was an attempt by a weakened government to placate right-wing critics in Britain. |
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Like a child fearing a telling-off, I knew I had to placate this man or he was going to upset me and I wasn't going to enjoy the game. |
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He was only making the statement to placate the frothy, emotional ultranationalism that has reared its ugly head these past few years. |
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It was forced to spend tons of money to overnight gear and to placate the channel. |
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And if your gut does start complaining, placate it with a cup of soothing mint or ginger tea or a capsule of peppermint oil. |
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Do they imagine that the timely renunciation of resolve can placate an implacable foe? |
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She even made notes on my account indicating that she'd tried to placate me, but ultimately I was inconsolable. |
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The old bulls sensed the cnunbling of their position and vainly tried to placate the reformers. |
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So, to placate his parents, he decides to marry Wei-Wei, a penniless Chinese opera singer in his building. |
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No politician can placate such fury while expressing a nuanced view of what British policy can practically achieve in the Middle East. |
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It certainly wouldn't placate us, at this table, if there was to be a weakening of the regulations that are now before the committee. |
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Because where does Frank Gehry get off calling me up and telling me to placate Marcia, after she's just offed one of my pieces? |
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The bill oversimplifies the issue and irresponsibly seeks only to placate Conservative voters. |
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This puts Morales in a tight spot between his social base and the imperialists he is seeking to placate. |
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This doesn't placate anyone or calm things down or keep order. |
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They are amazingly deferential to men and try to placate them. |
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He, too, refused to work with the Kudo-kai or placate them and he, too, was shot to death just last December. |
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President Mandela has managed to placate the worst of the rebellious elements with his policy of national reconciliation. |
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One important purpose fulfilled by a trade sanction may be that the complaining government can signal its outrage, placate the injured domestic constituency, and then move on. |
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It was completely and utterly ridiculous, but the gentleman wielded a power whereby you had no choice but to placate him. |
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The second type of healer was the exorcist, who used spells to placate the god or drive him away. |
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The lengths we will go to in order to sublimate ourselves and placate the people we care about is a simultaneously charming and pathetic aspect of human nature. |
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Take a saucer of milk to placate him and you might just escape unscathed. |
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They may pay lip service to the fans, but it's only to placate those who still buy their albums. |
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It adopts no postures of phoney charms to placate its visitors. |
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By implying that the last sephardi poet to warrant commemoration lived 900 years ago, Bibi did not placate critics. |
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Most of the small fry don't do investment banking business with companies, so they have less reason to placate company management with positive recommendations. |
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On each of those issues there are half way measures which he can offer to placate the Neocons without really doing anything of substance for them. |
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Given the somewhat macabre origins of the feast, many of the celebrations were designed to placate the gods. |
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Just as the Japanese used netsuke toggles to fasten their kimonos, the Inuit hung theirs from hunting equipment to placate the animal spirits for past catches. |
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The Saville report will placate the overwhelming majority of nationalists not only in Derry but throughout both states on the island of Ireland. |
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The onlooking Romans were stunned and horrified, and Brutus immediately arranged for a public funeral where he could placate the masses by justifying the assassination. |
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The police inside, clearly alarmed, did nothing while their senior officer leaned out of the window and tried to placate the mob. |
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Odysseus is even told, notwithstanding his ultimate safe return, that to placate the wrath of Poseidon will require one more voyage on his part. |
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And in particular, those things that seem to be benefits, he had nothing directly to do with, except to respond in an effort to buy off and placate the class struggle that was seriously ignited at that time. |
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From then on, calm reigned in the town and its surroundings, a calm punctuated by several organized efforts by the military and civilian authorities, to explain and placate. |
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This has implied a worsening of relations with the U. S., as the Tehran continues to stoke nationalist feelings to compensate for growingly precarious standards of living and to placate rising popular aspirations. |
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David Cameron will use the balm of marriage to placate Tory rebels later, promising a marriage tax-break designed to bribe co-habitees to the altar with £150 a year. |
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Whatever he comes up with – even if he offered free winter holidays in the Caribbean for every citizen of the UK courtesy of Herman von Rompuy – he will never placate his party's Better Off Outers. |
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This might placate anxious European citizens in the short term, but the usefulness and consequences of the measures had not been sufficiently thought through. |
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He is attempting to placate the rival powers of Russia, Europe and the United States, with the latter having used military bases in the country until recently. |
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However, all that is happening here is that this is just a political statement designed to placate the animal rights organizations, to say, look, we are increasing the penalties, we are taking this more seriously. |
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I say no. Instead, in a rush to placate their Conservative counterparts in the south, the Conservatives ignored five international trade rulings in favour of Canada. |
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We have learned to perhaps placate those of us who say those are wrong-headed agreements, but we have never learned to fundamentally change the direction so we develop fair trade agreements. |
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However, the programme was abandoned due to a change in a government that was no longer politically supportive of privatization and wished to placate educational officials in the local school districts. |
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The real reasons behind such discriminatory policies may have included a desire to placate voters who had become wary of foreign people and ideas. |
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It will be just enough, they hope, to placate farmers. |
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This conflict was accentuated by the political authorities of the two districts who, to placate their respective constituents, refused to take action to resolve the situation peacefully. |
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Mr. Paul Szabo: In the prior panel, Mr. Wilson suggested that the government is currently negotiating deals or compromises that would tend to maybe placate some of the differences of opinion on impacts. |
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For weeks, the White House, the Pentagon and Senate Democrats have been working overtime to cajole, convince and placate Republicans. |
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Think of the hundreds of imberb boys and impubert girls it had needed to placate the Cretan minotaur! |
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Henry refused, but agreed to increase his son's allowance, but this was not enough to placate Young Henry. |
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The purpose, which was commendable though not necessarily achieved, was to placate the anger of public opinion egged on by the media and politicians in the condemnation of excessive bonus payments. |
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This genre of ritual encompasses forms of sacrifice and offering meant to praise, please or placate divine powers. |
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The indigenous people were upset by this proclamation and so Ojeda tried to placate them by offering them trinkets. |
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They proceeded at once to New York, where Congress was in session, to placate the expected opposition. |
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The real purpose of this exorbitant barrel of pigmeat is to placate West Virginia politicians who complain their state doesn't get enough pork. |
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In July 2011, the King won a landslide victory in a referendum on a reformed constitution he had proposed to placate the Arab Spring protests. |
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Asquith immediately decided that an accommodation with Lloyd George, and a substantial reconstruction to placate the Unionist ministers, were required. |
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To placate critics, the Oath of Supremacy which peers were required to swear, gave the monarch's title as Supreme Governor rather than Supreme Head of the church. |
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In 1915, the Germans renounced these restrictions and began to sink merchant ships on sight, but later returned to the previous rules of engagement to placate neutral opinion. |
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To placate Philip, Richard had given him 10,000 marks and agreed that if he had two sons, the youngest would take Normandy, Aquitaine, or Anjou and rule it under Philip. |
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In Sialkoti's view, this was done mainly to placate the Sikhs. |
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To placate critics, the Oath of Supremacy which nobles were required to swear, gave the monarch's title as Supreme Governor rather than Supreme Head of the church. |
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It occurred to Chaplin that it was turning into a large project, so to placate First National, he halted production and quickly filmed A Day's Pleasure. |
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It is not yet clear whether Mr Dudley and his team are seriously considering a break-up or merely showing willing to placate investors clamouring for more value. |
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