If our folks sit on their rears, the Republicans are better organized in Pennsylvania than they've ever been. |
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In Norma, forbidden love rears its tragic head as a Druid High Priestess falls for a Roman officer. |
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He rears 100 bull beef calves, runs a flock of 300 ewes and produces 3,000 turkeys for the Christmas market. |
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Then, one after the other, they hit the same tiny protrusion which caused their rears to topple over their fronts. |
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Now Macy's in New York is endorsing big bottoms by adding an extra 2.5in to their dummies' rears. |
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On the other side of the alley are the rears of another strip, and the back doors of all these stores empty into the alley. |
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Lambs graze on organic grass on the farm, where the family also rears free-range pigs and then cure their own bacon on the premises. |
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Good thing we'll burn it all off by sitting on our rears for another three days. |
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For all our technological and intellectual advances, we are impotent when nature rears up against us. |
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Although it is predominately a dairy business, he also rears beef and grows 52 acres of arable crops. |
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These athletes have such great-looking rears because their sport effectively targets the gluteal muscles. |
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The firm rears chickens from just days old and processes them through to cooked finished products. |
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Noise still rears an ugly head but, instead of relentlessly bashing away, it is under a leash and controlled. |
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When a horse rears as you are walking beside it, you want to stay as close to the shoulder as possible. |
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Then that feisty optimist rears up in me, and my commitment deepens to enjoying this brief ride on the only green planet I happen to know of. |
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However, I have to admit that the green-eyed monster sometimes rears its head when I compare my puny attempts with those of your experts. |
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The seven-foot Cobra curled on the ground slowly rears his head and stares at the Marines encircling him. |
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In polygamous marriages, wives cooperate in performing household duties, although each rears her own children. |
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Just as the garden weeds are more robust than the desired plants, bad information rears its ugly head more virulently than good information. |
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It certainly reared its head in the past and it rears its head in the present time as well. |
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Every hour, it jerkily rears up on its hind legs and waggles its forelegs a bit. |
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I noticed only the faintest of sound from the rears and did not detect any perceptible subwoofer support. |
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There's a pop bubbling along beneath the surface, which rears its head in the form of a bouncing, jerking bass-line. |
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The powerful film shows that the beautiful game rears a truly ugly side, which is bound to shock and stun audiences. |
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Lahore station rears out of the surrounding anarchy like a liner out of the ocean. |
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There is a loud whinny as the horse rears to a stop, and a loud pounding is soon heard on the door. |
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Not surprisingly this hostility rears its head most often when the Liverpudlians feel they have been insulted. |
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He rears the bull calves to a year-and-a-half and the heifer calves to two-year-olds. |
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In all brake applications, the front calipers utilize dual pistons and the rears use single pistons. |
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The company rears popular varieties like goldfish, angelfish, mollies and fighters in its farm near Coimbatore. |
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Of course, Shostakovich's biting and grotesque satire rears its head as well, particularly in the 3rd Movement Allegro non troppo. |
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As soon as the chaos approaches, the monster rears its head and I'm back on track. |
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He rears up and instills fear into the hearts of his adversaries. |
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The parent who constantly whines empty threats rears a child who pays no heed. |
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I could imagine what it would be like to have that dog bolling his way down the mall hallway, sniffing people's rears and grabbing bags out of unsuspecting hands. |
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If developers rampantly fail to produce good software, but the company exceeds earnings estimates anyway, how many of those rears will be actually on the line? |
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Every time I think that the studios are slow in getting what's going on out here, the traditional media rears up to let me know that they're even slower. |
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But just when I think so, yet another Craig Wilson rears his head. |
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I plunged into a rage of bucks, kicks, rears, jumps, and twists. |
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And there's some real griping when the incessant rotations cause a disorganized sea which rears up and becomes boat breaking. |
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The two supporting lengths of parallel pipe swerve in unison from the back until the top pipe rears up and curves back over the sails that it also apparently is bracing. |
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A great black head rears up and swallows some black stick figures: the motherland. |
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Just as often, a distorted electric-guitar melody rears up from the quietude. |
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Here the riverbank suddenly rears up forming bluffs over a hundred feet high. |
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This is an unexpected and mysterious apparition, that rears up along the paved path winding through the greenery. |
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Where dissent rears its ugly head let us behave with studied disdain and act as if some oik has committed some dreadful faux pas and ignore the blighter. |
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Cranswick's pigs, which the firm rears itself, frolic free-range around the Yorkshire wolds. |
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The Asians who are still targeted these days tend to be Muslims, as Islamophobia rears its ugly head. |
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This is an old issue that rears its head at frequent intervals, but many dramas bring us back to it. |
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I am very well aware that it is the discarding issue that rears its head here. |
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The question of equal pay for equal work performed by women and men rears its head with remarkable regularity especially during election periods. |
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A problem which rears its head from time to time is the recognition of vocational and university qualifications. |
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When they finally seem to put the problem of one disease to rest, a more resistant one rears its ugly head. |
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This could even be dangerous, as it will effectively result in a difference in adhesion between your front and rears wheels. |
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In terms of contact area, this meant that the fronts gained proportionally more grip than the rears. |
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Wherever terrorism lurks, wherever it rears its head, whatever form it takes, the European Union must not shrink from fighting it. |
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Seat belts, air bags, energy absorbing car fronts and rears are good vehicle examples. |
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Everyone says that they are in favour of enlargement, but when it comes to paying the price of solidarity, political selfishness rears its head. |
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The debate on increasing reserves rears its head each time there is a rise in the price per barrel. |
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When oppression rears its head, students in Burma have always stood with the people. |
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After mom cries out in anguish and frustration on hearing the verdict, the ugly side of the protests rears its head. |
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Shep rears and begins racing in the other direction, taking Tess with him. |
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A metallic roar cuts through the stillness, and out of the murk further up the valley a gigantic shape rears, an uprooted sapling clutched in its metal talons. |
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Just behind them a haystack rears up, a ladder leaning against the side. |
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The message that we must send is that racism, in all of its forms, must be fought every time it rears its dangerous head. |
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Melbourne Zoo has a long history of breeding stick insects and currently rears five separate species as well as dozens of other invertebrate species. |
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The man who rears pigs is a productive, the man who teaches men an unproductive, member of society', asserted the German economist, Friedrich List, 150 years ago. |
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Once the project starts, real life rears its ugly head. |
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Robert: The more fearless will surely risk getting near the Hindus by wearing a fake turban on their heads and smelling their rears to appear to be one of them. |
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This terrible, jagged remnant rears up from a panoramic view of the civic grandeur of Dresden like some terrible, ungainly, carious tooth which both shames and alarms. |
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Rarely can a capital letter have carried such freight: Blackwood's Nature isn't pastoral but a wild and dangerous other, which rears up in his stories to destroy the minds of those who try to get too close to it. |
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A disgruntled garter snake hisses and rears at the rake. |
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More like wolves with stripy rears, Tasmanian tigers are an extinct Australian marsupial. |
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It has a violent and direct action on the bars when the horse rears up. |
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Scent glands located at the base of the ankles are used when the caribou is in danger: the animal rears up on its hind legs and deposits a scent that alerts other caribou to the menace. |
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The mountain falls away and then rears up to the 2,200m Lavey ridge. |
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Almost immediately, the route rears up to lungbuster steepness. |
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A herd of six to eight feeder cattle, each weighing between 300 and 500 pounds, is corralled into a pen, and their heads, ears, bellies, rears and topsides are manually inspected. |
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Captain Mourier joined the GCMA operating in the rears of Viet Minh and, for close to two years, coordinated the Thai maquis, Miao and Chinese nationalists. |
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But jauntiness rears its head in the form of one-armed cartwheels, all to the urban sounds of dripping water and jackhammers. |
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Jealousy rears its head, shattering friendship before mutual desire finally brings the threesome back together for a joltingly abrupt ending. |
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After a two-year program in farm management at a nearby college, Chaîné took over the nursery where Boutin rears batches of 2,000 piglets, allowing him to concentrate on his 4,000 hogs. |
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Each time, it was a pious hope and, each time a new international crisis rears its head, Europe is mute, mute because European countries are incapable of agreeing on a common approach. |
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The farm grows a variety of vegetables, herbs, edible flowers and rears meat including cows, chickens and pigs. |
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Barely perceptible in the deep ocean, a tsunami travels at the speed of a commercial jet plane but slows down when it hits shallow waters and rears up onto land. |
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My car was oversteering at the beginning of race one, which burned out the rears fairly quickly, so we worked on mitigating that for the afternoon event. |
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The legendary species routinely rears out of the depths in movies and literature, but until now, the only real giant squids that people have seen have been dead ones. |
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Treachery rears its peruked head in the form of Nevers' cousin Gonzague who, next in line to inherit the Nevers fortune, looks to off the duke and his progeny. |
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