Every once in awhile she liked to remind me of how I hate my size and how she loves her size six self. |
|
Just when you are thinking too many cooks spoil the broth, suddenly someone will remind you that many hands make light work. |
|
We consistently remind customers that they can buy fresh bakery at very reasonable prices. |
|
If your father mouths off to you about it, just remind him that he lives in your house and has to respect your rules now. |
|
These poles and trees are to remind the heir that it is his obligation to care for the orphans. |
|
The system can even send a text message to remind the motorist if they are nearing the maximum stay. |
|
They remind me of the bandstands that jazz bands used to play in when I was a young girl in the South. |
|
Jess, remind me to never ever let you volunteer us for anything ever again, okay? |
|
The master of ceremonies interrupted the speaker to remind the audience not to repeat questions that had already been asked. |
|
Sudden bursts of light tend to remind our more fragile ballerinas of Bolshevik gunfire. |
|
These theories remind us that historical events are experienced by individuals in a material way on real bodies and minds. |
|
You can then maintain email contact and remind him or her to visit your website again. |
|
We blow balloons up for them, do some magic and just remind them what it's like to play again. |
|
There are a number of orchestras here which also remind us of those days when everything was calmer and more sedate. |
|
As we hear today what the year may bring forth, I think it is wise to remind ourselves of these three basic human requirements. |
|
Now I keep trying to remind myself that some people are supporting whole families on a single income. |
|
And the giant mountains with their snowy peaks and endless trees remind me of you. |
|
In the way that they're organized and in the way that they thuggishly behave, they remind one of the Cosa Nostra. |
|
They would do better to remind their friends that there can be no democracy without genuine sovereignty and self-determination. |
|
The pictures of the evangelical megachurches remind me of Las Vegas gambling palaces. |
|
|
Does it remind you of Clark Kent pulling off his glasses, adding a spit curl, and suddenly no one can recognize that he is Superman? |
|
In that case, this film might not tickle your fancy, as it would probably just remind you of a boring day at the office. |
|
All it's done is remind me that when self-sacrifice is held up as a moral ideal, whatever you give will never be enough. |
|
Set a tickler in Outlook or wherever to remind you when the year has passed. |
|
Let me remind you of the now familiar distinction between mourning and melancholia. |
|
History will serve only to remind us that man's reach always exceeds his grasp. |
|
A lot of times his lyrics remind me of being a little kid and I really like the sadness and melancholy these songs evoke of that time. |
|
The psychologists remind us that hopelessness is the seedbed of melancholy and destructiveness. |
|
Remove those bumper stickers or license plate frames on your cars that remind you of a lifestyle you wish to leave behind. |
|
But, in general, the wail of jazz trumpets and the melancholy echoes of domestic chaos remind you that Elysian Fields resounds with desperation. |
|
As if to remind us that Vikings were warriors as well as traders, a shining Viking helmet stands next to him. |
|
We need to remind ourselves in framing our policies that luck, rather than virtue, is one of the great determinants of life. |
|
Throughout the landscape stand stately trees thick enough to remind me of California's sequoias, their massive roots winding over the earth. |
|
In a further attempt to remind drivers of their responsibilities, the radio station broadcasts messages from famous musicians. |
|
As the cards and carols remind us, Christmas is supposed to be a time for families and togetherness and peace and well being for all. |
|
First as we go on let me remind you that this three hour program is being simulcast on CNN International and on CNN Radio. |
|
The primitive but often inspired toons remind us that hip-hop has enjoyed a stronger visual identity than other genres. |
|
I would also remind people, please do not stop for any vehicles that try to flag you down, unless clearly marked as a police vehicle. |
|
It does remind people that the President has intelligent people working directly beneath him. |
|
It's a quick and easy way to remind your MP that they are supposed to represent their constituents in parliament, and not their party's whip. |
|
|
Today, the morning after the night before, it's a great feeling to wake up and have all the sores to remind you of the game that was. |
|
These awaken our appreciation for all the gifts God has bestowed upon us and remind us of how much God loves us. |
|
Two experiences sharply remain fixed in my mind, scenes that will forever remind me of how hate can ever so subtly linger. |
|
I would like to remind my fellow brothers and sisters that their primary objective should be service delivery and the eradication of poverty. |
|
It's easy to list the sillinesses of this idea, but it did remind me of one of my favourite stories. |
|
I think my feet were trying to remind me they could resolve the problem by simply waltzing me fight out of there! |
|
They remind Americans to eat more whole grains and fruits and vegetables, while limiting consumption of trans-fats and alcohol. |
|
Music can enhance a good mood, confirm a bad mood, console me, remind me of specific events, people, places in my life. |
|
Six months in jail would certainly remind those handling the minutiae of our lives that what's private should stay that way. |
|
As you might gather, I've been getting a few misaddressed messages, so I thought I'd remind people about this. |
|
Rather, it was built to impress man, bowl him over with its magnitude, and remind him what an insignificant twit he really is. |
|
The shoaly, azure, clear ocean and the white beach may remind you of an island in the South Seas. |
|
The harshness of this incident serves to remind us what a shock reality can be. |
|
That sign is to remind them that if they don't behave with polish and refinement at all times, they'll be punished. |
|
I wouldn't mind, as I remind my wife, but I've never in my life been stung by a wasp. |
|
He rarely misses an opportunity to remind me of in the fact that he is some years my junior! |
|
If you know exactly what sets you off, you can be mindful of it and remind yourself of the best ways to react in a trigger situation. |
|
Need I remind you the countless hours you spent crying because no one wanted to be friends with the shorty? |
|
Smoke blasts through chimneys and the odd crevice, as if to remind you that this machine belongs to the era of steam power. |
|
I want to remind those who want to spend Monopoly money on horses that the value of their investments can go down as well as up. |
|
|
Indeed, he was most peaceable as he accepted the chain of office, though he did remind us of a Hollywood boxer at one point. |
|
To help remind myself not to drink, I am wearing a silver and turquoise bracelet. |
|
But while it's consistently interesting and hypnotically watchable, its manipulative techniques should remind us what sort of thing a movie is. |
|
Like the jester at a medieval court whose caperings and quips recalled the king to sanity, he aimed only to remind the world of its duty. |
|
I would like to remind the Cabinet Ministers that a clear conscience is a soft pillow. |
|
Walls covered with quotations and images of inspiration and persecution remind visitors why they have come. |
|
Only her slightly erratic movements and an obvious weariness remind you that for the past 25 years she has suffered from Parkinson's disease. |
|
Family physicians should remind patients of the importance of hydration and leg movements during flights. |
|
The actors, in their movements and actions, too remind one of theatrical expressions that are wholly Malayali in origin. |
|
I must grit my teeth and remind myself that I did need a laptop, and that I did get over a hundred pounds off it. |
|
These remind one ever so much of tortuous university lectures in symbolic logic on a warm spring day. |
|
That way, when I address the ball, the leaf or patch of grass is still in my peripheral vision and can remind me where my target is. |
|
The sergeant's tone is meant to remind me that foreign journalists have no juice whatsoever in a place like this. |
|
Do tapered jeans, legwarmers, unicorns and green mascara remind you of your adolescent years? |
|
But reporters like Milbank remind us of the Post's history as a particular party's house organ. |
|
Finally, remind yourself that the choices you make now will help determine whether you end up a well-tuned muscle car or a rusted-out old junker. |
|
Warm, dark, the maroon velvet seats remind me of the womb, and then there's the spermatic smell of popcorn. |
|
My style is to read the stuff, make a mental list of keywords to remind me of what to talk about, then wing it. |
|
Even when a practice was prompted to remind a child to return, the decision to actually recall that child was made by the doctor. |
|
He said it all the time, as if to remind his kids that life is too short to sweat the small stuff. |
|
|
I want to remind people that homophobia stills exist and that we still must watch out. |
|
The company also likes to remind its customers that independent restaurants are more likely to recirculate profits in the local community. |
|
The evenings are becoming chilly now, enough to remind us of how very cold it will be, come winter. |
|
Hadid's graphics remind me of the steep perspectives and vertiginous sweep of illustrations in science fiction comics. |
|
Maybe a bit of cheesiness is a small price to pay to remind us of how lucky we really are. |
|
I have no intention of offending her but it behooves me to remind her that feminist extremism works against genuine women's liberation. |
|
This outcrop must remind him of his present surroundings, a place redolent of mythology and ancient magic, I suggest. |
|
But he occasionally re-emphasised the anti-Communist rhetoric, as if to remind Gorbachev that he needed to continue on the path to reform. |
|
These articles remind readers that literacy means the ability to both read and write as the latter is often forgotten. |
|
Both observers took notes to remind them of key events and used an observation grid to write these notes up in more detail later. |
|
Let's refresh your memory and remind you why you are able to speak freely, albeit ineptly. |
|
This activity can remind us that vernacular architecture is one cornerstone of our identity. |
|
There will be special quiz shows and the winners will be awarded with souvenirs to remind them of their participation in the fiesta. |
|
The center also frequently uses the checklists to remind staff of what needs to be done and to get organized. |
|
Rosha, who was sitting at the bottom of the porch stairs, barked at her, a little yap to remind her of where she was going. |
|
I remind myself to convert miles per hour into knots and even learn to speak New Zealandese. |
|
Ridiculously catchy, this'll remind you how fun pop can be without being totally lame. |
|
There are some twists and quirks that also remind me of that admittedly better comedy, but still served to make me like this one. |
|
I would also like to remind everyone that the last two releases are alpha, which is why only minor changes are visible. |
|
Mentioning the Writers' Collective events remind me that it will just be a hop, skip and jump until festival time. |
|
|
They remind us of a time when our culture was sophisticated and full of elegance and beauty. |
|
Each anecdote seems designed to remind us we are in the presence of a clever and important man. |
|
I was able to remind myself of these cases by reading the notes on the previous evening. |
|
Healthcare professionals can address the psychological needs by having patients remind themselves daily why they are quitting smoking. |
|
It hurts, but now I just remind myself that they don't know anything about me, and that I am worth more than their cheap laughs. |
|
Occasionally the sounds remind one of noisy breakbeats and, at other times, the reliable downtempo four-on-the-floor of old blues music. |
|
But the nine-day fiesta will once again remind us of all that is great about Latino cinema. |
|
I would also like to remind our President about his speech on zero tolerance of corruption. |
|
These areas are then overlaid with a curious but beautiful, whitish veil-like layer, as if to remind us that her scenes are fictive. |
|
The dancing figures on the walls of the charnel house or the church were there to remind their audience that death was to be found everywhere. |
|
Those scissors remind me of the creative inventive and resourceful things my mother did. |
|
I hope they remind them that the spacebar doesn't respawn you in real combat. |
|
Both Taylor and Phillips wanted a more rural home that would remind them of their upbringings in deep countryside. |
|
One look at an anhinga's picture should remind you of the reptile precursors of birds! |
|
He's a slippery character whose public statements remind you of a fellow Rhodes scholar from Arkansas. |
|
As metaphysical mirror images, Yalis remind us we have various animal instincts rolled into this human form. |
|
There was no better way to remind the restorer of the Ottoman Empire of the Safavid king. |
|
His colleagues remind him that they should not contemplate such a step without informing the high-ups. |
|
They are also sending out posters to remind patients to cancel unwanted appointments. |
|
John Paul II appointed Arinze to be the pontifical legate to other faiths, and to remind us that God is a God of joy. |
|
|
Many of the digital images in this overblown cautionary tale remind us of humanity's relatively insignificant place in the universe. |
|
We would like to remind customers how important it is to let us know when they change address. |
|
We have to remind ourselves that we may not have the leisure to do this later. |
|
They also backed simple measures to remind people about their appointments, so less of doctors' time was wasted. |
|
Their Chardonnay wines remind one of well made Chablis, with a hint of California fruit at the finish. |
|
Can I remind both children and parents that graveyards and cemeteries are not playgrounds. |
|
May I remind you that if you drive while disqualified over the next two years, you could lose your liberty. |
|
If you listen to most rhymes of rappers they always remind me of the rhymes of Alexander Pope, the English poet. |
|
At this time, we remind ourselves that God is our rock, our strength, and support. |
|
The leaflets will remind pensioners never to open their doors to anyone they are unsure of. |
|
Now, maybe it is time to bring them back to our own shores to remind us again what makes this country great. |
|
By way of apology and, indeed, justification, let me then remind the reader of the early career of one Albert Einstein. |
|
Enter inside though and the high cathedral ceilings, elegant chandeliers and smooth hardwood floors remind you of a Hampton's mansion. |
|
The bowlers and fielders were quick to remind the other batsmen of their incompetence to bat at this level. |
|
Their editorial sought to remind Washington of Georgia's fragility as a functioning nation state. |
|
She said the sheet of questions may serve to remind teenagers of the riskiness of some of their choices, although that's not its purpose. |
|
Another young women bounded on stage to remind the audience that catcalls are subtler but nevertheless real forms of sexual violence. |
|
So he's going to remind us that our homeland is more secure, but it needs to be even more secure yet, meaning appropriations of money. |
|
The unposed, rather awkward-looking, front-on shots remind us that fashion is not all about celebrity and stylists. |
|
There are certainly heavenly smells that remind me how much I love and miss California. |
|
|
There is so much sickness that I want to remind listeners that everyone has goodness in them. |
|
Luckily, her aunt Joan is on the case to remind her of the important things in life. |
|
Writers like the Romantics, who found mystery in the commonplace and saw the universal in each individual's experience, remind us to hope. |
|
Step one is his novel, a hilarious romp intended to remind readers that the comic neurotic is also a talented writer. |
|
You remind me of another young roller I once knew, a roller with a golden arm and a headful of dreams. |
|
Just when you think you've cracked this racing game, along comes a considerable boo-boo to remind you that you are human. |
|
He says the whorls remind him of a cartographical system still undiscovered. |
|
The solution is to sometimes remind golfers that sand bunkers are a hazard. |
|
Gaghan and I would remind ourselves every time we went through the script that the issue of control was our Rosetta stone. |
|
We were actually brought our main courses before the soup arrived, and had to remind the waitress of our order. |
|
He's a slippery character whose public statements remind you of certain other politicians. |
|
Some may be anxious and nervous or may develop behaviors to avoid stimuli that remind them of past experiences. |
|
It helps to remind us of the long-standing peace between England and France and reminds us to continue that peace. |
|
It was really nice, sunny weather and these songs remind me of a carefree, happy time in my life. |
|
Labour has assiduously made capital from that little nugget ever since, even stencilling the phrase on its campaign cars to remind people. |
|
He went on to remind me that China consumes more steel, copper and iron ore than any other country in the world. |
|
Each time I see Hugh, I remind him that we are a figment of his capacious imagination. |
|
I'll try to send more as time passes, but you may need to remind me when your supply gets low. |
|
I resign myself to paying over the odds, and remind myself that this is still an outrageously low sum. |
|
Hotels outside the city remind you of renting a room from a polite but unenthusiastic friend. |
|
|
In choosing between these submissions we must first remind ourselves of the relevant provisions of statute and subordinate legislation. |
|
As the authors remind us, intellectual understanding doesn't necessarily lead to change. |
|
There are ten cables spilling out of a socket in the kitchen, white tubes that remind me of the guts of the robot in the Alien movie. |
|
In this historical context, the director's main aim is to remind the audience of virtues such as coherence, austerity, passion and faith. |
|
We must remind the Australian people not only of the alternatives, but of the consequences of change. |
|
Of course, as any yoga teacher worth his or her pork loins will remind you, true yoga has nothing to do with looking good in a Lycra bodysuit. |
|
Times like these also remind us of the need to take stock of our overall financial picture, from insurance to record-keeping to wills. |
|
Such events remind us of the sameness of our human destiny, the fragility of our existence. |
|
His starry eyed, almost hallucinatory imaginings remind us that dreams are part of life, too. |
|
I need only remind members that the hold-up of work on the Highway was because of a taniwha. |
|
Four forty-five am, my alarm awakes me to remind me three hours sleep really wasn't enough. |
|
The playing is good enough, and the engineering is better, yet the final peroration does remind me of a rush hour traffic jam in New York City. |
|
The shift is so complete and subtle that it is often a struggle to remind yourself that it is the same actress playing both parts. |
|
Maybe Dickens needed a good sub-editor to remind him that the rules require sentences to contain proper main verbs. |
|
But with their beauty and their majesty they remind us of who and where we are in this world. |
|
And the next time he puts the make on you, remind him that's what he has a girlfriend for. |
|
We need to continually remind them of the nutritious and tasty foods we have in our seas and on our lands. |
|
I babble on about style and plot, without admitting I had to re-read the first chapter three times to remind myself who George was. |
|
It is a sample taken from one state agency to remind taxpayers how their money is spent. |
|
Deaths of hundreds of tea garden workers every year in tropical diseases always remind us of the poor health and sanitation system. |
|
|
And let me also remind you that when some of the defense witnesses were on the stand, the jury laughed at them. |
|
We want to remind the public under no circumstances should anyone enter the fenced-off land. |
|
You remind yourself that these thoughts are being generated out of a mental habit. |
|
His legacy is to remind us to be sceptical about science and suspicious of facts. |
|
This is a small effort to remind Telugus about their rich traditions that are on the wane. |
|
But I want to remind him of this one simple fact before he becomes excessively boastful, as he is wont to do. |
|
That get up is outrageous and serves to remind us that our present day gangs are letting us down with their naff sportswear. |
|
The charts which illustrate the light curves of variable stars remind me of quilting charts. |
|
Let me take a moment to remind everyone that I judge this movie in terms of its under-the-radar B-movie brethren. |
|
The anchors and pundits still repeat the mantras that remind us what we have lost, but the spirit has gone out of it. |
|
But on Wednesday, here was the White House to remind you that an MC is more than the gestalt of his lyrics. |
|
He now has only a few trophies to remind him of the glory of his athletic career. |
|
But the ADS are not just intended to remind the Google-curious that Paul exists and is thinking about running for president. |
|
And remind me sometime to write about accessibility of information online. |
|
Leave it to the bard to remind you just how all-consuming a serious relationship can be. |
|
We need time to indulge in the things that we like doing purely for our own gratification once in a while to remind us that we, too, exist and need to quench certain desires. |
|
The gravel in the Brooklyn tones, the acidity in the wit and the raucous laugh remind us we are in the presence of one of the most controversial figures in literary history. |
|
Amid grim alternatives, clooney helped remind us all that one man still can make a difference. |
|
We in turn must act to save the fish from the fishermen and remind them that that once the fish are gone, they won't even be able to chuck dead fish back into the sea. |
|
Even now we occasionally pull out the tapes we made at that time and have a jolly good chuckle to remind ourselves of how far she has actually come! |
|
|
The people in the group bond in a special way, and addresses are exchanged at the end so you can keep in touch with, or just remind yourself of, those you walked with. |
|
They wear ornaments of human bone, which remind us of death, impermanence and renunciation, and as adornment, they wear ashes from cremation grounds. |
|
There was something raw and elemental about Dorset's windswept landscape that I'd missed, and which I needed, if only to remind myself what the city lacked. |
|
Andy wanted to see a wine list, but when no list was available, I had to remind him he was in Rome, Georgia, not Rome, Italy, and we all had a good laugh about that. |
|
Telling the nanny to remind the assistant to contact the decorator is not networking. |
|
I remind deen that his namesake died in an infamously horrible car crash, so he may want to cool it on texting and driving. |
|
Like the spurned women of Manhattan, Howard and his fellow rejects should remind themselves they're smart, beautiful, funny, wonderful people who deserve better. |
|
It's funny how certain scents can remind you of things, huh? |
|
If you do, your wife will remind you daily for the next six years. |
|
Still, a tight-jawed smile, wild eyes and a southern California drawl remind me of Matthew McConaughey. |
|
The filled out pledge cards are then mailed back to voters shortly before Election Day as a way to remind them to vote. |
|
Returning to retailing, we should remind ourselves that a retailer is simply an organization that buys products for the purpose of reselling them to consumers. |
|
Patents, may I remind you, expire after 20 years, but copyrights to recordings can be enforced for a century or more. |
|
Every afternoon conchero dancers wearing feathered headdresses and shell anklets and bracelets gather in the main square to remind everyone of the country's Aztec heritage. |
|
Can I remind her and other members of the Council that they are elected to be responsible to the council tax payers of Bradford and are supposedly answerable to them. |
|
This project also serves to remind us that the desire to mediate the future at the moment it emerges into the present has its historical antecedents. |
|
But wading out into the crystal water, I had to remind myself that only 50m away was the largest accessible shipwreck in the world of recreational diving. |
|
It hosts a big, public wedding to remind everyone that it can, as a statement of power, not a fairytale. |
|
I needn't remind you that this is the very same society that shackles them with its false smile and pristine lies and acts as a drug for the braindead masses. |
|
What it did do, however, was remind everyone what fashion was before it became thick with theatricality and flamboyance. |
|
|
For another, we can remind ourselves how fluidly hate is taught, and how haltingly trust is restored. |
|
I think I should remind listeners just how dangerous it can be. |
|
Fittingly, the stage is framed with light structures that remind one of what a fragmented Stargate might look like. |
|
We have to remind people why the original was great, and have to do a little more work to bring that to fruition. |
|
Latham couldn't believe his luck and gladly accepted the offer of the underarm lob from half way down the pitch to remind voters of Howard's cut and run strategy. |
|
If anything can remind us about the futility of war, it is those wrecked, dismembered bodies. |
|
As well as using the alcohol gel rub, most hospital staff now wear a badge with the Clean Your Hands logo on to remind everyone to practice good hand hygiene. |
|
If the cost of repairing the damage could be laid squarely at the door of those people, it would be a rude awakening and remind them of their parental responsibilities. |
|
The foxes in winter remind Thoreau of rudimental, burrowing men. |
|
I think I wanted to remind myself and anyone who might be reading this to hold on to what you believe in no matter how loud the other kids are shouting. |
|
This Christmas, remind the kids just how nice animation can be, with a cartoon genuine in its sentiment, free of pop culture references and lowbrow humor. |
|
The main roads remind me of the roads on the outskirts of huge cities in the USA, with their seemingly endless miles of fast food joints and lurid neon signs. |
|
Even if you train like a madwoman on a mission, a Pilates Mat class will remind you that you have a body and when you're nice to it, it's nice to you right back. |
|
His plummy accent, polite demeanour and sartorial elegance remind one of an era when business was conducted at gentlemen's clubs over cigars and port. |
|
We need a great leader to wake us from our slumber and remind us that a two-state solution is urgently in our own interest. |
|
The crisp backbeat and twinkling xylophones remind one of a child's playroom, with toys scattered and overturned, and the sun building shadows in their midst. |
|
I watched the pilot before I shot it, just to remind myself where she had been and how humiliated she was. |
|
Even our joys, in their temporality, remind us of impermanence. |
|
His leg pained him more than he was willing to admit, and his side was sending small sharp jabs of discomfort as if to remind him of its presence. |
|
You remind us that men and women have imperfection in common, and are indivisible. |
|
|
How many more times do we have to remind you of this, he is just using you and there are plenty more fish in the sea, then you will see what love really is! |
|
But for his final show, Valentino made the bizarre decision that instead of emphasising these modern strengths he would remind people of his 80s matchy-matchy heyday. |
|
He makes great use of silence and subtle sounds to remind us that the only thing scarier to a child than hearing the things that go bump in the night is not hearing them. |
|
I particularly refer to the closure of the Weddel meatworks, and also remind the country of the situation in the meat industry over the past 15 to 20 years. |
|
What it also does is remind me of how special and precious those few are who don't disappoint, who don't surrender to the odds, the ravages of time, or self-indulgence. |
|
Before leaving HMS York, Caroline was presented with a signed photograph of the ship and given other mementoes to remind her of her time on board. |
|
Punk, let me remind you, had happened nine years earlier and had evolved into art rock sub-genres every bit as beastly as the muck that it had, in theory, swept aside. |
|
He likes to remind people that he supports abortion rights and does not kowtow to the fire-breathers in the Republican ranks. |
|
I love stories that move us and that remind us of what it is to be human. |
|
May it remind you of the transcendent, divine reality of God. |
|
And if people consistently misidentify you as a man, woman, female impersonator or some other incorrect label, you sometimes want to remind them who you are. |
|
My father would remind us mischievously that all Iranians were in one way or another related to the Qajars. |
|
Most siddurim list six verses of the Torah that we should recite each day to remind us of who we are and to caution us against idolatry and lashon hara. |
|
These boxes look flimsy and remind me of the old metal money boxes for children which the most adept could easily relieve of the collected treasure. |
|
I happen to like the whistling of the turbo to remind me of what's going on in the engine bay just behind my back, although I imagine some might find it irritating. |
|
But Dowd and Cohen are here to remind us that the knives will once again be unsheathed. |
|
The slanted eyes of the headlight give the car an unmistakable look, adding to the muscular-looking bodywork, and remind me of a streamlined Japanese Sumo wrestler. |
|
In this connection it is necessary to remind oneself that people do give untruthful evidence for other reasons, including for example, an attempt to bolster up the truth. |
|
In your quest, I will only remind you to keep an open mind and to keep it real. |
|
When served, they are cut open, and their yellow and white centres remind people of the narcissus flowers which bloom in the hills in the spring time. |
|
|
These submerged accounts locate a broader horizon of possibilities, and remind people that there are other histories to write and unscripted stories to tell. |
|
It is song-like movements like this which remind us forcibly of Lloyd s foreshortened career in opera writing and render its termination all the more regrettable. |
|
But you have to stand back and remind yourself that no news is good news. |
|
Regretfully, I know no soporific agent to make it all painless so that later on there is only a tiny scar on the skin that would remind one of the process. |
|
His pillowy agglomerations of intensely colored cardboard are assembled inside forms that remind me of beds. |
|
But now that the romance has gone south, what's an equally dramatic way to get rid of the clothes, gifts, and jewelry that remind you of your hated ex? |
|
I would like to remind my fellow brothers and sisters in the ANC that their primary objective should be service delivery and the eradication of poverty. |
|
Meyers couldn't ask for two better first guests, something that Poehler was quick to remind him. |
|
So to ease my pain I've been videoing chunks of afternoon television to remind myself that the cosy world of midweek inactivity isn't necessarily as rosy as I remember. |
|
The intrigue is accompanied by a voice-over commentary, just in case you don't understand, and haphazard flashbacks to remind you of her traumatic childhood. |
|
They're all presented in glorious new digital garb and remind some of us of a certain age that simply jumping up and down on the spot was once considered dancing. |
|
We just want to put him on notice to remind him what we will be doing. |
|
However, as the recent and unpredicted actions in Crimea remind us, there is always a chance of relapse. |
|
From the orange obelisk monument of Ohakune, to the corrugated iron sheep and dog combo, outlandish structures remind us of the cargo-cult of tourism and a need to be noticed. |
|
The Christmas tree is decorated with coloured lights because they remind us of the stars flickering through the branches on a cold starry winter night. |
|
Sunaryo says his installation is just to remind us of the large scenario that feeds the acts of war and violence, without which the weapons industry would fade into oblivion. |
|
See her, in Medea, remember the hammerhead shark, play with a cigarette, remind her listeners that their tape is running out, and obsess about another, very different Billie. |
|
The lines remind me of cantorial chant, but Hovhaness has probably made it all up, since it doesn't lie all that far away from his usual solo-against-strings melodies. |
|
And in conclusion, may I please remind you it does not say RSVP on the Statue of Liberty. |
|
I guess that every once in a while, we get a huge natural cataclysm to take the wind out of our sails, and to remind us of who's really in charge on this planet. |
|
|
Just to remind our viewers, the potential crime here is that it's against the law to knowingly leak the identity of an undercover CIA or intelligence operative. |
|
Our wedding day was so stress-free that we had to remind ourselves at noon, as we snoozed by the sea, that yes, we were getting married that day at 4pm. |
|
Then I get all het up and angry and upset and frustrated and full of rage and have to remind myself that this imagined conversation never actually took place. |
|
Its natural appearance is a dry, high acid white wine with aromas ranging from lilies to basil, and a flavor and texture that can remind one of Chablis. |
|
Emigrant John Hackney's complaints along the Platte road in 1864 remind us how overlanders had devastated the great valley's timber and forage beds. |
|
Wood also objects to the way Rushdie's characters remind us of their likeness to Greek and Indian mythical heroes, unlike Joyce's characters who do not know they are Homeric. |
|
Perhaps it's just that the power of the wind and rain remind me of the paltriness of the original irritation but I never fail to feel renewed by such weather. |
|
He saw enough in Hicks to remind him of the nihilistic swagger of Bruce. |
|
This will remind test users that the reliability coefficient in hand is not the population parameter and that the reliability estimate is affected by sampling error. |
|
While the north coast has sweltered under the hottest February sun for 100 years, the rains have arrived just in time to remind us it's winter sport sign-on. |
|
She parceled it up and set it on the nightstand to remind her to send it. |
|
I took this opportunity, not only to answer her question and remind her of the proper name for the damper pedal, but also to explore the piano and how it worked. |
|
Whether they are valuable for their collectible worth or for their sentiment, items that remind you of a special trip, time, or person should be readily accessible. |
|
Explanations which continually remind one's interlocutor of one's ignorance are a great damper upon the easy flow of talk. |
|
In either case, it was far too early for such an account, and may have only served to remind Augustus that Claudius was Antony's descendant. |
|
Talking about Beyonce's Super Bowl 2014 after party wardrobe malfunction may remind you of the infamous wardrobe malfunction of Janet Jackson. |
|
The primary school pupils have designed stickers and posters to remind pensioners to put the safety chain on before opening their doors. |
|
Fortunately, this does more to remind the reader that in putting together a LIDAR project, consulting a skilled photogrammetrist is advisable. |
|
However, only four firms require users to select policy type when logging in and only four remind clients to close their browser upon logout. |
|
Any time a credit card is removed, the wallet will sound a beep to remind users to replace their credit card. |
|