I think I'll go to the gym and just do some quick cardio or something and then sit in the sauna. |
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When I make these for the real event I'm going to make bowls or nests for the apples to sit in so no one has to tear away spiky sugar. |
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Furthermore, the lap belt often rides up into the abdomen because children usually sit in a slouched posture. |
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To hear cases, the judges sit in Chambers of seven, appointed on a rotating basis from within each Section. |
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Why is it that you sit in this office like the cat that got the cream and expect the world to revolve around you? |
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If you sit in zazen, divorced from the rest of Buddhist practice, I'm afraid it's not Zen Buddhism. |
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Pilot and copilot, flight engineer and radio operator sit in the forward upper portion. |
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These two people need to sit in a room together and make a doggone decision right now. |
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They have wide, flat forends and low centers of gravity which make them sit in the front and rear rests securely. |
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Once the hard work is done it's easy to fish to a baited area from the bank or to sit in the boat and fish it with a float. |
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The plan, to take a long weekend in Cornwall to surf, sit in the sun, drink cold beer and eat Cornish pasties, was successful. |
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And the panel assesses hip flexibility by asking dancers to sit in a wide second position. |
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Notice your behavior the next time you and your colleagues sit in a conference room for four hours in straight-back chairs. |
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Members of the public are always most welcome to sit in on our monthly trust board meetings. |
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Courts sit in chambers or in open court generally merely as a matter of administrative convenience. |
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Once in a while, when we changed to the express train I would have trouble finding a seat for the Founder to sit in. |
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Legend has it that a group of early chaologists in Santa Cruz would sit in cafes looking for strange attractors through the window. |
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He knows what it is like to sit in those solemn over-decorated rooms and see the same sort of business cross his desk. |
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And we sit in a sukkah, the tabernacle itself, which is just a shed, a shack, open to the sky, with just a covering of leaves for a roof. |
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Ever the inveterate people watcher, I used to sit in the stands and study the folk down in the boxes. |
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Those who should ask questions either do not bother to show up, knowing they will not be called, or sit in sullen silence. |
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As somebody who gets paid to sit in restaurants, I'm well accustomed to deciphering hackneyed old menu descriptions and cheffy verbiage. |
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Normally we go there on Saturday afternoons and sit in leisure and talk over our steak chili. |
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The train is not full because, due to the delays, it is now past rush hour but the carriage I sit in is uncomfortably hot and stuffy. |
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Sometimes I sit in a small, cedar-paneled room full of old wrinkly men who are naked and sweating profusely. |
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You might have to sit in a sweat lodge until you pass out or eat a weird vine and it will not be pleasant. |
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I sit in Cafe 1001, eating a crispy bacon ciabatta and reading Time Out, and this is when I start feeling morose. |
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So you think you're going to sit in front of the TV watching Sport and swilling beer on a Saturday after a hard week at the office, do you? |
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Basically all this man ever did was sit in a big black recliner and smoke cigars. |
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It was covered in books and parchments from the opposite wall of shelves, but it was one of few places to sit in the cluttered study. |
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We're accustomed to facing a gauntlet of hucksters when we sit in front of a TV set. |
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In a car sit in the front seat if possible so you can get a clear view of the road. |
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They were to sit in cloister when reading each reading his own book, save those who might be singing from antiphoners, graduals, or hymnaries. |
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Only the Church of England clergy have a constitutional right to sit in the Lords. |
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One lucky fan will be chosen to sit in the cockpit of the dragster while the engine is warmed up. |
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It is my idea of a perfectly lovely summer afternoon to sit in a lawn chair in the shade and read. |
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Today I'll just sit in my office with my feet well under my desk and pray no one asks me to do anything that involves moving! |
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I tend to sit in my own corner and do what I enjoy doing without too much concern with the latest fad, style or trend. |
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You can check them out of libraries, put them in backpacks, walk to a cafe, buy a coffee, and then go sit in a park and read them. |
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The smell of the crowd and the roar of the greasepaint is anathema to wanting to sit in a room alone and write. |
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In any city you can sit in a busy, warmly generic coffee shop staring out the window and across the street into a rival franchise. |
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Scampering and skittering up stony slopes we bag our coigns of vantage on the hills and sit in this thin heady oxygen. |
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It was hard to sit in one and not expect the imminent arrival of the drinks trolley. |
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Looking for shelter, he finds himself a place to sit in the leeward side of a snowdrift. |
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The kind of lesson the inspectors would enjoy would be for the teacher to sit in silence while the students talk gibberish to each other. |
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He doesn't sit in his low-slung leather chair so much as melt into it, his body surrendering at once to a rare moment of physical comfort. |
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Never sit in front of or with your back to a door or window, which leaves you exposed and vulnerable. |
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It is an extremely sad society if a mother has to dash off to sit in the toilet every time her baby needs a feed. |
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You can walk around, sit in different areas, or you can go up to the top level viewing deck and watch the vessel depart the harbour. |
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Now I can just sit in front of the TV and knit away without too much thinking about it. |
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If I sit in front of a computer screen long enough, I can actually churn out quite a lot of words. |
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I loved to sit in the planetarium, just me beneath a million pinpricks of light. |
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We'd sit in cafes and bakeries and fine Italian restaurants and pizzerias in Little Italy, eating canolis and margarita pizza and gelato. |
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Most of the time, it's not enough to sit in a room and intellectualize about markets. |
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Sharon got to sit in her bedroom, listening to her mom explain the true facts of life. |
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Emma and Sarah had the unexpected opportunity to sit in the cab of a real fire engine. |
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That means a convicted fire-raiser has the right to sit in parliament and pass laws binding on the rest of us. |
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I remembered how she could sit in that rocker for hours and hours and hours and make designs. |
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Would Kurd sit in moral judgment on Sunni, Shia on Kurd, exiles on those who stayed and suffered? |
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The low protective wall, the height of a seated figure, allows protection for people to sit in reflective contemplation. |
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On a raining day, to sit in the bridge pavilion and chat with friends is one of the most pleasurable experiences. |
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The turf was actually decent and they were kind enough to let us plebs sit in the expensive seats. |
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Space up front is plentiful and adults can sit in the back for short journeys. |
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And so he does not drop to his knees, he is not contrite, he does not sit in the church with the grieving parents and wives and children. |
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If these sugars cannot be broken down, they will sit in the large intestine and putrefy, leading to a bloated feeling and gas. |
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Currently, a minimum of 38,000 pupils sit in classes without desks and write in their books supported by their knees. |
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On Saturday, Hat Hair and I sit in the park and drink beer until his quiet introspection distresses me and I leave. |
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That Ming vase can sit in your study for five years or more before you see its value appreciate substantially. |
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I just let the plants sit in the hot tap water until it comes to room temperature, and place in our cooler. |
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I'd just sit in the little cuticle and chew my nails down to the roots, not caring if they put me in one of those straitjackets. |
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Women must enter city buses by separate rear entrances and sit in specially designated sections. |
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The audience sit in a sort of three-cornered arrangement facing the main platform. |
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A critic or a cinegoer can sit in judgement on a film and say that a subject is shallow. |
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Signal dead zones exist on campus, most notably the residences which apparently sit in the signal shadow of the Optometry building. |
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When the music resumed at midnight, I had no choice but to go sit in the living room and look at pictures of lolcats until it stopped. |
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The drawing here gives an artist's impression of how grumpy I am, having to sit in my broken chair. |
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Those bishops who sit in the Lords do so, not as peers, but as lords of Parliament. |
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For example, pretty much everyone agrees that a judge should not sit in judgment in a case on appeal if he participated in the decision below. |
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Who would like a part-time, non-committed judge to sit in judgement on a particular case, if one were a litigant? |
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For this reason, the Buddha teaches his students to sit in the full lotus posture with upright minds. |
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They would sit in silence in the lotus posture and fast, drinking only water. |
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In the same way, I wouldn't want to sit in the middle of a group of men discussing cars, football and women. |
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As your flexibility increases you may be able to then sit in the half-lotus, then full lotus positions. |
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We'll just go and sit in the corner like idiots while you two say a horrendously long lovey-dovey goodbye. |
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I was invited to sit in the live audience and watch an episode being made, and what a quare geg it was too. |
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I had to sit in the clubhouse and nervously watch as Michael holed about a 40-foot putt on No.17 for par to stay within one shot of me. |
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He must be the only chief executive of a public limited company in Ireland to sit in open plan space. |
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These sit in between your hip bones and the sacrum bone in your lower back. |
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Ronnie pulled up one of the benches so he could sit in front of Roberto, a saddish expression upon his face. |
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Instead of attitudinizing for the cameras, he would rather sit in a dark room listening to the strategic counsel of his old buddy. |
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She'd sit in front of this tabletop device and breathe slowly for 20 minutes. |
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Have each student sit in front of a sheet of tagboard, which has been taped to the blackboard. |
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The match officials took a dim view of his persistent remonstrations and he was ordered to sit in the stand for the second half. |
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There is no legislation of South Australia which says that courts of other jurisdictions may not sit in South Australia. |
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All you can say is wow, and plan to sit in front of the television for the next two days geeking out to Halloween trivia. |
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Old men should sit in the sun, says the Talmud, to remember the simple feeling of well-being that physical enjoyment brings. |
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The open day coincided with normal rehearsals and visitors were able to sit in as the young musical maestros performed. |
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The instructor and student sit in tandem on rocket-powered ejection seats in a pressurized, air-conditioned cockpit. |
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They can sit in our whirlpool, unwind in our sauna, or play pool if they like. |
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All we saw them do was sit in restaurants preening themselves and getting drunk on wine. |
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The lady made me sit in a fancy black chair where immediately a team of make-up artists began wiping my face clean. |
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I tried offering the front seat to Anna, but he insisted she sit in back with Matt and Travis. |
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A business suit-clad man then greets them, shakes hands affably and makes them sit in comfortable chairs. |
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All she did was sit in one corner of her room and stare into empty space while hugging her teddy bear. |
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Have fun and sit in on one of their rites, it can't be too much more boring than sitting in front of the tele and it may be an adventure. |
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They tend to sit in front of televisions and computer screens for hours on end. |
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A growing number of workers, whether they are college professors, bank tellers, or quality control engineers, sit in front of computer terminals. |
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As for pollution, when you sit in traffic in Lancaster with all the heavy goods vehicles the pollution is very bad. |
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To sit in it on a windy day was an experience in itself as you listened to the wind whistling through and rattling the galvanised roof. |
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Pollsters sit in front of a computer terminal and enter the responses they're given. |
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And the wonderful Darren has promised that I can sit in the balcony and watch from above. |
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The movie is terrific and really almost perfectly captures the feeling of what it was like to sit in a theater and watch the show. |
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Every single day and night we had to sit in terror of the next bomb, the next plane, the next explosion. |
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There were no windows inside the carriage, so Primrose's leader had to sit in silence as the carriage rattled towards Graveyard. |
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When tasting dark chocolate let the chocolate sit in your mouth for a few seconds. |
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The real punishment is having to sit in prison and watch a TV movie about what a screwed-up freak you are. |
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The girl or woman he was addressing seemed to be expected to sit in silence, marvelling at the brilliance of the person orating at her. |
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All the while, audience members sit in their seats, wondering how these illusions are possible. |
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Anglican bishops should be stripped of their right to sit in the Lords, says the Fabian Society, a Labour think tank. |
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One does not sit in a first-class coach if the train ticket is for a second-class seat. |
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One was a peculiarly reclusive and dramatic fellow who preferred to sit in the darkness, wearing sunglasses and twirling his prayer beads. |
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Patients waiting for appointments had to sit in the main corridors because there wasn't even a waiting room. |
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He was truthfully longing to sit in the King's throne, a large ornate thing, ebony and mahogany edged with gold and silver. |
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I took my sit in Creative Writing and listened as Mr. Thompson lectured the class on when to use commas and semicolons when writing a story. |
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He reaches his hand out to me and invites me to sit in the spa room with him away from the noise of the video. |
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It is often said that the smartest unionists and staffers don't want to sit in Parliament so that is where the duds and time-servers finish up. |
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People cannot go and sit in parliaments or senates to monitor their day-to-day affairs. |
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As I waited, I felt very lucky to be able to sit in the dark listening to beautiful music. |
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They sit in the bleachers and relive the glory days of their time on the field. |
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Of course, while these cheques sit in our wallets and purses, they aren't earning us money, so we're losing out on interest. |
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Lesser items, such as old magazines, inexpensive glass and china ware, may just sit in boxes. |
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There was no place to sit in the sitting room, to dine in the dining rooms, or to sleep in the bedrooms. |
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He used to sit in the pub in Greek Street, next to our office, surrounded by admirers, and he was in his element. |
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It's my me time, where I can go and sit in the bath for two hours if I wanted to, or watch a movie in full, without any interruptions. |
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The pinrail has a row of little holes punched through it for the belaying pins to sit in. |
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Our plates are clear of food, but sit in front of us for a good 10 minutes before the waitress reappears. |
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And he's the only man I've ever seen who could sit in a chair and touch both elbows on the floor. |
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Spectators sit in the galleries, grouped according to rank, race, or religion. |
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All this is important because pilots are expected to be eagle-eyed and sit in a cockpit which is as big as a soap-box. |
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So, assuming the mien of a lion, I sit in the open, hiding my coward's heart. |
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We had to sit in the car, in our suits, without the car running for the air con as we can't allow any noise. |
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He'd sit in the furthest corner from the door and drink it all in, always keeping one eye on his dad. |
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Cottages sit in gardens dripping with trellised roses beside shores lapped by frothy waves. |
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You and the missus can just go out to the driveway with a bottle of champagne and sit in the Galant. |
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The Pythia were priestesses of Apollo who would sit in a tripod or throne over a crevice in the earth. |
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Today millions of unbelievers sit in front of their TV sets laughing and mocking at what once was considered sacred. |
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Two men sit in a small, claustrophobic room, cigarette smoke curling through the soft light. |
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The moms sit in the kitchen drinking strong coffee and sharing pie and good conversation while the kids all run amok. |
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The rights to a future project currently sit in the directors tumid billfold. |
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On Saturday and Sunday I managed to sit in the glorious sunshine and turn a delightful pink colour, but that has now gone to a dark olive brown. |
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Just 20 months ago Vanessa Hodkinson could not fit into airline seats or get through turnstiles, let alone sit in a cinema seat. |
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They sit in silence in the back as the car drives off in a dark moonless night. |
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The relatives and close friends sit in the same room as the deceased and maintain a silent prayer vigil throughout the night until morning. |
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Communications cannot sit in a silo within an organisation but must cross workstreams and practices to create one single voice. |
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People sit in their cubicles on the phone or typing away at their computers amid the chaos. |
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Energy expenditure whilst flying is limited as most passengers sit in their seats for most if not all of the journey. |
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He thought I was going to force him to sit in a corner and drink a bottle of wine with me. |
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We sit in the moth-eaten upstairs lounge overlooking the St Helen's ground, with the surf pounding the adjacent beach. |
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They go home, they sit in their room, they smoke cigarettes and they think about blowing their brains out. |
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Travis mounts the stairs hesitantly, leaving Greg and Danielle to sit in silence in the living room. |
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Mainly young in age and long of hair, they sit in tight cubicles, drinking beer, playing cards and swapping tales. |
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Late in the film there is a scene where Thomas and Jane sit in her kitchen sipping tea. |
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Come check it out and play for awhile, or just have a sit in the shade for a bit. |
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The deal was that I'd sit in for three classes and then he could decide if I added value or not. |
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The minister then sweeps in and proceeds to sit in on each table's discussion. |
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Because what are they hiding, if they don't want you to sit in on the meetings? |
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Judge Morris allowed the McBrearty family to sit in for two issues that arose in relation to them from Mr Jennings. |
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I was shy around girls, I didn't hit the bars, I tended to buy a bag of oysters and a six-pack of beer and sit in the garden. |
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I'm using the idea here because it's too good to sit in Matt's brain uncommunicated to the world at large. |
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When they reached the undecorated office, the teens all were told to sit in the waiting room. |
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And I just sit in the car taking in the music, bobbing my head and quietly singing along. |
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It is not for other people to sit in judgement, especially when using values which are not universally shared. |
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The reporter said that officers had forced him to sit in liquid sewage and kept him for hours in the burning sun. |
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How sporting of Ahriman to sit in the corner and knit booties while Duncan gets his head together. |
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You could either sit in your car and wait, and wait, and wait, or you could hot foot it to your destination a lot quicker. |
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When the Ministers have said the Gloria at the altar, they go to sit in the sanctuary until the choir has finished singing. |
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Inside a room, whey-faced men in drab suits sit in cubicles pushing paper about. |
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Issues of complexity, evolution, nanotechnology and robotics sit in the very center of this debate. |
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I gave my essay in on time and went to sit in the medical school coffee shop. |
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No less than three radiators sit in the engine bay, one for the air conditioning and one each for the low and high temperature cooling loops. |
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When you are careering down the motorway at the breakneck speed of forty-five miles per hour, make sure you sit in the middle lane. |
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You don't have to sit in the full lotus position with a soppy smile on your face. |
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I sit in the shade mostly, looking out at the sun, but even so the effect of the open air and reflected sunshine is weathering my skin nicely. |
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It faces southwards away from the road, and its large, pretty garden is a real sun-trap that you could probably sit in on a fine winter's day. |
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He paid for our tickets while I vegged in those really comfy blue armchairs they have for you to sit in while you wait. |
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My preference is for lowly-lit, low-ceilinged places with nooks and crannies where you can sit in the corner and not be noticed all evening. |
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Basic chores done, I gave up and went to sit in the kitchen, where I slumped in my chair, yawning and nodding. |
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Think he's going to be fired up to drive to places such as Irmo, S.C., to sit in a living room and play footsie with recruits and their parents? |
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Little tiny lace panties sold rolled up like ladyfingers, and in a myriad of gem tones, sit in a case on the front counter. |
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Take the bucket seat out of your old Chevy, put it on a wood frame in the middle of a field and sit in it. |
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Aradia, Gwydion and Faunus were made to sit in three rickety and spindly chairs before the thirteen members of the Society of Sorcerers. |
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It's no fun when you're yanked out of the pool against your will and then forced to get back into clothes and sit in your buggy. |
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The recent addition of seats placed around the burial ground provides a facility for visitors to sit in quiet meditation, and is a lovely idea. |
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They sit in a circle with a drawing on the ground, of a large circular diagram called Mandala or yantra. |
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Plus, you can sit in the back and kiss your boyfriend all you want without having to worry about Peeping Toms or voyeurs. |
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Patrons could apparently stand in the yard around the stage and either stand or sit in the galleries which enclosed the yard. |
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He further noticed, there was a guy who would sit in his room with the door open, stark naked, eating brownies, while standing on his head. |
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Maybe you just sit in a corner and sink quietly into oblivion, snoring loudly for the rest of the evening. |
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He knows how many steaks sit in the refrigerators of the 64 Morton's steakhouses. |
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He continues to sit in the wreckage of the camp, however, lamenting the deaths of his friends and wondering what he can possibly do next. |
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I quickly ran to him and wished him happy birthday and he in return hugged me and told me to sit in the blanket because I was very cold. |
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Like a child with a new toy, his spirit rose with each idea the group generated until he could hardly sit in his chair. |
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Afterwards, fuelled by chocolate Santa heads, I would sit in a nest of crumpled, torn wrapping paper, impatient for the new year to move quickly. |
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They sit in classrooms and cannot hear the teachers so, hello, it is no surprise that we are unable to get good outcomes from our education system. |
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Bringing comedy to the forefront, Samsung employs Seth Rogen and Paul Rudd to sit in a brainstorm meeting. |
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I remember how I'd sit in class back in grade school, drawing rad pictures of the Grim Reaper sweeping down and stealing the souls of all he touched. |
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A portrait of him was done once in which the collar point was made to sit in its proper place. |
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Women come in pairs, sit in pairs, and go to the ladies in pairs. |
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It is already hard enough to sit in a traffic jam without Begg wishing to add insult to injury by asking motorists to pay extra for the inconvenience. |
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Do not, under any circumstances, place the juice in a jug, stopper the jug with a cork, and allow it to sit in a cool, dry place for eighteen to twenty-one days. |
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When I spoke to a number of residents here, on Friday morning last, they were after taking their complaints to the County Council the previous day and had staged a sit in. |
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I noted on more than one occasion that he was distressed during the interview and noted that he was so agitated at times that he could not sit in his seat. |
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The hospital is filthy, without drugs, and women who used to be nurses sit in the corner doing embroidery while patients suffer agonies without pain relief. |
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Office workers sit in the park eating pasta salad with a disposable fork, with half an eye on the crossword. |
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Whenever I fly anywhere I always like to sit in a window seat if I can. |
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So, for the most part I just sit in traffic stewing in my own juices. |
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I do not wish to sit in any accommodation at the mercy of a driver. |
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I sit in my class now, half listening to the teacher's lecture. |
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I would sit in my rather dim, hot room with the scent from the lemon tree coming through the window, feverishly going through the same issues over and over again. |
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And contemplate the risibility of the prospect of individuals with a role in these outrages ending up on a press council to sit in judgment on working journalists! |
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If you're not absolutely sure about your own face shape, try using this quick and simple method, take an old lip liner or eye pencil and sit in front of a mirror. |
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In her update of Olympia, entitled Tribeca, an older, clothed woman and a naked young man of Asian descent sit in a loft space furnished with modern appointments. |
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I am writing this as I sit in my office, having just completed a call on my wireless phone, despite the fact that two landline phones are within arm's reach. |
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Judges sit in the audience looking at an impressive array of films ranging from TV commercials to animation for the Internet, from episodes of TV series to indie works. |
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The Lords Spiritual are the archbishops and bishops of the Church of England who sit in Parliament as representatives of the established Church of England. |
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In one scene, Buster is forced to accept a ride from his rival, and he has to sit in the open rumble seat while Sally sits with the rival in the front. |
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When you sit in the lotus position, you should sit naturally straight. |
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The Rock doesn't simply sit in the sea just off the coast of southern Spain, to which it is attached by a narrow isthmus, it very thoroughly dominates the entire coastline. |
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Inside the guild, men in caps and long gowns sit in twos, weaving together in small rooms. |
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Then he told the story of the day he tried to sit in with the professionals at the showboat Club in Philadelphia. |
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Having just returned from their trip to Brussels, Carol and her friends sit in her house in one of the broad avenues set back from the town's harbour, to take stock. |
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We sit in the snug upstairs, drinking red wine and avoiding the storms raging outside. |
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Meanwhile, I sit in my wrinkled, ill-fitting blazer, sweaty from nerves and running to get to this interview on time. |
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She knows full well that some rappers sit in relative safety while stoking the violence. |
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I saw a senior commander sit in the barracks and complain with his soldiers for days while waiting to deploy, ignoring advice to use the time for training. |
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Backstage, the children sit in front of naked light bulbs hanging from the ceiling, wiping away the make-up they carefully applied before the performance. |
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At first, his friends noted, he would simply ask his mistress to sit in a chair in a sunlit room. |
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It certainly helps to be able to sit in the sun by a wide open window with only the sound of the birds and the occasional tinkle of a cat's bell to be heard. |
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And a few kilometres away, on the Pacific coast, American tourists sit in resorts, drinking cervezas and taking photos of the titi monkeys playing in a nearby tree. |
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When he outgrew his toddler car seat, he still needed a seat with a harness, as he is unable to sit in place with just a lap belt. |
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During the day we were forced to sit in the cell in total silence. |
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How is this possible if the only shield protecting the people against a fate worse than death is to have the reformists, no matter how incompetent, sit in power positions? |
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On the wet days they'd sit in my shop and one would look out of one window and the other out of the opposite window to keep a check on what was going on. |
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A few of those that don't agree sit in mortal fear, terrified one of these shrieking maniacs will tear their head off for having an opposing opinion. |
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The bench was wooden and had a brass nameplate on the top board that made up the back, which read, In memory of Maria Sash, who loved to sit in this spot. |
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If, however, they collect donations which then sit in some account, gathering interest, which are used sporadically and unmethodically for occasional charity use, tax it. |
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But when they want to reverse nature, and rule white men, and marry white women, and sit in my parlor, then, by God! |
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For one terrifying evening, innocent people are forced to sit in an unventilated windowless room with a group of bodybuilders who have just guzzled cheap protein shakes. |
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We'd sit in store front Thai noodle houses, eating Pad Thai, and drinking mango bubble tea with wide pink and green straws that sucked up the tapioca balls at the bottom. |
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When it came time to sit in our circle and take turns airing our parenting gripes in a non-confrontational, non-judgmental manner, I quietly took my place on the floor. |
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In most research settings, observers sit in the dark watching an illuminated vivarium, peer through gauzy curtains, or observe by means of remote video surveillance. |
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If I do, I sit in the backseat and stay alert for whatever the driver does. |
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Brigadier General Rhonda Cornum asks rhetorically as we sit in her Pentagon office. |
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It reminded me of the desultory days when I used to sit in Harvard Square and talk with every homeless stewbum and mental outpatient that I could corner for a cup of coffee. |
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In the afternoon we sit in the stifling press tent and try to work. |
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The smooth, hundred-year-old larch under my stockinged feet where I now sit in my study represents only a tiny fraction of a very complex solution for what ails our forests. |
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I sit in the only empty chair on the front row next to a very pale man with long straggly gray hair who has a persistent dry cough and wears sandals with thin black socks. |
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I meant to wait however long it took, even if I had to sit in that unfriendly place and smell the heavy aroma of frying fat from the kitchens forever. |
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The EPC is designed to work alongside consumer electronics devices such as big screen TVs and hi-fi speaker rigs, rather than sit in the corner next to a monitor. |
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Now, of course I wanted to appear as sophisticated as I really was to this small-town girl, so I suggested we find a coffee bar to sit in and talk. |
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The director was to sit in an enclosed pew at the rear of the church. |
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Not only would the court have to sit in camera but neither the detained person nor his legal advisers could be present or told any of the details. |
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Once he had deployed his forces on the battlefield, the commander-in-chief could only sit in his headquarters many miles behind the front line and hope for the best. |
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Placing large parking lots around buildings means office complexes usually sit in the middle of an island of heat which requires more air conditioning. |
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My fingerboard gets sticky and I get fed-up and want to sit in the garden. |
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Indigenous people sit in the doorways weaving baskets or preparing small platters of fruit with the ubiquitous lime, salt and chilli for hungry passers-by. |
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We want it to be used by the community and for people to sit in the quiet and contemplate as much as possible and this money will help us do that. |
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As we feared, she was not prepared for just how long you have to sit in a car hurtling at great speeds to cross even a fraction of the United States. |
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The group's frontman has as much as admitted that this conscious move represents their reaction against the arty-whiteboys-with-guitars pigeonhole they sit in. |
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They are nice furry mammals, which sit in the palm and can be stroked. |
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You have to sit down at a computer, log on to the Net and click and scroll and sit in a chair not nearly as comfortable as the easy chair out in the family room. |
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When you sit in your porch, instead of seeing lovely greenery or properly constructed homes, it's old galvanise, termite-ridden board and dirty looking water drums. |
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A High Court judge presides in all Central Criminal Court cases, and High Court judges already sit in Limerick three times a year, but only for civil cases. |
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There are much better things to do than sit in front of a puter today. |
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If a woman, famous or not, decides she needs to diet or have weight loss surgery for her own health or happiness, far be it from me to sit in judgment. |
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I am not in the business of trying to enrich people who would like to sit in the middle as bureaucrats, as sort of quasi-political business people. |
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There was a splash of sunlight late morning in what has otherwise been a dull, overcast day, and I went out to sit in it for as long as it lasted. |
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This leaves people with the choice of either getting whiplash from being forced to sit in the very front row, or to exchange their ticket for a Silvercity gift certificate. |
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As I sit in my hut in the middle of the King Country I think to myself, you have a helluva responsible job, haven' you? |
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Captain Kenny Wilson, 52, let colleague Samantha Lamb's dad sit in the jumpseat during a BA CityFlyer trip to Milan. |
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They were able to take refuge in an Anderson shelter and sit in the driving seat of a US Jeep. |
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They said the only thing I could do was to sit in the bathtub with a bar of soap and a washrag and scrub my face. |
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You may cover your body with honey and then sit in a steambath or sauna, for 10-15 minutes, to allow the honey to be absorbed into your skin. |
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Highlights of the day included formation flying by the Wapitis and the opportunity to sit in a Wapiti for a small fee. |
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I sit in the art deco Crown Bar and order a bottle of Wonkey Donkey, from a local brewery. |
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The Chiricahuas sit in a transition zone, where two deserts and two mountain ranges converge. |
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Young space explorers can climb the 20ft space rocket, sit in the lookout tubes or whizz down the wavy four-lane astra slide. |
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Brew the tea, sit in a quiet, cozy spot, and just sip as you listen to the silence and feel your body unknot. |
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And in fact if Adams did sit in the Commons, he would speak as a Sinn Feiner first. |
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The judge, who used to sit in Liverpool, was one of four people to voluntarily attend a police station on Merseyside this week. |
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I certainly get very brattish unless I'm allowed to sit in my favourite armchair and kick lumps out of Colombia playmaker James Rodriguez. |
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Two new Bambi Airstreams sit in the plastic flamingo-filled garden of the French-themed Metro Hotel, about 15 minutes from Sonoma wineries. |
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They sit in a beautiful atrium or hotel lobby or sunporch or patio, and a uniformed server approaches with the tea menu. |
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The big winners this weekend were Saint Charles RC Church, who now sit in joint fourth. |
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For take off, rest and landing she was illegally allowed to sit in the cabin crew horizontal rest area by the commander. |
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Parish priest Fr Pat Buckley gave every confirmand four tickets for close family to sit in the church and provided a marquee for others outside. |
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We'll pay a hundred dollars an hour to sit in a creaky chair. |
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All I had to do was sit in my apartment and get on the conference call. |
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On any given day, 10,000 jurors sit in jury boxes throughout Los Angeles County. |
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I can always sit in the jump seat if there is room on one of the flights from Dublin to Cardiff or get a standby ticket so I get back a lot. |
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