Maybe they'll get a sniff of it here, just north of the geographic center of the lower 48 states. |
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A pack of skeletally thin dogs, which have followed their owners, sniff the wet patches of grass for scraps of food. |
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Defensemen remained as a staunch back line on the blue line, retreating at the mere sniff of a turnover in possession. |
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None gave a sniff of atmosphere or a hint of the third dimension of depth that is lacking in all televisual presentations. |
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Put a few drops in each nostril and sniff gently, then give your nose a good blow to get rid of the mucus. |
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It would have been a great opportunity just to get a sniff, a chance, that you could try and turn in to something much more. |
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She used Ryan's jacket to cover her numbing feet, and, glancing at his seating position, she gave a loud sniff. |
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I heard her sniff and looked up in time to see her wipe away tears from her own red eyes. |
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In separate trials, subjects were presented with both odorless and scented air and told to sniff at the sound of a tone. |
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That is harder to pin down, but movie people all sniff the same zeitgeist and often have simultaneous inspiration. |
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The three-year-old bearded collie uses his keen sense of smell to sniff out missing people. |
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After all, if you're disposed to mind-altering drugs, it's easy just to swallow, smoke, sniff, or lick them. |
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A sniff of perfume, aftershave, air freshener or deodorant can trigger a potentially deadly reaction because of a rare allergy she has developed. |
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Terry can also rely on Richmond's army of supporters to jump on the bandwagon if they get the sniff of success. |
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When I knocked on her door, the dog barked and came to sniff under the door. |
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Put a few drops of peppermint oil on the thumb patches of your gloves, so you can sniff on the fly. |
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Of course he was going to have a sniff at the first piece of totty that showed him any sympathy and consideration. |
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Nobody expected him to even get a sniff at the medals and, once again, he proved us all wrong. |
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Watching people sniff suspiciously at our currency has become, in this household at any rate, a family sport. |
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She bent over the table and swept her head over the mushrooms, giving a loud sniff. |
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If you could ask a rat, it could locate the direction of the stench's source in a single sniff, scientists report in a new study. |
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Twenty-two years of diving and never a sniff of one of the leviathans of the sea, then suddenly dozens of whale sharks turn up all at once. |
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The air was filled with the smell of yummy food and a slight sniff of alcohol. |
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An easier life-lesson would be greatly appreciated, she thought while sounding a sniff. |
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But when it comes to finding his office, you have to either sniff it out or stumble across it. |
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I mean, it would be great if I could bring everyone with me but I was trying to figure out a way to sniff it out on my own. |
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His guarantee of service includes a promise to reconnect your pirated line after cable officials sniff it out. |
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They have got to be careful and able to smell danger, sniff it out and walk away from trouble. |
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The second reason it's difficult to be happy is that we think we can measure happiness, or sniff it out like truffles. |
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People in the privileged classes can sniff at bourgeois values and still turn out O.K. because they eventually grow up. |
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I gave them a miss since my feet were being led by my nostrils, which could sniff the appetising aroma of Chinese food, at a stall nearby. |
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But you can definitely see some clubs having a bit of a sniff of him because the lad has a lot to offer. |
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If there is a sniff of politics in deciding this issue I believe the electoral punishment for that side would be ruthless. |
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After years spent as a skint student with only a few pounds to my name, I learnt to sniff out the best deals behind the bar. |
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The only sniff Swaby got of the coveted Lonsdale belt was before the fight when it was waved tauntingly under his nose by Hobson's camp. |
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A quick look-over, a squeeze, a shake, and a sniff are some of our best tools for testing freshness. |
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If there is a sniper downwind of you, he will sniff the air, smell your urine, and loose off a whole clip at you, even though he can't see you. |
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She was a left-wing Labour parliamentary candidate long before her husband-to-be got a sniff of elected office. |
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Delachaise, a pit bull mix, made it across the field on her first try, but had to stop and sniff the camera. |
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Dropping my head low, ostrich style, was more likely to lead to a closer sniff of an armpit than to a clearer view of a work. |
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He approached ahead of her, Barking furiously, and I put down my hand for him to sniff, which seemed to enrage him further. |
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But officers were there until 1.30 am to establish the cause of the blaze with help from a fire investigation dog, specially trained to sniff out accelerants. |
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I continued to sniff away and although it still didn't resemble anything edible, I didn't even think about chocolate or jelly babies all afternoon. |
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She lifted her face and whipped away some tears and gave a big sniff. |
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Quick feet, lightening turns and shots taken early often mean that a half-chance is often nestling in the goal before the keeper has a sniff of it. |
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They have a tremendous manager in Blackwell, who has admitted that he would not have had a sniff of the job if the club had not been on their knees. |
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He may now be saying he wants to spend more time with his young son, but come next season the sniff of liniment might become something he can't refuse. |
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Porcelain commodes and cat litter are among the substances setting off radiation alarms designed to sniff out nuclear terror at ports and border crossings. |
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If Letizia did know how to sniff out a media rat in her camp, it was undoubtedly due to her professional training as a journalist. |
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Late in the afternoon, the day being warm, I raised the window again and leaned out to get a sniff of air. |
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The most practical gift Real Housewives has given me, however, is the ability to sniff out a lie. |
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Those of us devoted to this stuff can sniff out when voters were paying attention and when they were just being lazy. |
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From actress and style guru Debi Mazar to producer William Orbit she has the instinct to sniff out the cool and the credible. |
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I wander out onto the terrace, sniff green tea leaves as they brew, touch balls made of snowy flowerets, gaze at gold tickling the lake's skin, peaks clad in polar bear white. |
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She could sniff intrigue and schemes blowing on the wind, they said. |
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Both their livelihoods depend on the ability to bluff and sniff out fraud. |
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But even paranoid melodramatic self-aggrandizers sniff out nefarious and tentacular plots from time to time. |
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She heard his sniff of disbelief, but she didn't let that deter her. |
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They know what success is about and they have got a sniff of it again. |
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He could sense their fright like a bloodhound could sniff out a fox. |
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Like I mention in all my articles, search engines are getting smarter and can detect and sniff out a network of web sites created to help one thing, profit. |
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And I would see people subtly sniff the air and then their own clothing, not sure whether it was themselves that were smelling slightly off or not. |
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The sound of an occasional sniff twisted the pain even deeper. |
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With a loud sniff, Laura rose from the bed and walked into the kitchen. |
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He was answered with what sounded like a sniff and a smothered sob. |
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She didn't answer him, another desolate sniff sounding instead. |
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And without another word, and only a single sniff, she turned on her heel and began home, walking at first before she made her way onto the next street and broke into tears. |
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Now, whether you seek our civilisation in religion, language, values, aesthetics or habits of thought, you get only a myth or a sniff of it, never the real thing. |
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The downside to this is that you turn into a cautionary cynic, not trusting anything that comes out of a publisher's mouth and avoiding anything with a sniff of hype. |
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It seems like the latter until the media gets a sniff of a racy story and the girls are suddenly on a roller coaster ride of global media attention. |
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Did you go on to other people's labs and sniff out to see whether there were any signs of producing stuff for nasty purposes rather than just research purposes? |
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He didn't even get a sniff at the All-Century Team when he should have. |
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These players won't get a sniff at England's World Cup squad. |
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The Xhosas have a saying that the foot does not sniff, that is, you may land where you never thought you would ever be. |
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Duncan is a former fireman who is now the handler for Billy, an incredibly talented springer spaniel who can sniff out accelerants. |
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Cloning a drug-sniffing dog would produce a dog capable ofbeing trained but not already able to sniff out drugs. |
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Carry along a can of Raid for those ant farms and a hungry tomcat to sniff out those gerbils you might miss. |
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In fact, he did sniff out the killer in Dexter... and he liked it. |
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But is their sniff strong enough for an entire legal system to rest on? |
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Forgetting all the odd bumfoolery going on with IE, you need to sniff the NIC and see what is really happening. |
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Marta Manser crouches in the dry grass, watching a cat-sized meerkat sniff for its breakfast. |
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In the first minute, a short passback from Blazej Augustyn gave Moult a sniff but keeper Neil Alexander booted the ball away in the nick of time. |
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They are big sellers among clubbers and it's hoped that the scratch and sniff idea will soon be ahead by a nose on the dance floor too. |
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The common factor that links GT2, Katy and the crime fighters together is, actually, that they all scratch and sniff. |
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Earlier this month the PSNI launched scratch and sniff cards to help the public recognise the smell of growing cannabis. |
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The revellers at the River Thames will get packs featuring scatch 'n' sniff, LED wristbands and seven kinds of fruit-flavoured sweets. |
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We didn't get a sniff of the endangered Sable antelope for which the park is famous and, unfortunately, there wasn't a cat in sight. |
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Marriages break up, lives collapse and moral compasses go skew-whiff at the slightest sniff of a suitcase filled with wodge. |
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Because they have far more powerful noses than humans, dogs are ideal to sniff out drugs. |
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Marriages break-up, lives collapse, and moral compasses go skewiff at the slightest sniff of a suitcase filled with wodge. |
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If you want to get a little sense of what it smells like, just sniff some Limburger cheese and imagine the smell magnified thousands of times. |
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While I listen I sniff in the cordite fumes. Ironstone chipped against ironstone invokes a spark and a wisp of the same heady smoke. |
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Rusik held pride of place in the Stavropol region of Russia, blessed with the uncanny ability to sniff out hauls of endangered fish. |
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Their Stephen Backster is my worry because he can't be given even a sniff at goal. |
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Given Siri's Miss Marple-like tendency to sniff out wrongdoings and murderous misdemeanours, he was never going to be the type to sit quietly. |
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Britain is not the first country to produce scratch and sniff stamps. |
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The young men became crazy-wild because a straight guy nicknamed Pretty Boy had to sniff some dude-navel and triangular manhair between a frat guy's toned legs. |
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Springer spaniels or Labradors are used to sniff out drugs, cash and guns. |
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The Australian then had Lyth caught at first slip for three wickets in three overs and when Andre Adams bowled Andrew Gale through the gate, Notts again had a sniff. |
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Meanwhile, the ambassador and his staff try to sniff out a mole inside the embassy, and the pair's lawyer Lorna offers a new definition of cluelessness. |
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That's because people use their noses to sniff imaginary as well as real aromas, and the mere act of sniffing scentless air kick-starts odor perception, a new study finds. |
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It's an important reminder, because many dogs find it tempting, and will sniff it out and eat it if they find it, including extremely dangerous baker's chocolate. |
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Europeans nave long used dogs to sniff out indoor mold, which has been associated with hypersensitivity pneumonitis, rhinitis, conjunctivitis, and asthma. |
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