However, you'll not be snitching a slice before the meal, so don't even think to touch it. |
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What's more, officials have handed out around 2,000 yuan in rewards to people snitching on illegal sites. |
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Everyone co-operated in making sure that good manners were maintained, even if it meant snitching on people who used bad language. |
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It was tattling, I knew, but somehow I didn't think Dove could get very upset with me for snitching about this. |
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While I'm wary of children snitching on their parents, in some cases one has to applaud such actions. |
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Seated under the bright red and blue awning with his back against a merchant stall that was positively heaped with apples, the young man couldn't resist snitching one. |
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They recently robbed her granddaughter and broke her husband's arm with an axe-handle to stop him from snitching. |
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That's how they kept clean, meeting with the mayor one day and affirming no snitching over nonviolence the next. |
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Posing as a false communist, spying and snitching to prove his fervour, he became the youngest pilot in the North Korean air force. |
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And one of the leading causes for the pipeline of nonviolent drug offenders into the prison system is mandatory minimum sentencing and snitching. |
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A TEENAGE girl arranged the rape of a schoolgirl in an alleyway as punishment for snitching, a court has heard. |
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The prosecutor offers him the chance to avoid 10 years in jail by snitching on those higher up the food chain. |
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James Alan Fox, a professor of criminology at Northeastern University, says the attitude on snitching is shifting for the better. |
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Snitching, on the other hand, is trying to seek revenge on a person, to harm that person or if you just can't keep a secret. |
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The chapter on Baltimore, tracing the origins of the explosive initial Stop Snitching DVD, is especially fascinating and reads like a plot from an episode of The Wire. |
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