To speed cooling divide into smaller portions, place in shallow containers or stand in a tray of cold water. |
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No narrow patriotism of race, country or religion will stand in the way of the millennium of universal peace. |
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The player told him to pad up with every piece of protective equipment he could find and then stand in the goal and not move one inch. |
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We need to explore personal, family, community and systemic barriers that stand in the way of understanding and preventing suicides. |
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He's the owner of a roadside stand in the middle of the Everglades, who seems involved in every sighting of Florida's Bigfoot in his area. |
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Pollack's casts bulge with big-timers whose personalities often stand in for character and motivation. |
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The foretopsail is smallish and easy to work on because we can stand in the working top on the foremast. |
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Christmas cards can be taken along to Tesco or WH Smith, where recycling bins will stand in all their York stores. |
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Four players stand in a square formation 5 yards away from the receiver, who's in the middle. |
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These shrimp stand in silent rebuke to their unfortunate cousins that are butterflied and flattened by less sensitive restaurants. |
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The fencers would stand in an almost upright position with a short stance and the knees only slightly bent. |
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Steve and Andy stand in front of us and collapse into ridiculous splutters. |
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As I stand in shock, Riley pushes me to the side and then forcefully shoves me into a chair. |
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To stand in a glade in the Catskills is to realize what a deeply troubling trade-off that is. |
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What would you do if I shut you outside, to stand in the rain and catch cold so you died? |
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Larks that live in desert areas will stand in the shade of grass tussocks during the hottest parts of the day. |
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And if the ultraconservatives who headed his Liberal Democratic Party dared to stand in his way, he pledged, he would take them down, too. |
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The house was full and we non-paying students had to stand in the small foyer. |
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She had only to stand in the orchard, to put her hand on a little crab tree and look up at the apples, to make you feel the goodness of planting. |
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The boys continued the unchivalrous behavior as they left Lyn only the welfare line to stand in as Sunny took third. |
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Kiltane locals are prepared to stand in front of bulldozers to stop work on the rehabilitation of bogs in Erris. |
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Twelve children stand in bare feet holding onto rickety chairs, wearing hand-me-down leotards or torn underclothes. |
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The slums and shanty towns stand in stark contrast to the multi-storey towers and the glamour of Bollywood. |
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As a confessional people, Southern Baptists do not stand in neutral territory. |
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There was even a music stand in the corner and a shelf for my violin right next to it. |
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He took a few sheets of music out, and neatly set them on the music stand in front of him. |
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Outside, cows stand in pools of yellowish liquid that has oozed from blocked drains. |
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I had planned to stand in a convenient archway, watching the rain and working on the book in my head. |
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Did you ever stand in a bookies shop on St Stephens Day for a period of time? |
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This presence is kind of like hopping out of the car to stand in a parking space so no one nabs it while your friend drives around the block. |
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The first three properties are said to stand in the name of his wife, and the fourth in the name of his son. |
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An order has just been given to stand in to enable our coast pilot, Cooper, to fix our whereabouts exactly by his knowledge of the land. |
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His narwhal tusks stand in the attic near a loose pile of taxidermic heads. |
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Caesar would give up his command and stand in person at the consular election on condition that Pompey abandon his command at the same time. |
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Later, I stand in the tiny kitchen through lunch service, watching his brigade of intense young men and women, cooking and plating his food. |
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It was the first time a school had taken a stand in the courts to uphold its educational philosophy, Warder said. |
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I have altogether failed to comprehend as to how undue pride or vaingloriousness could ever stand in the way of a man's faith. |
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Stalin saw the organisers of the insurrection as reactionary nationalists who would stand in the way of future Soviet hegemony. |
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Young and old, they stand in corners, hands outstretched, mewing piteously. |
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Whey-based coatings also could one day stand in for the confectioner's glaze that coats a number of today's chocolate products. |
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Will, then, these, or any of these things, stand in competition with that which we propose for the great concernment of souls? |
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You stand in a dark room looking at a round concave surface perhaps five feet in diameter. |
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I had him stand in front of me and slowly we worked it out, piece by piece. |
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The funeral service was such a big event that many people had to stand in the aisles and 150 extra orders of service had to be photocopied. |
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But, the pep talk apart, where does Bollywood stand in terms of competition? |
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A small fridge is nestled beside him, salt and pepper shakers stand in the centre console and a bed stretches behind the seats. |
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Buskers who stand in subways with a cap and a penny whistle can intimidate people, and it doesn't create a pleasant atmosphere. |
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I hopped on out to the patio to stand in quite pleasantly warm sunshine and peered up at the pellucid blue sky. |
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He tried to stand in front of her but was clouted on the head so hard that he went unconscious temporarily. |
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Keltos will be syndicated and stand in France or in Ireland, the trainer said. |
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Another unsung hero has been a towering hulk who has made life miserable for opponents trying to stand in front of the San Jose net. |
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The major shook our hands as if relieved from the duty of explaining drill and ceremony and invited us to stand in the detail formation. |
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If she shoves her head above the parapets to stand in the next general election, just wait for it and watch her get it in the neck. |
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I stand in Newberry's paper shop, 10p in my pocket, deciding which comic to buy. |
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Only Ireland and Italy stand in the way of adopting 30 extraditable crimes. |
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Instead, you'll stand in front of monuments where civilization took a quantum leap forward. |
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I would stand in a corner watchfully, taking pictures as the opportunities came. |
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Don't stand in any one place too long or the fire ants may swarm all over your feet. |
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This was the second time she was required to take the stand in full view of the accused. |
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A more sympathetic reading of the trend toward domesticity would see it as a desperate last stand in the face of powerlessness. |
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The law can be inconvenient when it isn't on your side, but you can't let that stand in your way when political power is at stake. |
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A principled stand in defence of the human rights of children is not an empty gesture. |
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Did he, as his father, have the right to stand in his son's way to reach the happiness he earned so gruelingly over the past years? |
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So often, powerful forces and powerful interests stand in your way, and the odds seem stacked against you. |
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It turned out to be an excuse to stand in the kitchen for fifteen minutes and grill me about mine and Lisa's wedding plans. |
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I get a chance to interview them on today if the rain doesn't stand in our way. |
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I remember thinking to myself, if I let this person stand in my way I'll never get to my goals. |
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His Jewishness, which he does not attempt to conceal, seems to stand in the way. |
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Hollywood executives and other interested parties had to make do with a live webcast as he took the stand in the long-awaited trial. |
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On the downside, this dependency on biography and history means that sometimes the tales do not stand in their own right. |
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The radii of the given circles and n must stand in a certain relationship for the chain to close on itself. |
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If the theatre audience is dense and does not applaud, canned applause should stand in, on the ready. |
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Let the pots stand in a saucer of water, ideally rainwater, then let them dry off a bit over the winter. |
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The Orkney Conservative Party are due to adopt Christopher Zawadski as their prospective parliamentary candidate to stand in the next election. |
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In a nutshell, when the masses justly resist, it is an honor and an obligation to stand in support of such resistance. |
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As I stand in the meandering check-out queue, a petite woman in designer jeans is demanding of an assistant where all the Prosecco has gone. |
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It's no longer acceptable that demarcations and disputes can stand in the way of improvements for patients. |
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It is with pleasure that I stand in the House to speak to the final reading of this bill. |
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Label, water and stand in a frost-free propagator or cold frame, or in a heated propagator for faster rooting. |
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He self-consciously drew himself up, and went out to stand in the entrance way. |
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I will stand in the water and look at my stretching belly and thank Lakshmi for my great good luck. |
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Given the choice to recant, martyrs chose instead to face their murderers and stand in witness to their beliefs. |
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The privy had its little stand in the corner with a blue curtain and a small wash stand and porcelain sink with a mirror. |
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He tells her to hold out her hand, and he hits it several times, then makes her stand in front of the class until recess. |
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Participants stand in front of a blue screen and have their video image chromakeyed into the virtual court action. |
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Their monuments stand in testimony to their beliefs and even today one is wonderstruck at their foresight. |
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Eventually he gets near the beach, and jumps out into water that's just about shallow enough to stand in. |
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But where does the skilled workman or the skilled addressee stand in the spectrum? |
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I want to stand in the same batter's box where Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig stood. |
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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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I thought I wouldn't care so much, but I'd like to garden and have a yard just to stand in the grass. |
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Are we willing to be the alpha and the omega rather than stand in the middle all the time? |
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To make dough, allow yeast to stand in a small bowl until frothy, about 10 minutes. |
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The cabins stand in their own picket-fenced patch of grass amid beautiful countryside. |
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The tall, leggy blonde pushed rudely past Jennifer to stand in front of him. |
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Sassy dreams of becoming a prima ballerina but as her dance classmates tell her, her large feet and long legs stand in the way of her dreams. |
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When we finally dragged the hulking thing home, all we could do was saw it in half and just stand in awe, gawking at the horror within. |
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At his traditional food stand in the harborside flea market, one vendor said he is seeing a marked rise in sales of horsemeat. |
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Christopher continued to stare down at his coffee as she came to stand in the doorway, his finger still tapping the lip of the cup. |
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These body parts stand in relief against shadows gathering under the studio lights, the subject posed against a roll of white backdrop paper. |
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A roll-top desk that used to stand in one corner of my grandfather's office fell to my lot and was delivered to me in Hyderabad in July. |
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She stopped, then slowly walked over to stand in the middle of the large, round room, looking down at the threadbare area rug. |
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Three strangely dressed men stand in the moonlight by three panting camels. |
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Some would argue that he should get his affairs as they currently stand in order. |
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To hear it aright you must stand in the darkness of such a by-street as this, and for the moment be at one with those who dwell around. |
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Parking for staff and visitors, already tight, has been diminished as the entire lot has been roped off for visitors to stand in. |
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To determine the extent of their external rotation, dancers should stand in first position with straight knees and no rolling over. |
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The Pope has designated other prelates to stand in for him, and the Vatican says his only commitment is his Easter blessing. |
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In particular, we should aim to follow their example and not let anything stand in the way of lofty intellectual pursuit. |
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Three large mill buildings stand in a U shape around a courtyard which contains the earliest extant gasworks chimney in Scotland. |
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When I first got him, he was a surly little puppy who could stand in my two hands. |
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And why should a person doing an honest day's hard work have to stand in line after hours for a handout in order to eat or pay rent? |
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In the early mornings he would stand in his dressing gown at the window, sipping a cup of milky coffee, while his valet ran his bath. |
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He gazed out into the sun-bathed crowd assembled in front of the stand in the clearing in Donadea forest. |
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Each has two bedrooms, a lounge, a dining room and a kitchen, and they stand in a decent area of garden. |
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This poses an important test for those of us who want to make a consistent stand in defence of liberties during the second term. |
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A larger clam or cowry shell and an auger shell can stand in for Goddess and God images in a pinch, particularly on a small altar. |
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There's a danger that this stand in defence of reason could be subsumed by some of the other unreasonable trends of our time. |
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It was exhilarating to stand in the store, glaring fluorescent light beaming down upon hundreds of shiny cases, each one containing a story. |
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Lopez is the first celebrity to take the stand in the trial, and prosecutors say he will not be the last. |
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As things stand in British arts, only an autist would dare to profess disinterest in diversity. |
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She shuffled a few papers before moving to stand in front of the rows of desks. |
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It's a subtext which betrays the author's own feelings but he doesn't allow it to stand in the way of a good yarn. |
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You stand in the way of a swarm of bats and you can expect to get horsewhipped to tarnation, boy! |
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In a free society, why should anyone stand in the way of another person's transformation from tatterdemalion to goddess? |
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In high-traffic areas, where players stand in the outfield, we use rubber crumbs from recycled tires. |
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He has had to stand in for injured dancers in leading roles several times, because he's a quick study. |
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I made them stand in their scanties and subjected them to the gaze of men with tape measures. |
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One hundred eighty-nine American newcomers, Tejus Anglo settlers, and Tejanos made a stand in the fort. |
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First, we could say that those events are simultaneous which necessarily stand in no relation of cause and effect to one another. |
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And here, folks are willing to stand in line for an hour on a Sunday evening to check out a cartful of groceries. |
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She arched her back, mantling her wings threateningly as she stalked to stand in front of her rescuer. |
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Should the obligation to care for this terminal patient stand in the way of finding cures for the many patients who might suffer in the future? |
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The brutal cut-outs stand in effective stark contrast to the gentle, slow art of pinhole photography. |
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The ground was packed with enthusiastic Scotsmen, and this race will stand in my memory as the greatest in my running career. |
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Her theory is that shoes stand in for the girly, feminine part of women that is being repressed as women are forced to act as ball-breakers. |
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For, though I've no idea what this accoutred frowsty barn is worth, it pleases me to stand in silence here. |
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He takes his cue from what they are doing, and I stand in awe of how often he is correct in forecasting what they will do. |
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The labourers stand in cheaply-bought clogs while the skilled masons are marked out by their leather boots. |
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To stand in it barelegged was to be assaulted by dry flannels from the shins down. |
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Gravel crunched under her feet as she walked around to stand in front of me. |
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Coolmore recently purchased Ecurie Wildenstein's homebred Westerner, a champion stayer in Europe, to stand in 2006 as a National Hunt stallion. |
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Bolli's vocal trick is to stand in another room yowling as if in her death throes. |
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In Bihar, for instance, during the Chhath festival, devotees are required to stand in waist-deep water while paying obeisance to the Sun-god. |
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The driver had failed to set a driver's reminder appliance when he was at a stand in a station, so he didn't have the reminder. |
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Passengers once glad to stand in line grow fretful as officials frisk grandmas' bags for tweezers. |
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Rare laces and old silks may take on a renewed appearance if allowed to stand in French chalk for several days. |
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You and Owen stand in front of me Margaret, so you'll both see better, that's the ticket. |
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An inspector and several other police officers get out and stand in the middle of the road. |
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A hill which a motor car would hardly notice would bring a heavy train to a stand in next to no time. |
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As you walk by a fruit stand in the market the sweet, fragrant smell also indicates that the melons are ready to eat. |
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Our notions of order and disorder stand in stark contrast to the dynamic artistry of the integral beauty of things as they are in nature. |
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Place in an oiled bowl, cover with a tea towel and allow to stand in a warm place for an hour or until doubled in size. |
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When cooked, transfer to a warm plate, cover loosely and leave to stand in a warm place for ten minutes. |
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The last time was the night after the firework and I was too fragile to stand in that pub with fireworks going off all over London. |
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Roberto Carlos has taken to hacking the ball miles into the stand in desperation. |
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When fetish objects stand in for the sexual object the fetish replaces the genitals within the sexual narrative. |
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She shoved her into the front row before moving to stand in the doorway of the gazebo. |
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I will stand in your heart as fierce as the lion of Judah, as strong as the temple we shall build. |
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The deep creases under my eyes stand in noteworthy contrast to my pale skin. |
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And the shank of the shoe is flat too, so when I stand in first position, I can actually feel all five toes on the ground. |
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The supporters also stand in nodding rows at subway entrances, bowing and squawking their inane messages. |
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By means of an exceptional system, the organizations hope to make the public aware of the need to take a stand in the debate which is currently raging in the world of sports. |
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The world should stand in solidarity with him and the many other victims of the Assad regime. |
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One need only stand in the aisle marked Produce to understand how the wan light obscuring the bruised fruit makes all of our decisions more difficult. |
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They clawed their way to the top, inch by inch, not letting anything stand in their way. |
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When you put your mind to something, nothing can stand in your way. |
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They have no intention of allowing nature to stand in their way. |
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I decided that no injury or illness was going to stand in my way. |
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We stand in silence watching more people join the line as others leave happily with their cones and cups blissed out, stressless, and not quite ready to go home. |
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They put on a record-breaking 302-run stand in their previous match. |
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By doctrine, to be sure, military police stand in the front ranks of first responders when service support units become incapable of defending themselves. |
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After all, if you stand in front of a room and tell everyone that no one reads what you write online, maybe the problem isn't with the users or the medium. |
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The custom-made moulding inserted into shoes and boots ensures that people stand in the correct position, realigning their gait and easing pressure on other parts of the body. |
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Even in the rearmost car, we ended up having to stand in the doorway. |
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I wasn't even allowed to stand in the receiving line after the service. |
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Huge glacial erratics, boulders unlike most of the other rocks in their surroundings, stand in mute testimony to their cross-country transport by advancing ice. |
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More clumsily, fireworks stand in for the Big Bang and a potato and peas are invoked to explain relativity. |
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As a result of this activity, students may or may not discover that the diameter and the circumference of the circle stand in a linear relationship. |
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Dr. Martin Luther King and Gandhi stand in this great nonviolent tradition. |
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A president who makes such a claim would be arrogating the right to be the ultimate arbiter of war and peace and to stand in judgment over the world. |
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Some time ago, he took a courageous and principled stand in support of a local failed asylum seeker and her family who were threatened with deportation. |
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Because sgt Simpson and many all-Americans like him are the ones you will be entrusted to lead, protect and stand in front of. |
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Greste has also taken a stand in prison as a staunch critic of what has transpired. |
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But as for the rest of the work, its makers had their hands full pushing the notion that balletic dance movements could stand in for street-gang macho. |
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Was it conservative to insist that she would not allow marriage and family to stand in the way of her legal studies or, once called to the Bar, her career as a lawyer? |
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My job really wasn't to do filing or take phone calls, it was to stand in front of the door if his wife got the idea in her head to turn up and barge into the surgery. |
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One cannot but stand in awe of such selfless devotion to a cause. |
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People are getting no satisfaction and they are strongly considering having somebody stand in the May elections on a ticket of keeping the school open. |
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Alas now if he posted such extracts someone would probably complain that they were commercial posts and send him off to stand in a corner like some naughty little boy. |
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The gadrooned flattened torus moulding, shown on the shelf or footrest of the stand in the engraving also appears on the stretchers of the Blenheim stands. |
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Whenever the smoke of the grill became unbearable I would stand in the car park with a lime and lemonade, or sometimes a shandy, and she would look up from her book and smile. |
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Like the beekeeper taking his stand in the garden, it requires the prolonged use of miniaturized verbal trestles that can be dismantled once the swarm has gone. |
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Howling voices broke into the silence, and the Orcs swept across the land like a tornado, ready to mow down anything and everything that might stand in their way. |
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Experiments involved aerial spraying, gas chambers, and field tests that required soldiers to crawl across ground soaked with mustard gas or stand in chemical clouds. |
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It was eerie to stand in the centre of this huge, empty, dark space, with only a few slivers of light creeping in through the cracks in the hangar door. |
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The width of the surrounding streets allows the Barclays Center to stand in relief as the alien presence it is. |
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Most people touring the 302-square-kilometre Lushan National Park will be unruffled when they stand in front of perpendicular cliffs and look down on deep valleys. |
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They also have a very powerful kick, to be avoided at all costs, and have most unsocial habits like peeing on your foot or leaving large deposits for you to stand in. |
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Others, clad in stylish jeans and leather jackets stand in front of the stage, drinking bootleg liquor and swaying to the music along with their veilless girlfriends. |
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Here people would just stand in front of bulldozers to change that law. |
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May they all stand in a puddle and stick their tongues in a Prius charge port. |
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Jack caught hold of her arm and pulled her back to stand in front of him. |
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The Lions will open a three-game home stand in Tainan against the Chinatrust Whales, where Lions closer Michael Garcia is set to reach the 20-save plateau. |
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Mr Baggs expected his decision to stand in the election would provoke controversy, but said he is prepared to put his head above the parapet for what he believes in. |
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Elbowing in on their act, of course, are those unique artist who dress in a period piece and then stand in one position for what seems time eternal. |
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The incident happened in the afternoon near the main bus stand in the communally sensitive North Gujarat town, which has witnessed several violent incidents in recent weeks. |
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She raised her flute at her eleventh measure of rest, her piccolo on the stand in front of her, and after eight more beats she began playing the music. |
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At the moment 15 homes and a couple of sports clubs stand in the way of the scheme, but these are likely to be demolished if and when compulsory purchase orders are issued. |
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Before Act II, the dancers stand in a circle and interlock pinkie fingers. |
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I used to stand in the window at quiet times listening to the records and trying to play along to them on the Moog synthesizer they had in the shop. |
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In vindication, Gerald turned and walked away, leaving April to stand in the middle of the sidewalk with a flurry of golden leaves cascading around her. |
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Moreover, there was no basis for him to exercise discretion to allow the statutory declarations to stand in place of the counterstatements in the proceedings. |
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Vanity, the need personally to stand in the foreground as clearly as possible, strongly tempts the politician to commit one or both of these sins. |
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All he could do was stand in the rubble of his precious memories, and forlornly point out random spots now cluttered with cranes and building supplies. |
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One of the most challenging things to do when your head is fuzzily congested is to stand in the cold remedy aisle and contemplate which product might help you most. |
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At one point the gully is deep enough for a man to stand in. |
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Usually I'll stand in a newsagents and stare at the assorted glossies for ages without ever seeing a single copy of anything I actually want to buy. |
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When everyone is worried about losing their built up areas that serve as shops and residences, the magnificent gopuras of the temples stand in eloquent silence. |
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Go stand in a shoe shop and watch women fight over the final pair of suede boots with the kitten heel and tasseled edgings around the top that have been reduced to sell. |
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Let's all us dimwits gather together and stand in their way! |
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Will Lee Westwood attempt to have a stunt-man double stand in for him? |
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When you look at most golfers in a driving range they stand in a little bay, which I call a cell, and don't let themselves out until they've hit the perfect shot. |
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Her evaluation will give me a good indication of where I stand in the class. |
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Her mum says that she is deaf and only partially sighted, so I need to go and stand in front of her, so she can see the gift. |
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If this ordinance is withdrawn even then my petition does not stand in fructuous, he added. |
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However, these advantages would not stand in the face of Roman perseverance and ingenuity. |
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He asked the senate for permission to stand in absentia, but Cato blocked the proposal. |
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However, the behaviour also takes place in warm water and is also observed in birds that do not typically stand in water. |
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Irish troops made a stand in the market square, but they were quickly overwhelmed. |
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Notwithstanding national arrangements, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and UKIP indicated they might not stand in every constituency. |
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Despite contesting 10 seats last time, UKIP did not stand in Northern Ireland. |
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If you want a taxi in Central London, you'll have to stand in the road and flag one down. |
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From this turnpike he walked far, only to stand in icelight where the poets and brothers rocked in the rickety porch-dark of his body. |
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However, such claims of equality stand in contrast to her statements respecting the superiority of masculine strength and valour. |
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They argue that distinct selves can have perceptions that stand in relations of similarity and causality with one another. |
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One person identified as Indrajit Singh was shot dead from point blank range at a polling booth near Katwa bus stand in Burdwan district. |
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You stand in the tall van and still he looms giantly above you, sitting royally in his throne like some ancient king. |
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The grey and haunting ruins that stand in the valley of Skell are remnants of an age when monks virtually ruled the wool trade. |
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In Berlin, copies of tut's treasures stand in well for the real ones. |
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Decisions of the House of Lords before 1 July 1997 stand in a similar position. |
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At the heats, students had to abandon their scheduled speech to stand in for an absent college and presented a different, unrehearsed, topic. |
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Thus there arises a complex whole of overlapping syntheses, which stand in a certain mutual relation of superordination and subordination. |
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We removed the underdrain of each microplate and allowed the plate to stand in the room atmosphere for 1 h before array printing. |
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Painted arrows on the linoleum floor direct you where to stand in line. |
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There's no evidence of an umbrella stand in Cdr William's cabin on board the ship. |
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All strength and mighty muscle, it seems robust and ready for the cloggiest bog or craggiest peak if one dares to stand in its way. |
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I have now been put on the transfer list and the president won't stand in the way if I get the chance of a move. |
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The sprightly six-year-old doesn't let the fact that she has Down's syndrome and a tracheostomy stand in her way of having fun. |
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Some wells to be completed in the ground with concrete socket pipe and betonlg, so they do not stand in the way of traffic in the area. |
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But the realities for many Indian women stand in grim contrast as the discrimination against girls and female foeticide are common. |
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I couldn't stand in the '80s and '90s seeing people in cardboard cities like it was normal life. |
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We say should because only you, and your histrionics, stand in the way. |
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A TEACHER who made a sevenyear-old child with brittle bone disease stand in the corner was yesterday struck off the register for two years. |
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Theresa May, Boris Johnson and events stand in the way but Osborne has improved his standing with the Tory party selectorate. |
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The shop was not even busy I could not let my father stand in the shop any longer so we left and went over to the Body Shop. |
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Out in the shop, replenishers stand in each aisle, most wearing gloves to protect their hands. |
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Keith Ball, pictured, will stand in for his father who had been booked to appear with his Jazzmen tomorrow. |
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As for dried pasillas, they can stand in for dried poblanos like mulatos and anchos in sauces, completing the circle. |
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With a B-4 stand in hand, a co-worker and I walked to the aircraft and removed the top propeller afterbody. |
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Even if they did decide to prosecute, the Justice Department would have to take a number and stand in a very long line. |
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Today he is principally remembered for the manner of his death, and monuments to him stand in Pimlico, Chichester Cathedral, and Liverpool. |
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We Germans more than anybody else stand in need of a knowledge of the facts concerning this question. |
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A kid can stand in the street and sell newspapers, if the headlines are hot. |
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Caesar petitioned the Senate to stand in absentia, but Cato employed a filibuster to block the proposal. |
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The artisans may stand in for the master craftsman of the myth, and builder of the Labyrinth, Daedalus. |
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The company wanted to projectize their business and wanted to know what might stand in the way of that. |
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So, after doing my professorly duty and dispensing wisdom, I hang up with the reporter and stand in the middle of the dark bedroom. |
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When surveying an area for predators, zebras will stand in an alert posture with ears erect, head held high, and staring. |
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I shall have no peace of mind until I have planted a seed of Nordic blood wherever the population stand in need of regeneration. |
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I found a little corner to stand in and pretended to sip my own louched absinthe. |
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The latter was delivered some 5 months after the former and in the interim a PT20 craft, Fleccia di Reggio was chartered to stand in. |
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Emmanuel Macron was an independent politician as Minister, but formed his own party to stand in the 2017 presidential election. |
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I think it the best way to plant the fifteen sorts, and the hard Peaches I have mentioned, in the same order as they stand in the list. |
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Cover with a piece of glad wrap or a large tea towel and let stand in a warm place until doubled in size, 1 to 2 hours. |
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We could play elastics, or skipping, without the need of anyone else to stand in the loops or hold the rope. |
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Athena disguises Odysseus as a wandering beggar so he can see how things stand in his household. |
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A justiciar was appointed by the king to stand in his absence when he was on the continent. |
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It is also the home of the tallest floodlight stand in Europe. |
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Finally, stand in the right place at precisely the right time, and you'll be either shot, snakebit, struck by lightning or get a column in a gun magazine. |
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A TEACHER who made a seven-year-old child with brittle bone disease stand in the corner of a classroom was yesterday struck off the register for two years. |
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The Queen invited her cousin, the Duke of Kent, to stand in for her husband and join her in her glass coach for the short journey from Buckingham Palace along The Mall. |
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The group, especially Moon, were not fond of the hippie movement, and thought their violent stage act would stand in sharp contrast to the peaceful atmosphere of the festival. |
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According to Rochleder, legumine and casein stand in close affinity to one another, and differ only in their respective reactions with acetic acid. |
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Rather than engaging in a formal pact, the DUP agreed not to contest Fermanagh and South Tyrone, while the UUP chose not to stand in four constituencies. |
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Independent candidates often stand in British parliamentary elections, often with platforms about specific local issues, but usually without success. |
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Daly might have had a double on the night, having been ready to stand in on Morris's winner Alabama Wurley, who caused a 14-1 upset in the seller. |
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During the singing of this antiphon, all stand in their places, and the monarch remains seated in the Coronation Chair still wearing the crown and holding the sceptres. |
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But I feel an impulse to scribble wordly words, to stand in a silk hat beside the statue of Liberty and gaze out upon the Atlantic with a Carlylian pensiveness. |
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Another shot across the bow would be to remark on the unrepresentativeness of the substitute measures used to stand in for good physician behavior. |
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It has selected Liz Saville Roberts to stand in the heartland seat of Dwyfor Meirionnydd, where Plaid Westminster leader Elfyn Llwyd is standing down. |
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I asked my colleague to stand in for me so I could take the day off. |
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The name of the Cumberland View public house in Morecambe reflects the fact that Black Combe used to stand in the historical county of Cumberland. |
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Some UK political parties that only stand in part of the country have reciprocal relationships with parties standing in other parts of the country. |
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Gladstone stood for South West Lancashire and for Greenwich, it being quite common then for candidates to stand in two constituencies simultaneously. |
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Cobbett intended to stand for Parliament in Honiton in 1806, but was persuaded by Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald to let him stand in his stead. |
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Otway's play had the floating city of Venice stand in for the river town of London, and it had the dark senatorial plotters of the play stand in for the Earl of Shaftesbury. |
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When there is either no Deputy Prime Minister or First Secretary of State, the Leader of the House may stand in for an absent Prime Minister at Prime Minister's Questions. |
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In virtue of their contents, psychological states stand in logical relations like incompatibility, material implication, and conceptual necessitation. |
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Clr John Beacroft-Mitchell, Calderdale Council's cabinet member for performance and resources, said the council will take a robust stand in tackling the compensation culture. |
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