The terrible twosome came unstuck after subjecting an innocent group of southern belles to a tirade of verbal abuse in the town centre. |
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Last year, it gave up 43 sacks, subjecting quarterbacks Patrick Ramsey and Tim Hasselbeck to a horrid battering. |
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Stratfordians are similarly guilty of ignoring the facts or subjecting them to unwarranted interpretations. |
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By subjecting him and all other officials to a constitution, it sought to replace the rule of arbitrariness by the rule of law. |
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He enslaved the Congolese in their homeland, subjecting them to forced labor, and meting out inhuman treatment on those who dared defy him. |
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Residents are campaigning to close a playground, claiming gangs of youths who gather are subjecting them to a reign of terror. |
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Conservatives in Congress are talking about subjecting cable TV to the same indecency regs that govern broadcast networks. |
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One might account for this by supposing that such items were de trop, subjecting their wearer to ridicule. |
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He appears convincing by aggregating voluminous references without subjecting himself to the rigours of the scientific process. |
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That's what comes from subjecting oneself to confusion and some painfully obvious bias on both sides of the argument. |
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A schoolboy was today behind bars for subjecting a family to a campaign of terror and intimidation. |
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The bio-diesel is produced by converting the vegetable oils into methyl esters, by subjecting them to esterification and trans-esterification. |
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They humiliated Brian, subjecting him to a torrent of physical and emotional abuse. |
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This is a philistine agenda, subjecting universities' research and teaching to the narrow interests of the British economy. |
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I'm subjecting an actor to my gushing appraisal of his work when it becomes obvious that he and another actor are about to blow a doobie. |
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I think my body is paying me back for subjecting it to a years' worth of hard shift work. |
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Voluntarily subjecting yourself to it is about as plausible as asking to have your good teeth drilled. |
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But after subjecting the images to dictionary attacks, not a single hidden message was discovered. |
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Curiously, there does not seem to be any footage of the select committee subjecting Alastair Campbell to equivalent treatment. |
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Thus, like the pagan of old, the materialist ends up subjecting man to the subhuman. |
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The purpose of subjecting the model to energy minimization is to refine reasonable stereochemistry produced by our motif modeling method. |
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This technique permits Alain Satié to present the photographs from an original angle, by subjecting his own photography to minute chiseling. |
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This method had its dangers since the P38 was subjecting itself to antiaircraft fire from defenders as well as gunners aboard the Japanese bombers. |
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If this is the case, what health risks are women subjecting themselves to with one-time use of the pill? |
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However, the acoustic guitar is a folk instrument par excellence, and the folk have never been shy about subjecting their guitars to creative abuse. |
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He proposed that insight into the mechanism of rock deformation could be obtained by subjecting confined samples to high pressures in the laboratory. |
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This is why Nestlé is currently sounding out all the opportunities that RFID technology presents and by subjecting it to rigorous evaluation. |
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This will give manufacturers easier access to all markets, subjecting their production and marketing practices to a uniform set of conditions. |
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Water-soluble pentacyclic triterpene composition made by subjecting pentacyclic triterpene compound to inclusion in cyclodextrin group. |
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To attempt to 'moralize' politics by subjecting it to personal norms is to destroy it. |
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Investors in growing enterprises have repented of their boom-era zeal and incautiousness, and are now subjecting every deal to microscopic scrutiny. |
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In the academic world, peer review involves subjecting a researcher's scholarly work to the scrutiny of experts in the field. |
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These treatments take place under water jets, thus subjecting the edibles to continuous washing during each single action. |
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Such practices can help stamp out attacks at the source and thus stop them from spreading, without subjecting the network to congestion. |
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Among the scientific claims made regarding Rife Bare therapy is the proposal that subjecting cells to a high energy pulse causes their cell wall micropores to open. |
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Another hypothesis claims that the Sith Lord Exar Kun created the terentatek by subjecting rancors to his strange Force experiments. |
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This done, the model can be stochastically simulated by subjecting it to random collections of these impulses. |
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When one attempts to quantize gravity, one is subjecting some of the properties of spacetime to quantum fluctuations. |
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Efforts to make diamond by subjecting graphitic carbon to high pressure began shortly after that historic discovery. |
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But subjecting oneself to hypothermic conditions, he explains, is only a small part of the process. |
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Nevertheless, it appears that the US authorities plan to press on, subjecting numerous more Guantánamo detainees to these unlawful procedures. |
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We feel, however, that this objective is not best served by subjecting it to the interests and pressures of the private sector. |
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It was suggested to allow this type of cooperation within the same sea basin without subjecting it to distancerelated criteria. |
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They also argued that subjecting LMO-FFPs to AIA would subject trade in agricultural commodities to prohibitive delays and expense. |
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An inner planet that did manage to stay in orbit would have its path elongated by the interaction, subjecting the body to huge temperature swings. |
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Then I ran the risk of subjecting my hypothetical lover to the disturbing sounds my giant trombone of a schnozz would produce while she tried to sleep. |
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He is merciless toward his characters, subjecting them to all manner of suffering and cruelty. |
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The people on the waterfront are irresponsibly subjecting their children to unacceptable conditions. |
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Instead of subjecting description to action, as do Homer and Virgil in their narrativizing descriptions, Keats defamiliarizes the adjective and lingers on it. |
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In 1927 he showed that subjecting a sequence of independent random variables to a sequence of moving averages generated an almost periodic sequence. |
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If trying to fix the system doesn't work, parents need to have the option to pull up stakes and move on instead of subjecting their children to schools that can't educate. |
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Enraged bus users are misdialling and then subjecting the holiday team to every type of incivility, both before and after they were told of their error. |
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Method for the recovery of poxvirus from infected cells comprising the step of subjecting the infected cells to a high-pressure homogenization to obtain a poxvirus-containing homogenate. |
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On the contrary, it weakens them by subjecting agriculture to speculative funds that only accentuate variations in falling prices and engendering an agricultural system founded on social and environmental dumping. |
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Along the way, he shoots a video diary as a means of apologizing to his two young daughters for subjecting them to the ignominy of having a criminal for a father. |
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The entrepreneurial journey is about consistently seeing the bigger picture, continuously innovating and subjecting yourself to risk, and of course you can never give up! |
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While knitting machines spin ever faster, subjecting fabrics to even greater strain, the world of fashion cries out for ever thinner, lighter materials. |
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Herbal preparations: preparations obtained by subjecting herbal substances to treatments such as extraction, distillation, expression, fractionation, purification, concentration or fermentation. |
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But subjecting Douglas Carswell to what was undoubtedly a frightening and upsetting experience was totally wrong, and it is difficult to see what those involved hoped to achieve. |
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This time, the damage caused by the Great Recession is subjecting most advanced economies to secular stagnation and creating major structural growth challenges for emerging markets. |
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Such an authorisation thus cannot provide a legal basis for national legislation subjecting to value added tax the theft of goods from a tax warehouse. |
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In particular, the Commission is subjecting an increasing share of its work programme to extended impact assessment and is systematically consulting stakeholders at an early stage. |
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Feminists, like New Historicists, were interested in contextualizing Shakespeare's writings rather than subjecting them to ahistorical formalist analysis. |
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Indeed, subjecting 'Insalata di Lusia' to excessive handling and long journeys would lead to the turgidity and crispness of the leaves being lost. |
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The main practical limitation lies in the need to carry out dissolution tests to constant surface, and for that it is necessary to cover the pills with a paraffin pellicle before subjecting it to the test. |
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A new privacy protection policy, subjecting any government initiative to a privacy impact study, has significantly increased the workload of PPT and DFAIT employees. |
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A process for producing a porous film of polypropylene which comprises subjecting a biaxially stretched film or inflation film of polypropylene to uniaxial or biaxial stretching. |
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The transmission of knowledge by tutorship systems, for example, is a good way of exploiting the experience of senior citizens and subjecting them to less physical stress. |
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Japan's amended moneylending business law will be fully implemented next year, subjecting lenders to tougher restrictions. |
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This instrument produces tridimensional maps of the human brain structures, identifying possible lesions or simple dysfunctional syndromes, by subjecting the patient to a magnetic field. |
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In still another application, an aluminous insulating material is formed by melting alumina and silica in an electric furnace and subjecting the molten mixture to high-velocity gases to produce fine white fibres. |
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Needless to say, Commissioner, this amendment has the sole purpose of dealing with this type of situation in an objective way and subjecting it to a regulated, and not discretional, procedure on the part of the Commission. |
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From now on, however, we will be subjecting them to more stringent requirements as concerns environmental protection, labor contracts, and working conditions. |
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The risk of subjecting participants to a potentially scientifically inconclusive trial needs to be weighed against the risk of subjecting them to a potentially harmful placebo intervention. |
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One of the things the government has resisted forever is allowing broadcasters the right to make that transfer without subjecting themselves to a legal challenge. |
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In several cases, these women received delayed medical treatment or only received them after admitting to having undergone an abortion, subjecting them to criminal procedures. |
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The implications of this claim are stark: an employer permitting exposure to second hand smoke may be subjecting employees to a hazard contrary to the Occupational Health and Safety Act. |
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For this purpose and in order to guarantee a thorough judicial review of decisions subjecting an individual or entity to restrictive measures, such decisions must be based on clear and distinct criteria. |
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It is totally unacceptable, unjustified and immoral to bring a whole country to a halt by subjecting it to a merciless and relentless pounding and blockade on all sides. |
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Even the most sceptical political observers would have to admit that inter-party competition curbs misrule by subjecting the governing party to the relentless scrutiny of its rivals. |
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Instead of subjecting sanctions to some kind of rigid set of rules, we should, in the name of the efficacy of our impact on world politics, leave their application to sagacious political evaluation. |
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Ultimately, her inability to make meaningful decisions could result in her subjecting herself to irreparable legal, psychological and emotional harm. |
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Imagine a President and almost two hundred senators and representatives willingly subjecting themselves to a chamber full of deadly vapors for the sake of curing the common cold. |
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Groundwater infiltration is also problematic because it results in dilution of the waste water, subjecting the effluent treatment plant to unnecessary hydraulic loads. |
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To take the obverse of what Mr Caplan says: it may be difficult from a neo-classical perspective to explain why a football coach is helping his players by subjecting them to extremely painful drills, against their wishes. |
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For the first time, a modest corps of skilfully camouflaged light infantry deploying quickly had shown that it could foil a powerful army by subjecting it to decisive losses with only muskets for weapons. |
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Pierre, French for 'stone', the coarseness of the canvas, the roughness of a dense brush sculpting the white surface, turning it black from the inside out, subjecting it to the unyielding harshness of the light. |
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It is due to the idiocy of subjecting ourselves to qualified majority voting that we find ourselves in this position, and yet some under Lisbon would say we should hand over more and more subjects to that category. |
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In one case, the husband was so certain of his power to control that he beat his wife who was not subjecting herself to his rule, then he called the police to report her, thinking that she would be incarcerated. |
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Such standards are ensured by not subjecting the animals to the stress of transport or rehousing in the weaning, growing-finishing or fattening phases. |
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In their October 2009 issue, APC Magazine put the little NAS that could on the test bench, and after subjecting it to a battery of tests, agreed that it is truly something special. |
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More specifically, the suggestibility of young children means subjecting child witnesses to cross-examination can actually produce less accurate testimony. |
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Otherwise, unlawfully subjecting a corpse to intrusions by life-support mechanisms could be regarded as the crime of violating a corpse in South African law. |
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They are subjecting them to inappropriate tests which they are likely to fail and then reducing the financial support the mentally ill desperately need. |
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Countries accede to the union by becoming party to the founding treaties, thereby subjecting themselves to the privileges and obligations of EU membership. |
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The German occupants encouraged such registration, in many cases forcing it or subjecting Poles of German ethnicity to terror assaults if they refused. |
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The known means of measuring longitude were so inexact that the line of demarcation could not in practice be determined, subjecting the treaty to diverse interpretations. |
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