My first order of business was to take off my coat and enjoy the warmth emanating from the radiator. |
|
In the United States and more developed regions of the world, trained health care professionals can rapidly take steps to treat asphyxia. |
|
As for Tom, a clear sign when a forward has lost confidence or the appetite for the fray is when they choose to kick rather than take contact. |
|
She became convinced she was losing her baby and insisted her husband take her to hospital. |
|
We decided we to take a chance on the jar of Petrossian whole goose foie gras in aspic with port wine. |
|
To lose body weight, essentially you have to burn more calories than you take in. |
|
You begin to lose height very quickly and it is important to take care on this descent. |
|
I'm mildly Aspie so I can take things quite literally, especially in stressful situations like an interview. |
|
Money and a great looking wardrobe doesn't take away the fact that her voice still does not stand out amongst the rock grrls of the music world. |
|
Critically evaluate the steps that companies can take to ensure that their direct mail does not become junk mail. |
|
It may take some time, but the ultimate losers in a world of reduced suppliers will of course be the carriers themselves. |
|
If you're bowling and feel a headache coming on, take two aspirins and stay away from splits. |
|
Even now if I get a headache I'm not allowed to take any aspirins in case it masks the symptoms and I have a recurrence. |
|
Seniors are also one of the few target groups that actually take the time to comb through their mountains of direct mail. |
|
My stomach is way too sensitive to take aspirin, ibuprofen or other arthritis pills. |
|
Compare that with how much you might otherwise spend on health care benefits, and you'll probably just take two aspirins and sign up. |
|
If you use a sprat to catch a mackerel, you make a small expenditure or take a small risk in the hope of a much greater gain. |
|
Are real estate agents encouraging lowball offers, because their take doesn't change much and they just want to make a deal? |
|
If a company has no directors, customers cannot take action to recover their losses. |
|
This could take up to an hour and must be completed by the end of a gruelling nine-hour shift. |
|
|
I'm sure I'll be a bit rusty on the first couple of stages, but it won't take long to get back into the groove. |
|
Consequently, he says, there were places where he had to grit his teeth and take editorial decisions. |
|
She picked it up with the cloth, saying she would take it to lost and found. |
|
It was rumoured that Queen Victoria ordered members of the cabinet to take action to end the liaison. |
|
The combination of the assassins, of time, of blame, and his own inevitable errors mean that someone else must take on the job. |
|
First, it's wrong to take a clause out of an indirect quotation and pretend that it's direct speech. |
|
French officials at the embassy tried to talk Wilson out of it, and would not take the medal back. |
|
It is expected to take four auctioneers seven hours to sell off 1,000 lots to people bidding via the web, by phone and in person. |
|
A larger demonstration is due to take place today with protesters planning to march past the US ambassador's residence and the British embassy. |
|
We are reliably informed that the Senate may take up the bill in its rump session, scheduled to start Tuesday. |
|
She forced herself to take a few deep breaths to calm her racing heart and clear her mind. |
|
I swallowed and began to take deep breaths to try to stop the fire in my chest. |
|
I have to take it in my stride and take a few deep breaths and manage it in the most mature way I can. |
|
From the moment we are born until we take our last breath and die, it is like our life force. |
|
Mr Woolford, who must be one of the counsel in the case, said that is an unusual stance for an embassy to take. |
|
Now, the football team must take breath from this fantastic win and build on it. |
|
They can take Reggie Bush, the most electrifying player in this class, but they really don't need a running back. |
|
The heavy, dirge-like music combined with dark, haunting lyrics combine to take you on a trip through the darkest parts of your soul. |
|
Until the 18th Century, punctuation was closely related to spoken delivery, including pauses to take breath. |
|
Spanish athlete Morta Dominguez ran superbly to take the silver ahead of Ethiopia's Ayelech Worko who won the bronze. |
|
|
This week is Energy Week, time to take a long hard look at how much it costs you to run your home. |
|
At 28, he decided to take his protests to Congress by running for election. |
|
Sir Liam said he was keen to encourage people to take exercise in a variety of forms, not just gym workouts or long-distance runs. |
|
He believed Virgin would start to take a bigger share of the market on the Glasgow run when a new timetable was introduced in December. |
|
Most definitely, we can take a lot from this game and the cup run we have had. |
|
This whole thing will be run like a classic flight test program of expanding the envelope, but we will always take off at full gross weight. |
|
One of the largest resorts in Quebec, Sutton boasts 40 kilometres of runs with 194 junctions allowing you to take a different route on each run. |
|
The facade is more than adequate, and the harsh reality of poverty and dirt all but invisible unless you take a wrong turn. |
|
It would take another eight years for the FBI to assemble the evidence to accuse him as a counterspy and place him under arrest. |
|
I assure you this will take a lot of practice and as you all know, practice makes perfect. |
|
If they fail to score another run or take another wicket on the entire tour, it will not matter one iota. |
|
I don't know much about Garner, but I take it as a good sign that The Guardian has utterly failed to come up with any dirt on him. |
|
It did not take long before the Crusaders were running short on supplies and on patience. |
|
I've been a private eye for thirty-five years, give or take, and I've never run across anything like this. |
|
Year 12 students co-ordinated the project at the school and gave presentations in assembly to encourage other pupils to take part. |
|
This allows the main facility, where all of the critical fitting and assembly procedures take place, to be as spotless as possible. |
|
I play around with BMX biking and ride my dirt bike when I have time to take it to the track. |
|
He mentally ran through how much money he had saved up and how long it would take to have enough as he shoved his key into the lock on his door. |
|
If you want I'll get Harry to take you into the village in his runabout and you can take the bus home. |
|
I'm trying hard not to take this as an indictment of my efforts, assuring myself it's symptomatic of our age, an aimless seeking without focus. |
|
|
Over a low to moderate heat this will take a good 25 minutes, during which time a savoury golden sediment will attach itself to the pan. |
|
He has said from the beginning that he would like for the team to take a more run-and-gun, open and fast break style of offense. |
|
If you don't loudly dictate the path that you wish to take from the outset, then clients or other external factors will generate your trajectory. |
|
What is it going to take to get the Government and the Opposition to work together to bring runaway crime under control? |
|
One who does have high self-esteem displays confidence and assurance, gaining the courage needed to take steps towards success. |
|
It seemed to take no notice of them and swung onto a low branch above Katrina holding on only by its feet. |
|
Many would no doubt take issue with me on that simple assertion, citing personal reasons why it is not so. |
|
It would take only an assertive patient and a confident healthcare provider who is willing to listen. |
|
Lana's family wasn't dirt poor, but they never could have afforded to take Lana, her brother, AND me on a two-week European dream vacation. |
|
For a rundown on his remarkable life, take a look at the official Vatican site. |
|
So reading the runes then, a Pearl phone, perhaps with some fancy imaging integrated, looks likely to take its place in the 8000 series. |
|
Marriage exists because people must take responsibility for childcare and assume economic obligations. |
|
I do not take too seriously Bill's asseverations about retiring from this, that, and the other thing. |
|
Sampson contends that social constructionism has failed to take seriously the notion of embodiment. |
|
In conversation, however, she doesn't shy from voicing her view that other countries could take a lesson from Sweden's liberal ways. |
|
Flagship Uberalles, third in the last running of this race, galloped ahead on the run-in and battled up the hill to take a convincing victory. |
|
It is asking fellow supporters to join association members for the lobby, which will take place in Westminster Hall between noon and 3pm. |
|
Let's not louse it up by letting someone else take over and make the rules for us. |
|
This is an opportunity to take blood for checking full blood count, urea and electrolytes, blood group, and clotting screen. |
|
The entire poem is an appeal by a lovelorn woman to a cloud, which she urges to take her message to her beloved. |
|
|
The tie-up will enable the company to take the card business to centres where the associate banks are located. |
|
Writers no longer take note of the assists credited to a shortstop or second baseman. |
|
Pay is so low for many workers that some rely on state assistance to take care of their families. |
|
Personally, I only take note of clarinet players, what with their tighter embouchure and greater tongue control. |
|
It is a documentary in which various members of a Guarani community take the camera and film themselves engaged in common daily activities. |
|
He has years of experience as an assistant manager and is very eager to take the next step. |
|
We've got a good team, and we've got two good assistant coaches as well so they can probably take a bit of credit. |
|
I had always been a fast runner, so it didn't take me very long to get into the park which was 2 blocks away. |
|
Trim up overhanging foliage from surrounding plants and simultaneously cut back any stray grass runners before they take root in adjacent beds. |
|
Sliding down the hallway on a carpet runner, Scott came to a screeching halt beside his little sister and reached down to take her hand. |
|
Fourth, the president must take immediate, urgent, essential steps to guarantee the promised elections can be held next year. |
|
After York failed to take a high bomb, Rovers moved the ball out to Gavin Molloy who was awarded a try despite appeals for a forward pass. |
|
If you have a runny nose or a cough and take garlic your body becomes a more unpleasant environment for germs and they high-tail it out of you. |
|
The authorities wanted to take me back to Dover to sort out the paperwork, but I managed to get freed in London. |
|
He didn't actually call for Colless's head but he did embroider the story with enough venom for his followers to take up the cudgel. |
|
Also, take a look at Tulip Girl, who has a running commentary on events and links to a number of other Ukrainian blogs and news sites. |
|
They take their daughter to a low-cost clinic for the poor that they heard about from a friend. |
|
The big scandal is that some of the people in the chat room were egging him on to take more. |
|
They can force an advancing enemy to take an approach or position in which they are at a disadvantage. |
|
We don't have to take sides in the abortion debate to agree that development and embryology and fetuses are neat. |
|
|
At its simplest the aura may take the form of a familiar odour, or more commonly a disagreeable or even disgusting one. |
|
In a suitably equipped ambulance, they may take an electrocardiogram, which is a trace of the electrical activity of the heart. |
|
Then the court will decide who must take care of minor children unless the parents have appointed a guardian. |
|
It wasn't long after take off from Shenzen when the emergency exit warning light began to flash. |
|
The guardsmen, who are also crack paratroops, had been due to take part in a performance in front of the Queen. |
|
I was also very disappointed that Cork could not take their defeat like men. |
|
So, sadly and very disappointedly, I wandered back to the ice cream aisle to take one last look at my two gallons of Neapolatin. |
|
If your child has discomfort after swallowing a coin, take him to the emergency room. |
|
If yours is more complex, make a dimensioned sketch to take to your plumbing hardware supplier, who can make the appropriate recommendations. |
|
If you haven't got access to a grinder then a smooth file and emery will actually do a better job even if it does take much longer. |
|
Apparently, it's a risk he's willing to take to solidify his front-runner status and disarm his critics in the Democratic Party establishment. |
|
He prefers to purge children of demons by making them take laxatives and emetics. |
|
This program forced civilians to take sides and served to increasingly isolate guerillas from popular support. |
|
Does it take a disaster of these proportions to convince us all to give so freely? |
|
When dinner time rolled around on Saturday evening, I was still puzzled as to where I could take him. |
|
He is sponsoring legislation to restrict municipalities' rights to take property by eminent domain. |
|
It will take the losers considerable time to recover from this disastrous performance. |
|
It's time to take the casket out of the church, and you guessed it, it weighs a ton! |
|
Emirati referee Ali Bujsaim, who will take control of the opening match, said he had been told to set the tone for the tournament. |
|
The guild's next meeting will take place on Tuesday night, and the competition is a guessing game. |
|
|
Measured against what it would take to actually cool the planet, emissions trading is ultimately a form of institutional denial. |
|
Some kind of unimaginable chemical reaction would take the natural sweat produced by us all and turn it into an emitter of light. |
|
Having thus disburdened his mind, he instantly withdrew, left the office, and proceeded to Portsmouth to take the command of the expedition. |
|
Leaving emo behind, The Only Children take the roots-rock and country-folk route, drenched in acoustic guitar and pedal steel. |
|
Students who were unable to take part because of emotional and behavioural difficulties showed their work on video. |
|
These birds take refuge in hedges and wooded areas and at dusk fly out to feed in marshy ground. |
|
It can take months or years just to consciously grok your own experience, more so to effectively share it with someone else. |
|
So to sum up the subject of bait and groundbait, I have to say that you really cannot take too much bait. |
|
I also take into account the statutory guidelines and all the circumstances of the case. |
|
It would take a phased deployment over about 40 years to realize a complete deployment of electrical guideways and dual mode vehicles. |
|
Once inside the elevator, Nick pressed the level 7 button that would take them to the buffet room. |
|
The emphatic result was testament to his ability to challenge and expose the political classes and take the people along with him. |
|
Either way, it would clearly take all of the cunning and guile of an evil criminal mastermind to penetrate such online defences. |
|
Equally, he has the stamina, guile and composure both to make chances and work himself into positions to take them. |
|
Under the policy those who regularly take sick leave without good reason face disciplinary action. |
|
The firm employs three scientists and may take on more staff as its operations expand. |
|
However, so far talks are at an early stage and there are still many discussions to take place. |
|
There are Filipino stews, take out Chinese dim sum, or German sausages and French pastries at a deli. |
|
If we do not take a disciplined approach these accidents will continue to happen. |
|
But why do we think it beyond the capabilities of students to take on paid employment while studying? |
|
|
To help you get comfortable with your ability to take care of business, follow these steps to financial empowerment. |
|
From hilarious scenes to heart-rending arias, the show promises audiences a fun evening with an original take on opera in all its guises. |
|
As a nation of tea and coffee drinkers, our teeth take a battering and frequently end up stained or discoloured. |
|
My friend had to take to a canoe as flash floods cascaded outside the ground-floor flat of a friend he was visiting. |
|
If you choose not to do that, be prepared to discombobulate four lives and take your chances of it working out well or badly. |
|
The streets of the centre of the city emptied as frightened residents fled home to take shelter. |
|
The grass where I stood to take these pictures was littered with empties, mostly bourbon-and-cola bottles. |
|
Then and only then will we take back control over the market forces that are the cause of our increasing emptiness and anxiety. |
|
At least eleventy billion people told me they personally saw him take money from coaches. |
|
This is the image I fostered on the flight over, trying desperately to take my mind off the discomforts of the long journey. |
|
The standard medical treatment is to spend a day or two in bed and take soluble aspirin to alleviate the minor discomforting symptoms. |
|
If you take away power-play goals and empty-netters from the series, the Bruins only outscored the Red Wings 6-4 in the five games. |
|
Even though you probably won't fill out your financial aid application until early 2003, you can take steps now to improve your eligibility. |
|
The chief executive would be more than happy if they can emulate that achievement this year but knows they can take nothing for granted. |
|
A major draw will take place next month and anyone who joins in June will be eligible for all prizes. |
|
Unlike redundancy theories, however, the prosentential theory does not take the truth predicate to be always eliminable without loss. |
|
He smiled as Elena gulped her wine, put down the glass a bit too forcefully, and leaned on him, letting the sway of the car take it's toll. |
|
Her laughter rises to meet his, blending discordantly, pitch against pitch until I can't take anymore, but they don't stop. |
|
Many vendors at these shows offer discounts for point-of-sale purchases on the exhibit day, so take money or your credit cards with you. |
|
By discounting the price of a nights stay, they also take away some of the perks of staying in a hotel. |
|
|
Contact Air Canada's North America toll free number noted below, or your travel agent and take advantage of special discounted airfares. |
|
The ketone functional group can also take part in autocondensation reactions which eliminate water. |
|
It's hard for visitors to keep things straight in their heads when they can't see them and take them in at a gulp. |
|
This is the kind of book you take in at a gulp and, having reached the last page, put down reluctantly. |
|
I held out the gun for him to take, its sleek black enamel glinting dully in the fluorescent light. |
|
Not surprisingly, bidders are moving in now to take advantage of low value share prices, which typically trade at a discount to net assets. |
|
When I asked, I was told all the leaves are gumming up the undercarriage of trains and it can take up to a week to clean them. |
|
Then Precis and Claude take a ride on the aforementioned giant robot gumball. |
|
The management must take responsibility for the team's possible elimination from the knockout stages of the League. |
|
He should take enormous pride that his enthusiasm and gumption have turned Motherwell around in recent years. |
|
It's up to the travel industry to take the first steps toward solving this epidemic of discourteousness. |
|
I could take steps to discredit your organization and undermine it so that it could not maintain the project on a large scale. |
|
However, he said he was not ready to take the stage any time soon and discredited recent promotions under which his name appeared. |
|
We'll try and play attacking football but not ridiculous gung-ho stuff and if the chances come, we've got to take them. |
|
His object in this is to take advantage of the discretionary nature of the relief available to the court in such a case. |
|
There are several roles players can take on such as a fighter pilot, turret gunner, bomber, ship captain and base defender to name a few. |
|
Aircraft can be told to bomb infrastructure, attack ground forces, or take out ports. |
|
I couldn't take my eyes off the baby, which stopped crying and started to stare at me and then smiled and gurgled. |
|
Lets hope this great result encourages youngsters across Scotland to take up the sport themselves. |
|
Despite the dangers, some parents actively encourage their children to take part in the street clashes. |
|
|
The reader is actively encouraged to take back control over her own health. |
|
I step outside to take a look and see that the downspout is clogged and water is gushing out of the gutter. |
|
Innovative jackets take on a geometric appearance with gussets, cutouts and inserts. |
|
Both restoration and backups take no time at all, even with encryption and compression. |
|
Both players were trying to dominate with fast, attacking shots and they shared the next two ends to take it to a deciding set. |
|
He was happy to use me to further his own ends, secure in the knowledge that he'd take me out with virtually no effort when the time came. |
|
My opinion is that people take it from their mouths, toss it towards the bin but it misses and ends up on the floor. |
|
Should we, if we know we haven't got long to live, be allowed to take the option of ending it all? |
|
A meeting will take place today to decide if it is the end of the road for workers at the plant. |
|
I don't want to take the light away from her or else I'll never hear the end of it. |
|
Would even you take the risk of endangering the lives of both Peter and Erin, our friends? |
|
The third policy is to take every reasonable precaution not to harm or endanger life, either human or non-human. |
|
In the event of an outbreak of Avian Influenza, possible vaccination of rare breeds and endangered species would take place. |
|
However, travelers visiting endemic areas may be affected by this disease if they do not take proper precautionary hygienic measures. |
|
A tincture is easier for children to take and it can be added to a little juice to disguise the taste. |
|
Imagine the sun basking down on you over the past week with a pool nearby to take a dip and cool off in whenever you liked. |
|
She glared at the man in disgust but allowed him to take a blood sample and check her fever. |
|
But if you're climbing up a ladder to get to your guttering make sure you take care, and get somebody to hold the ladder for you. |
|
The question has a sticky personal dimension, that of presidential character and the president's own gutty willingness to take decisive action. |
|
It may yet take a national inquiry to establish the full extent of this disgusting phenomenon. |
|
|
There will also be an opportunity for the guests to fly kites, take a dip in the sea or the resort pool. |
|
You can also take part in the exercise programmes which run in the gym throughout the day, or take a dip in the pool. |
|
If people think it is all right to dish it out, then I think they should be prepared to take it, and should stop whingeing afterwards. |
|
If you've never heard a juicy tidbit you weren't dying to dish, take a gander at your gossip groove. |
|
And of course we did know that, and it disheartened us to think no one would take notice of us. |
|
They shot back in Vietnam for twelve years, until we finally got sick of the whole mess and let the bad guys take over. |
|
It can take some time for the endocrinologist to work with you on establishing the correct dose of replacement hormone. |
|
You're going to take the shame of dishonoring your kingdom to your grave, I promise you that. |
|
I take pride in being a thief, and what's more, I am the best dip in the States. |
|
Among others to take a keen interest in the gymnosophists was Pyrrho, founder of the philosophical school known as the Sceptics. |
|
My mother used to take me to work with her, at family planning clinics which were run as a gynaecocracy. |
|
Because her test results were always normal, she began to take her gynecological health for granted. |
|
If that's not enough for you, then you might take a look at the domains of gynarchy and mysticism of murderous amazons. |
|
Understandably, I have some reservations about getting drunk with my passport and visa with me, so I am disinclined to take them. |
|
The misinformation and disinformation that is circulated makes it impossible for any fair-minded commentator to take sides in the issue. |
|
Indeed, when they scored two tries early in the second half to take the lead, there was an air of Groundhog Day dread among an anxious crowd. |
|
Where to place groundskeepers and refreshment vendors is another factor to take note of. |
|
Another was reported to have taken to the stage, removed his shirt and started to take his trousers off as he gyrated round a pole. |
|
My assertion is by no means groundless if we take into account our 1.3 billion population and per capita arable land. |
|
The name has the sound of an early twentieth-century blood-boosting medicine, or of a modern, health-food take on the Greek sandwich, the gyro. |
|
|
The orbit of the Earth is an ellipse, not a circle, so different quarters of the orbit take different lengths of time to complete. |
|
This process involves large teams of ground staff that inspect the aircraft and take weather conditions into account. |
|
There is a groundswell of change but, like most groundswells, it will take time to break the surface and make itself felt. |
|
Despite her obvious dislike for him, she still did her best to take care of him. |
|
China should take note here and apply diplomacy to foster good neighbor relations. |
|
By concentrating on tact and diplomacy you can more effectively take advantage of your intellectual potential. |
|
Riding enduros can take a lot of dedication and time, but it is hugely rewarding and there is a real sense of camaraderie among competitors. |
|
I was willing to take the risk of having an enemy in my midst in order to get a hold of your brilliance. |
|
Doing so will help us stay tactically sharp and be able to take the fight to the enemy. |
|
They take about three to five minutes to come to full brightness after they are energized. |
|
The officials and diplomats spoke anonymously because of the delicacy of the negotiations on what tack to take on Iran. |
|
He was appointed to a position he wasn't groomed for at a time no one would have chosen to take the helm. |
|
Once we give permanent status it ought not take an act of Congress in order to dismiss a teacher that is ineffective. |
|
Spitzer's attacks on Wall Street are inspiring other state enforcers to take on big corporate icons on behalf of consumers. |
|
Perhaps the time has come to take this a step further, by enforcing compulsory contributions on both employers and employees. |
|
Very often such limitations take the form of disobedient opposition to the rules. |
|
What if something we take for granted, something utterly predictable, suddenly became unpredictable and chaotic and disordered? |
|
Strategic Traffic Unit senior sergeant Ian Campion said police could take action if the widow washers became disorderly or threatened drivers. |
|
You go to classes all day long and take notes and participate in group discussions. |
|
When the latter was over, I was so disorientated from grief that I forgot to take my bag with me from the cinema. |
|
|
They tend to gather in groups and take short flights out to sea and back in again, practising for their long journey back out onto the ocean. |
|
Worse still, many of them take the opportunity to disparage Norway into the bargain. |
|
The advantage is that he will be able to take a more distant and dispassionate view of things and will be seen to be impartial. |
|
They're able to go back now and take really deliberate, dispassionate views of the situation. |
|
I used to take yoga classes, and group fitness classes, but that has fallen by the way side for the moment. |
|
John wants to study environmental engineering at university but will take a year off before going. |
|
Robson said discussions would take place about the form that diplomatic relations with Afghanistan would take. |
|
For instance, when Penn State students take off for the holidays, the temperatures in the buildings can be lowered to 55 degrees. |
|
I asked politely if I could take notes on the diaries, diplomatically offering him a week to consider before calling again to get his answer. |
|
Neither side had the cohesion or the confidence to take control of a rudderless contest. |
|
The vast media conglomerates looking to take over the online music market are in rude health. |
|
He started to approach my Mom as if he was going to take her aside and engage her in a private conversation, but he didn't get the chance. |
|
I'd also like to take antioxidant vitamins and the herbs astragalus and milk thistle to help prevent a recurrence, but my doctors disagree. |
|
Part god, part athlete, he dances astoundingly in a big solo that seems to take its shape in the air until he comes to rest. |
|
Shrugging his shoulders up, he dismounted at Arnaud's, and handed his horse to the groom to take in. |
|
After a course of electroconvulsive therapy patients need to take an antidepressant medication to prevent the depression from relapsing. |
|
The man gets a surprise call and has to take an unexpected flight and then face some 36 hours of astoundingly dangerous adventures. |
|
Aaiu investigators said the flight crew had not take the precaution of taking a manual reading of fuel tank levels with a dipstick at Luton. |
|
They take possession of the villagers' olive groves without offering payment or alternatives. |
|
Bury council is also demanding people ask permission to film or take photographs, but has so far not extended the ban to phones. |
|
|
To ask them to take something from theater or dance or music, to see the indirect sources of creativity that they could use is asking them a lot. |
|
Once, her mother asked her to come home for a function and there she heard that some ceremony was to take place. |
|
She has cats and when she lived in the south she would take them to the groomers and have what is called a Line Cut. |
|
I find another harassed doctor to take the clinic but really she's meant to be elsewhere. |
|
Men say that a stitch in time saves nine, and so they take a thousand stitches today to save nine tomorrow. |
|
They should instead take comfort in the fact that African askaris and Indian sepoys fought as mercenaries in the armies of the British Empire. |
|
Augustine had an aura like lop-eared rabbits and fluffy baby chicks that demanded even the most crotchety of old men stand up and take notice. |
|
And finally, I take my loppers and head for the roses and red-twigged dogwoods. |
|
How many times per week are you dining out at restaurants, getting take out, ordering in, etc? |
|
Of course, he'd grown up with it, and people who grew up with it tended to take it for granted. |
|
Despite this good idea, however, the film fails to take it to what should have been a gripping conclusion. |
|
In this month of Elul we must try and find that evil potential inside of us and disarm it and not let it take control of our lives. |
|
Give or take a few crores, the national parties among themselves have spent a thousand crore rupees. |
|
Next year he will go on to take several A and AS levels and hopes to go on to university in two years' time. |
|
God in His infinite mercy gave us the entire month of Elul to repent, but we failed to take advantage of it. |
|
It was left to the other half of the legislature, the Lords, to take a stand. |
|
Should your work often take you outdoors, think about a ruggedised model to cope with the grind. |
|
So I decided I would help him take care of the little rug rat while he went. |
|
Now, as often as not, we take the bone out and butterfly it, so it lies flat, and can be grilled if you like. |
|
Cecilia had to hid a smile when she saw Kit straighten his shoulders and take a step forwards in his most lord-like manner. |
|
|
He believes that when discussing and planning the question of curbing lending growth, one has to take several aspects into consideration. |
|
Planted with a southern aspect to take advantage of the low arc of the winter sun, it has trees, shrubs, herbaceous plants and dwarf bulbs. |
|
The millionaire bookie gladly agreed to take the neglected animal into his private sanctuary after it was found emaciated and abandoned. |
|
Somehow this is all tied in to the treacherous mountain trails, where a mile as the crow flies can take twenty miles of switchbacks. |
|
I've now made it a rule to take care of at least one niggling work-related task each day. |
|
With our two-track machine, we can just load them on a lowboy and take off. |
|
The most commonly used drug is called griseofulvin, and you usually have to take it for up to 10 weeks. |
|
Someone with autism and Asperger's syndrome will take at face value what is said to them. |
|
Several property owners were lowballed, and court decisions increased their take. |
|
Acting on the report, the High Court had directed the Government to take action to clear the green belt area from encroachments. |
|
She would take out a ruler and measure exactly what I asked for, make a cut and show me what she had cut. |
|
To be certain, take a ruler and measure from the bottom crease of each finger to the tip. |
|
More than 40,000 asylum seekers are awaiting rulings on their cases, which take an average of seven months. |
|
The acoustic replaces the electric and there is no electro-pop numbers like Mayday to take the album on a different tangent. |
|
But stoics take rugs, umbrellas, thick coats and bracing amounts of booze. |
|
Shadow areas often take on a gritty or rough textured appearance. |
|
Many conversations can take place online via electronic mail so that participants don't have to all be present at once, and archives can permit following previous discussions. |
|
The Principal had to take the drastic measure of closing down a professional diploma in electronic publishing when the course leader was lured away by the private sector. |
|
I get my own horse, with a personal groom to take care of it. |
|
Any of our superior gunnery or our laser swords could easily take him out. |
|