She was unfriendly and as cold as ice when I tried to talk to her earlier. |
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She found it difficult to talk about her achievements without sounding pompous. |
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She's a teacher who can talk to her students about serious subjects without sermonizing. |
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All we've had from him is a lot of talk unaccompanied by any real effort to solve the problem. |
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She began her talk with some general observations about the state of the industry. |
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None of the students dared to talk back to the crotchety old teacher. |
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And not for nothing, but I think you might want to talk to the doctor about a better diet. I suggest more fruits and salads. |
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If I talk about the problem with him it just agitates him even more. |
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It's a good idea to talk to people who have actually been there. |
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Many sports shows have recently adopted the conventions of the talk show. |
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Many consider it indelicate to talk about such things in mixed company. |
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Crick's reaction was to invite Nirenberg to deliver his talk to a larger audience. |
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In 1966, Crick took the place of Leslie Orgel at a meeting where Orgel was to talk about the origin of life. |
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While making small talk with the audience, Demi's greetings were reciprocated with loud screams from the Lovatics. |
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When this lowsome rank, of which I'm one, hope to talk unthunk, sans garden, to You whose laughter at my wits supposedly laughs love? |
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There has long been talk of a new station at Rotherwas, in the south of Hereford. |
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Each child, including the girls, was taught to read as soon as they could walk and talk. |
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The opponent follows with a short talk on the topic, after which the pair critically discuss the dissertation. |
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At the briefings, two speakers talk for 15 minutes each before discussion is opened to all attendees, operating under Chatham House Rules. |
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Most accounts of Windsor in the 16th and 17th centuries talk of its poverty, badly made streets and poor housing. |
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His jailers then allowed him to talk with another priest in a neighbouring cell, with eavesdroppers listening to every word. |
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Payne accepted the rejection and tried without success to talk his friend Irving into proposing himself. |
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Ricardo, who was a close friend of his father, used to invite the young Mill to his house for a walk in order to talk about political economy. |
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In 2013 he gave a talk at Beaconsfield Library which he had visited as a child and donated the income from the event to it. |
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She tried not to be flattered, knowing this rake could talk a dog off a meat wagon. |
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A concert performance of the work was given at The Old Vic, preceded by an introductory talk by Vaughan Williams. |
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For the first time, there was a related talk or event before every Prom, held in the Royal College of Music. |
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Prior to 1980, there had long been talk of Hitchcock being knighted for his contribution to film. |
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When I talk about reality in these films, it's often misconstrued as a direct reality, but it's really about a cinematic reality. |
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I don't think he was very happy with my work, so I'm going to talk to him and try to mend fences. |
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There has been talk between the club and local football team Bath City, although the talks have never amounted to anything. |
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The supply situation in Britain was such there was talk of being unable to continue the war, with supplies of fuel being particularly low. |
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While stressing the need for coordination, governments have rejected talk of fiscal union or harmonisation in this regard. |
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In the formal register, such variation is reduced and the talk has a more monotone, business-like quality. |
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When people define and talk about a particular conception of race, they create a social reality through which social categorization is achieved. |
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The sales team sought to talk to the movers and shakers within an organization, rather than to their underlings. |
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He resented some socialists' talk of freedom and world brotherhood while keeping silent about his own partitioned and oppressed Poland. |
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Although there was talk of a memorial concert featuring both surviving brothers and invited guests, nothing materialised. |
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His talk indeed is wonderfully to the point and remarkable for clear good sense. |
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He took him to dinner, showed him how to walk, how to talk, even how to eat. |
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His interview on the 1998 relaunch edition of the British TV talk show Parkinson featured an impersonation of comedian Tommy Cooper. |
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The final station is the BBC Asian Network, providing music, talk and news to this section of the community. |
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He was known to talk to himself, a habit that began during his childhood when he would smile in rapt conversation with invisible companions. |
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I really don't have any friends at school Mama Mia. They talk about me all the time. They say my hair's nappy and my clothes are nasty. |
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His lecturing was nevertheless considered poor, as he often mumbled and walked into an adjacent room to find something while continuing to talk. |
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We write and talk and empower each other, but the obsession with newness and youth does not seem to change. |
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In 1896, in his last noteworthy speech, he denounced Armenian massacres by Ottomans in a talk delivered at Liverpool. |
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Despite talk of a merger with the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank did not possess the wherewithal to complete the deal. |
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It is therefore quite correct to talk of the MacDonald family or the Stirling clan. |
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The Monday night team in particular is so annoying with all the nongame chatter, you would think it was a talk show rather than a football game. |
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Yes, I did look for two empty seats together so I could sit down with my wife, to talk to her. |
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In September 1936, he went to Germany to talk with the German dictator Adolf Hitler. |
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You can't talk about ending the slums without first saying profit must be taken out of slums. |
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The city has also been the base of several talk shows, including, formerly, The Oprah Winfrey Show. |
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Ernie constantly badgered me to get her to talk to him but I suspected she would throttle him if he merely glanced in the direction of her norks. |
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He became morose and withdrawn and would not talk to anyone. |
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Over the air, they advertise their product on drive-time radio talk shows and TV news shows. |
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All right, already! Let me finish what I was doing first, and then we can talk. |
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So we tried not to talk about first or second anythings until our meeting with the rabbi. |
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You talk as though I was perfectly au courant when I do not know the first thing about it. |
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We must enable nonverbal auties to communicate by independent typing on devices that talk for them. |
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When I invited women to decide for themselves which rite of passage to talk or write about, I found that only a few chose their sexual awakening. |
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Now, I know the story is away with the fairies, but he produces a body and I take him down to the station to talk to the detectives. |
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On talk shows Mr. Huckabee would hold up his campaign pledges and the bannerlike size 50 pants he wore in his previous life. |
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A little bedrunken, we delved into the analysis of what it felt like to talk to my old boyfiend, now a candidate for governor. |
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What is all this talk about some bigass executive coming in to buy this town? |
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In an industry built on big talk and swagger, Bank of America's Kenneth Lewis is an anomaly. |
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Classmates remembered him as brash and jug-eared and full of big talk about his sexual experience. |
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At the annual livestock convention in Toronto's Royal York Hotel last week, the big talk was about Holsteins. |
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I told her she could call me and talk any time she wanted to blow off steam. |
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Well, you're not bridge-and-tunnel. No trace of the boroughs when you talk. So that means Manhattan, that means money. |
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Besides, now that I know you to be a confirmed Bunburyist I naturally want to talk to you about Bunburying. I want to tell you the rules. |
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I found him, lonely and unbefriended, the very next night after our talk, at the Dugald Delanes' burra-khana. |
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There was a nervousness under that quick Canadianly-accented talk of his, as if he were working himself up to something. |
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Conservationists often talk about the power of charismatic megafauna to get the public to care about the environment. |
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If we really want to talk about people or organisations that chut pattern, one cannot leave The New Paper out. |
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The teacher had a heart-to-heart talk with the student who was a clock-watcher, stressing the importance of putting his mind to his schoolwork. |
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Library commish Mary Dempsey presides over the talk, and there's an accompanying video, Staking Our Claim in Cyberspace. |
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My brother is king of the contradicks! You can't reason with them. It's like trying to talk to a magic 8 ball. |
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I'll talk to them and conversate, but I won't pay no mind to the things that they do. |
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The entire place teemed with harried executives who had no time to talk to one another. |
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Don't let this crumbum talk you into doing his dirty work. He's known as the literary pimp of Sixth Avenue. |
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It was a pleasure to talk to a movie producer who wasn't crying in his beer over what the European war has done to the picture business. |
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I kept trying to talk only to Mark, but Dan's been drinking since before the party started, so his natural dickitude is amplified. |
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Surprisingly few people refused to talk, even those I doorstepped or telephoned out of the blue. |
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I don't want to drag out this talk, so I'll stop unless you have questions. |
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How long will ye whet spears with eloquence, Fight, and kill beasts dry-handed with sweet words? Cease, or talk still and slay thy boars at home. |
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He played cards with me and listened to me talk about Leah Goldstein until the passing dunnyman announced the coming dawn. |
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The orbiters in her life in high likelihood like to talk about this and make themselves her emotional tampon and outlet. |
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But at least they learned to dance and smile and talk and choose engineeresses appropriate to their engineering futures. |
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I talk more about expandos in Chapter 10. This means that you can arbitrarily add new properties to an object whenever you want. |
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You talk on the farspeaker and it just isn't the same as talking with them person to person! |
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It was a good date but the food at the restaurant was so flabbergastingly excellent I could barely think of anything else to talk about. |
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We self-professed foodies liked to meet in restaurants and talk like experts about what we were eating. |
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For starters, you can't talk to black people like you're a redneck cowboy. We hate redneck cowboys. |
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Every time I talk to a woman about some things I am left gapemouthed and wishing terribly that I had a large dog with a heavily callused butt. |
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Nor was the president's talk of abundant and inexhaustible resources mere gasconade. |
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I thought they were joking at first, but it seemed they were genuinely interested in the talk about glaciers. |
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It was also new to be listening to talk of bribery and corruption in high places, and Michael Murray saw it as his duty to gen me up on this. |
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You may talk about different things with your girl friend than you do with your guy friends. |
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Afterwards we went over to talk to her friend Edith Conover about getting a bottle of glogg for Christmas dinner. |
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They talk easily together and they hear the come and go of the breeze in the soon to be turning burnt leaves of the high trees. |
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His eyes flicked in amusement to the young highlander, who was still enthralled in his guildmates' talk of diving. |
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Every Friday, Geoff and his group of friends all met at their favorite hangout to talk and have a good time. |
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Mike says he even likes to talk to him and run after him, but he has a hankering that Moore should be made an example of. |
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The prospect of a union of the kingdoms was deeply unpopular among the Scottish population at large, and talk of an uprising was widespread. |
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The girls all liked to hear him talk. They often gathered in a little circle while he sat on a bench, and held forth to them, laughing. |
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I was on a publicity tour for the book, fresh from a talk show over holovid. |
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Both Henry of Huntingdon and Matthew of Westminster talk of a golden dragon being raised at the Battle of Burford in AD 752 by the West Saxons. |
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She'd show me her doll, and talk about play-parties she'd been to, infares and dances. |
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Endless film stars turned infotainers appear on talk shows to push their new product. |
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I do not know if he wrote his own script, but whoever did, his subsequent pep talk was a masterpiece of intempestivity. |
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Even when they were not eager for talk, sometimes they were interestable if addressed directly. |
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That knee-trembler put Angela in an interesting condition and, of course, there was talk. |
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Explanations which continually remind one's interlocutor of one's ignorance are a great damper upon the easy flow of talk. |
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He obviously expected one of the senior army officials to walk over and talk to the jawan. |
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By the late 1990s, there was talk of the necessity of uniting the right in Canada, to deter further Liberal majorities. |
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A number of novel ideas about religion developed with the Enlightenment, including Deism and talk of atheism. |
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Tripods, keister and loud talk don't make a pitchman any more than do fine feathers make fine birds. |
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The Liberal Democrats said that they would talk first to whichever party won the most seats. |
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Their leader, Peter Robinson, said that the DUP would talk first to whichever party wins the most seats. |
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I cannot sing, nor heel the high lavolt, nor sweeten talk, nor play at subtle games. |
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He is obviously uninterested and my attempt to talk a little about what I have read leaves him cold. |
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There was talk in the past that ERP systems were legacy, lacked the agility and flexibility, and did not support interoperability. |
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This talk brought us up to the house that was a-building, not a large one, which stood at the end of a beautiful orchard surrounded by an old stone wall. |
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And because I knew I was supposed to talk to him like he was an adult, I filtered everything I said and made sure it sounded adulty before it left my mouth. |
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So at a time when people can talk about football and devolution and money, it is important that we also remember the values that we share in common. |
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But I figured Najah was cupcaking with Johan, Chelsea was eating something that didn't match while Greg rubbed her feet, and Kalena wasn't in a space to talk or listen. |
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I have been fully expecting my father to guilt-trip me, to lay it on really thick about what a terrible son I am, to basically, talk down to me like I was some kind of idiot. |
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She is an attentive listener, but does not like to talk much. |
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I don't wish to discuss this further. Let's talk about something else. |
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If the walls... could talk, they would reveal some hair-curling secrets. |
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Do you mind if I talk? It helps me keep the wolf from the door, so to speak. Jill, what do you think of the pedestrianization of Norwich city centre? |
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Shortage of resources and staff are seen as a problem and nurses have insufficient time to talk to young patients or to show patients they matter. |
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Backbiting talk that flattering blabs know wily how to blenge. |
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Dr. Sandwith soon afterwards ran out to the excited chattering group in the garden, and after a few minutes' happy talk with him, Harry spoke to him of the visitors. |
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But, Lord! to hear how W. Symons do commend and look sadly and then talk bawdily and merrily, though his wife was dead but the other day, would make a dogg laugh. |
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In May 2012, BP tasked a press office staff member to openly join discussions on the Wikipedia article's talk page and suggest content to be posted by other editors. |
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She was a quite biddable creature and good-hearted, but she had a flow of talk that was as steady as a mill, and made your head sore like the drays and wagons in a city. |
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He was soon the talk of the town, the enfant terrible of our little world. |
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You'll have to talk with the big kahuna to get a decision on that. |
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For more serious misdeeds, a boy is summoned from his lessons to the Head Master, or Lower Master if the boy is in the lower two years, to talk personally about his misdeeds. |
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He is the only person that has that peculiar something called 'audience appeal' in sufficient quality to defy the popular penchant for movies that talk. |
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Previn would talk informally direct to camera and then turn and conduct the LSO, whose members were dressed in casual sweaters or shirts rather than formal evening clothes. |
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You can talk to him all day about how good high tide is in extended, or how good necropotence is in a monoblack deck, but he will still never play it. |
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Acts and talk that induce breachful conduct may be tortious. |
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The lengthiness of his talk bored most of his audience nearly to sleep. |
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Multicultural means what? Means that, if you buang Singlish, everyone will be left with his or her own thing. The Angmohs and Eurasians and jiak kentangs will talk in England. |
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She uses the work of Cherrie Moraga, Ester Hernandez, and Marcia Ochoa to talk about cultural productions and the lesbianization of the heterosexual icons of popular culture. |
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It is a freak that people talk about when they see it. Not everyone calls it by the right name, and few people know how it gets to be what it is. This freak is hail. |
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Ayer and Tyson then began to talk, while Naomi Campbell slipped out. |
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But they are intensely interested in animals and other children and feel compassion for the blind boys and girls, and for the spastics who are unable to walk or talk. |
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Make sure to chew thoroughly, and don't talk with your mouth full! |
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He's awesome, full of energy, real chill and fun to talk with. |
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We talk of genius still, but with thought how changed! The genius of Augustus was a tutelary demon, to be sworn by and to receive offerings on an altar as a deity. |
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The difference between clever-clever talk and the appearance of a real awareness is desperately fine, and I do not guarantee to be right in my diagnosis every time. |
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The outbreak of the Sepoy Mutiny in 1857 shifted attention to the heroic defence of British interest by the army, and further talk of reform went nowhere. |
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All this talk about human rights is clouding the real issue. |
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That afternoon, in team camp, she started going right all the time. That shows how coachable she is. Her coachability is something I talk to college recruiters about. |
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I was absurdly pleased, like a very apprentice cocksmith praised for the length of his stream, and to cover my embarrassment I turned the talk back to her problems. |
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You cannot talk yourself back into the fight, you have no belts. |
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Men really ought to leave off talking a kind of nonsense on this subject, which they would neither talk nor listen to on other matters of practical concernment. |
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After they argued, it fell to me to talk to her and try to mop up. |
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Nu metal gained mainstream success through heavy MTV rotation and Ozzy Osbourne's 1996 introduction of Ozzfest, which led the media to talk of a resurgence of heavy metal. |
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Opposing counsel has a right to question you, and if you respond with smart talk or give evasive answers, opposing counsel may jump down your throat. |
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Barry did grow up in a white neighborhood, you know, and he does know how to conversate, and he does know how to pronounce his vowels, he knows how to talk. |
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And with them were some lang-gowned men who kenned the stars and would come out o' nights to talk to the deer and the corbies in their ain tongue. |
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The barista was saying how wonderful it was that the issue was receiving attention, coregasms being something a lot of women experienced and were frightened to talk about. |
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He need not reside in a room, but only in a bunk, and a bunk need not be rated for the relief of the poor. We talk about manhood suffrage, but what about groomhood suffrage? |
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