The mercury was rising in the city during the past one week and this had become the talk of the town. |
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They seem to fancy that the trendy outfits that adorn their children will become the talk of the town. |
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Kickstarting the burlesque scene in London, Maria Saugar reckons the Whoopee Club will be the talk of the town at The Edinburgh Festival. |
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That is why marketers yearn for word of mouth publicity and powerful media machines long for becoming the talk of the town. |
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Garnished with fresh vegetables and a side of mashed potatoes, this loaf of pure C grade meat is the talk of the town. |
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The tinsel celebrity, now the talk of the town, was flying to Coimbatore for a shoot and she stopped off to pick up her boarding pass. |
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The talk of the town was almost as important as the smoke of the factory chimneys in creating a prosperous industrial economy. |
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This became the talk of the town because the affiliated Members were receiving extra pensions from European resources through this arrangement. |
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The benefits of development, rather than insecurity, chaos and deprivation, should become the talk of the town. |
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However, this success was nothing compared with the launch of the Bunny Sutra, which has become the talk of the town. |
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This way, he has been able to find his true 'graphical' identity and can promise you a 2011 collection which risks being the talk of the town! |
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Use it on its own or throw it into a purse you'll be the major talk of the town for sure. |
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The rather shy, retiring singer soon found himself the talk of the town. |
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Mr President, I congratulate my group colleague Mrs Frassoni on this excellent report, which while perhaps not the talk of the town nonetheless deals with a crucial area of the Union's competence. |
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Firstly, on the trans-European networks, when I arrived in this Parliament, the talk of the town was the Delors White Paper, one of the main planks of which was European networks. |
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He admits that he is only vaguely interested in current events and is totally immune to the fascination for the intellectuals of the day such as Barthes, Lacan, Derrida, Deleuze and others who are the talk of the town. |
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The post of President of the European Union, which will have to be filled once the Lisbon Treaty comes into force, is the talk of the town in Brussels and a much discussed issue in other European capitals. |
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For reasons known only to printbound publishers, books about words are suddenly the talk of the town. |
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Turning up drunk at the debutante ball will certainly make you the talk of the town. |
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In the tiny Caribbean island of Aruba, a GOAL project to install an Astroturf artificial grass field and artificial lights in the island's capital, Oranjestad has been the talk of the town. |
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Ha Tae-Kyun is the talk of the town on the Korean peninsula. |
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Marseille's new star player became the talk of the town, dizzying defences and dancing down by the goal, celebrating each score with some traditional Ivorian steps. |
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He was soon the talk of the town, the enfant terrible of our little world. |
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Talk of the town is that the way the money is being spent they might be broke by next month. |
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Pedal steel guitar, the least punk instrument you can get, drove many of the songs like Don't Get Me Wrong and Talk of the Town. |
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The band made their debut performance without Robin at Talk of the Town. |
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