Task Force Danger encouraged leaders and soldiers to talk to the press and routinely embedded journalists and reporters with units. |
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They'd rather get second-hand info about the finances from Wong than have to talk to the lippy accountant. |
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His father was given permission to see him only once but was not allowed to talk to his son. |
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The nurses were a mixed bunch too, some wouldn't talk to me, others were fantastic, especially the one who came and held my hand while I cried. |
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I didn't want to get mixed up in all that but it would give me a chance to talk to him and maybe reason with him. |
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As they finished their last song, I rushed up to talk to them amidst cheers and yells from the crowd. |
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This is also the time to talk to the authorities about public shelters ashore. |
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In the first part of the triptych, we can hear the woman talk to the driver in Finnish gibberish. |
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People are somewhat more reluctant to talk to foreigners than they were at the beginning. |
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The Minister has never missed the chance to give a pep talk to the heads of district administration on development projects at such conferences. |
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Oh, goody, Maxine the wolf Redfield is on her way toward my table and this gives me a chance to talk to her. |
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We wanted to talk to the government about other unclassified work it's doing on biodefence, but no-one was prepared to be interviewed. |
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He waved at me as if he knew me already and coaxed me to come over and talk to him for while. |
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A total of 150 volunteers have signed up to tour wards and talk to patients and staff about hand-washing, cleanliness, and MRSA cases. |
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He should look like a fellow who knows his way around a shooting iron, but he doesn't take them out every night and talk to them. |
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Thus armed with a powerful mandate, I want to talk to you about this novel of yours. |
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I was going to go talk to him and just hang with him and sort of soak in some of his wisdom. |
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Just talk to paramedic rescue operators who pull people off mountain cliffs and fish them out of 40-foot swells at sea. |
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Actually talk to them, treat them like human beings, it's the bedside manner it comes down to at the end of the day. |
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It's unclear how a Segway makes it easier to stop and talk to people than say a car or bike also resting at a hotel or person's house. |
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I want to be able to talk to him and act like I normally do around my friends... lolz... like not being all jumpy or shifty. |
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An hour or so later, the men guarding me moved off to talk to their leader, leaving his horse and myself unattended. |
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He suffered a panic attack at his office, and decided to come and talk to me to blow off some steam, as he put it. |
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It was quite obvious I would be shouted down but nothing was done to move these people away or to talk to them privately. |
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If someone does happen to talk to you about their problems, you will use it as blackmail. |
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They thrive off of human interaction, they love company, they love to talk to people, to socialize, to surround themselves with people. |
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Asus GameFace allows you to not only talk to your opponent, but see them cringe as you annihilate them. |
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At that stage, parents can show pictures on cards to their children, and talk to them about each of them. |
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We'll gladly talk to whoever wins the competition about offsets when the contract is signed. |
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She asked if I would like to be transferred to the phone department to talk to someone about the phone charges that are wrong. |
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Fairweather said concern about revealing operational information was the reason why he refused to talk to programme makers. |
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Even the other fish were not biting so well, and I had put down my rod for a moment to talk to Belinda and to have a cold beer. |
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The visiting teachers sat in on lessons and had the chance to talk to both teachers and pupils. |
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Computers that don't share a local network talk to each other through telephone lines using modems. |
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All I can do is to offer myself as an honest broker and make myself available to talk to the people who can help provide a solution. |
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Her tragic flaw, depending on who you talk to in the family, is either stubbornness, selfishness or a love of suffering. |
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Dean doesn't talk to the women and they return to the Okie house where the daughter is afraid of Dean. |
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He presented this idea in a talk to the London Chemical Society in 1866, only to be greeted with derision. |
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Colin said that he would be keen to talk to anyone who thinks that they have the right kind of property in the area. |
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When you get home, you don't want to see anybody, talk to anybody or do anything. |
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I guess I'll just have to talk to my homeboy over there and get us some tickets. |
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I'll see you in the morning, chica... talk to you tomorrow, I'm going to turn in. |
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If my mom was here she wouldn't let them talk to me like that, but since she isn't I have to deal with it. |
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I think she was being totally disrespectful and that it's not okay for her to talk to me like that. |
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I figured they'd be more likely to talk to me if I gave them an excuse to chew me out. |
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Someone recommended I talk to them because they were the big cheeses when it comes to films. |
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Police also want to talk to anyone else who may have witnessed the suspected arson attack. |
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If you talk to them and blow our cover, I'll blow this plane up for exchange of our cover. |
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They'd rather get second-hand info about the finances than have to talk to the lippy accountant. |
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Do not watch or talk to another traveler who is experiencing motion sickness. |
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After several days of being sulky, Kate flatly refused to talk to me on Wednesday. |
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She complains that I don't talk to her and then she wonders why I get so angry because she never listens or hears anything I say. |
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Every time I talk to or hear of anyone studying anything at all, I get jealous. |
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My buddy told me that Abe was livid with anger, but he hid it, and continued to talk to Barney as though nothing untoward had been said! |
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Aides say he was fuming, so livid that he almost refused to come out to talk to the crowd. |
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He tactfully asked Lady Lucy to sit and talk to Rupert while I danced with him, cheek to cheek. |
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But the guys I can talk to either aren't available to me or wouldn't understand. |
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A couple of them got to work, one or two asked to be released to talk to other teachers, and a few were playing checkers and chess quietly. |
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They talk to us about their struggles in their native land and all that they endured and suffered to get to this country. |
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If you have concerns specific to your child's diet, talk to your doctor or a registered dietitian. |
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Freddy on the other hand lags behind and then stops by a locker to talk to one of his numerous acquaintances. |
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If the residents attempted to talk to these teenagers they would gain a lot of respect and they would start behaving themselves. |
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They arrive at a service station with a lot of wrecked cars and talk to a one-eyed attendant. |
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He's been consistently overlooked for promotion and doesn't find it easy to talk to people. |
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Whenever I was upset, I always turned to her, and she would talk to me in a calm, serene, optimistic manner, which always left me cheerful. |
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There is no need to talk to understand the longing Serbs feel for a new role in the European family of nations. |
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I don't want to talk to anyone, see anyone, do anything, My hair is a mess. |
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But when you talk to them you realise that they're informed and opinionated to a degree very rare among young Britons. |
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I could talk to him more easily than I could talk to dad, who was very much up on a pedestal. |
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We talk to another general, this one surprisingly overdressed, who briefs us off the record. |
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I ask Parliament why the Prime Minister has not gone down to talk to those in the hikoi who have assembled out the front. |
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He said he wanted to talk to me but I rejected him because it was so early in the morning. |
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If you're a high-up at a large, international ad agency, I would like to talk to you. |
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Install the software, connect a handset to your computer and talk to other Skype subscribers free. |
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The defence could have subpoenaed him but they could not force him to talk to them. |
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If you have pelvic pain or questions about ovarian cysts, talk to your physician. |
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I find it hard to believe he has high-level sources in the administration, let alone any who would talk to him and no other reporters about this. |
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Stroud said he wanted to talk to the co-producers of the show before making a final decision. |
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Hospital staff were as helpful as they could be, but they never seemed to have enough time to talk to me. |
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We're more of a purple state than a blue or red, but it's very important for the president to talk to our base. |
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Essentially, it is just a set of headphones and a boom microphone, plus the software that enables you to talk to others online. |
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One guy a few years back asked me whether he should call back and make an appointment with my secretary to talk to me. |
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A chap from the HMRI came to talk to me and a supervisor about detrainments yesterday. |
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Maybe a big part of your problem is that the only person you talk to during the day is a student barista in a coffee shop. |
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If Sigmund Freud was alive today and could talk to cats, he'd have a field day. |
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He could be talking to his opposite numbers in foreign governments, who then talk to American reporters, normally also on background. |
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For such mutually beneficial cooperation to develop, we need to be able to talk to each other. |
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The bishops, curates and theologians who allow such talk to be spread among the people, will have an account to render. |
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You can talk to radicals in Europe and they'll tell you that their agenda is very popular with the masses when, in fact, it's not. |
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It's hard enough to muster the confidence to attempt to even talk to an older girl, let alone kiss one. |
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We pulled up, radioed for the police and ambulance and then went across to try to talk to him. |
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Poster adverts that talk to people walking by could soon be hitting the high street. |
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I told Dorothy I would get a hiding for being so late but Dorothy said she would talk to my parents. |
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Again, it's advisable to talk to other parents and to follow up recommendations. |
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Whenever he does call you a bad name or threatens to whip you or anything else, tell your mom ASAP and have her talk to him and again. |
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Not to worry, though, this 61-year-old polyglot can talk to all species with the dexterity of a Doolittle. |
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That was gross and disgusting and I don't think I want to talk to you anymore. |
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Do not talk to the press or anyone who approaches you, at least, until after the event. |
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She kept on trying to talk to me in English even if her vocabulary was pretty limited. |
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But now we can talk to sponsors about a whole new set-up, with nine games in Scotland in this league alone. |
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You wanted to talk to Marshall about what had happened that day, but figured the issue was best left undiscussed. |
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When I asked him about it, he nodded and said yes, there probably ought to be a better way, and he would talk to some people. |
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I mean, everyone I talk to thinks I'm a nerdy loser or a gross loser or an obnoxious loser. |
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You'll send a guy with a stud in his tongue and a bag of skunk in his back pocket to talk to them. |
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We have been trying to talk to Mr Bentley and the national park authority for a long time and all we have had is rebuttals and refusals to talk. |
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Wash your pet outdoors or talk to your veterinarian about professional pet grooming. |
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The commanding general wishes to talk to her himself, but it is of low priority, with the fight so close at hand. |
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He refused to speak to the mama-sans because his parents told him not to talk to any girls while he was overseas. |
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I was about to turn and talk to Rachel but remembered that she was angry with me. |
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Brown was so angry with his players that he could barely bring himself to talk to them. |
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You tell me you're coming over to talk to Tom, but then the two of you wind up grilling me on my wedding plans. |
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The defendant refused to talk to him about the weapon or tell him where he had got it. |
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The day after my father died, his rabbi came to talk to the family in preparation for the funeral. |
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And often for the fear of being ridiculed, I would sit with a malis and talk to them in Hindi to improve my language. |
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The council also visits schools across the town to talk to children about the trouble they could get into if they were caught in the act. |
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If your child is not gaining weight as expected or is losing weight, talk to your child's doctor. |
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They talk to Izzy about buying her out of the business, and what a shock, she rants and storms out, knocking Steph over in the process. |
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We all like people to treat us well, to acknowledge us, to talk to us, to bond with us. |
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Outfitted with cowboy hats and boots, they stopped along the way to talk to ranchers, contractors, and other macho truck drivers. |
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I would be attempting to talk to somebody when another person would rush up with joyful squeals of greeting. |
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If he feels free to talk to his mom honestly about what is going on sexually, I'm elated. |
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I mean, the networks, the information networks behind the grid, utility by utility, they don't talk to each other. |
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If the chairman or the manager want to talk to me about an extension to my contract then no problem. |
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The prime minister flew to Saudi Arabia yesterday on an unpublicised mission to talk to the country's leaders. |
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The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the news media. |
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In June next year I will be free to talk to the third team or anyone else, but I try not to look ahead. |
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If a debt has already been amassed and your repayments are impossible to meet, talk to your bank manager about taking out a personal loan. |
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But there are many who commune with gods, talk to angels, worship deities and meet up to worship. |
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This was why she was allowed to talk to him with whatever amount of disrespect she liked. |
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Our house is a rancher so I could talk to him without shouting down like Juliet to her Romeo. |
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The youth's parents said they got the idea to talk to their son after watching a government-funded commercial on television. |
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Sandra Yates, thank you very much indeed for taking time to talk to us on Radio National. |
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I desperately wanted to talk to those close to me and to unload that agony I was carrying alone but something always stopped me. |
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Now I have someone else to talk to besides Melinda about the indecencies of money in the modern world. |
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Then I turned my back on him and wouldn't talk to him for the rest of the detention. |
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The lasers talk to the computer, which moves a blocking device to intercept the puck. |
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On our way out of al-Juweibir, we stop and talk to a man putting a thick layer of tar on his grandfather's boat. |
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They are afraid to talk to the student involved in case they say the wrong thing and upset them. |
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But when you talk to people, if you watch the television, if you listen to the radio, there's a real degree of acceptance, of fatalism. |
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We were told we couldn't take pictures inside and no one would talk to us on the record. |
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Fire crews were due to revisit the area today to talk to neighbours and fit smoke alarms in properties without them. |
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My closest friends are my friends in recovery, because we can talk to each other about what we feel today and help each other through it. |
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We'll talk to the creators of the new outrageous political cartoon that satirizes many of the issues we cover on this broadcast. |
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Moira nodded in agreement and we both started down the stairs to talk to the guys. |
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Scouts talk to more people on the battlefield than anyone else in the task force. |
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But I'm sure it's hard to talk to him and be civil with him after you feel he stabbed you in the back? |
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If that happens to you in your life, you come and talk to me about it and reassure them that they're safe and sound in your care. |
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I received phone calls saying they wanted to talk to me about a private matter. |
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It has been evident in your manner and demeanour that you do not wish to talk to me and so I have not approached you until now. |
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My son shouldn't have to put up with that sort of abuse, but when I talk to the council about it, they don't want to know. |
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I hope that you will talk to others about what you have learned about transgenderism. |
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It's very difficult for him to make all the phone calls and talk to everybody simply because he has a lot of farmwork to do. |
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People don't do that and instead they start getting lawyers and backing off and saying I won't talk to the cops. |
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You are living your life, you are unembarrassed to talk to new people, you are not ashamed of your worthlessness. |
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A team of workers has just hit the streets to drop off leaflets, knock on doors and talk to local people about the new service. |
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We need to distribute leaflets, write letters, send faxes, talk to people, get the message across and change opinions. |
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Police said afterwards that Mr Croxford's family was in tears and too upset to talk to the press. |
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Everyone liked her ideas but several suggested that she first talk to the mayor. |
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Call me a wimp and a wuss if you want to, but I could picture him in my head, and I couldn't talk to him. |
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The Samaritans urge people not to bottle up relationship problems but to talk to a friend or Samaritan if they are in crisis. |
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So when I went to talk to the police, I gave them my car's description and registration number and everything else. |
|
It's a nice ice-breaker when I talk to clients that I haven't been in touch with for a month or so. |
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The party also says he is available to talk to the media at regular intervals during his constituency tours around the country. |
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You've been trying to talk to him for a few days and now that he's shown up ready to talk, you're not going to listen. |
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You said something about just wanting to talk to me, but we could've talked in other places. |
|
I talk to him every once in a while, and I went to his birthday party, but we never talk like we used to. |
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She definitely preferred small talk to no talk, especially in this situation. |
|
And don't talk to me about numbers, because just about everyone who is good enough to make the NBA is good enough to compile numbers. |
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Jamison was at the bedside and took a hypodermic from the nurse, all the while beginning a steady stream of talk to the sick man. |
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They are skittish and fearful of most people and talk to no one but each other. |
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I didn't have much interesting news to offer him, but it was nice just to talk to him. |
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So we'll talk to you as the weather permits and as we allow ourselves time to talk on the cell phone. |
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Others handout leaflets, talk to passers-by, and do chalk outlines of the bodies of the dead. |
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That's what happens when you try to talk to your best friend about his girlfriend. |
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They have the right to talk to employees and safety representatives, take photographs and samples, and to impound dangerous equipment. |
|
Time to actually talk to patients, make a fuss of the kids and have a laugh. |
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For all the fierceness of his republican beliefs, he has repeatedly stated his willingness to talk to the killers of his father and brother. |
|
If you're struggling with debt and unsure about your options, talk to a reputable credit counselor before filing for bankruptcy. |
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She also took Spanish lessons so she could talk to people and have a greater understanding of santeria and the African origins of Cuban culture. |
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He believes that children who do not regularly eat with or talk to their parents can turn into anti-social, undisciplined individualists. |
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Chidduck sends his bagman, Sarno, to talk to the punks in a Mexican bordello where they're hiding out. |
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When you talk to laypeople, what don't they understand about what bandwidth means and what it can became? |
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The play itself gives me more than enough information without having to go talk to hustlers and see how they actually live. |
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Everything has gone quiet in the lead-up to the federal election but, once the poll is over, expect the talk to begin again. |
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I'd never met another cutter before, and I liked that it was so easy to talk to him because he understood what I was going through. |
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In the movie, Baldwin, as a sales motivator, gives a chalk talk to a group of real estate salesmen on the techniques of making a sale. |
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They've given interviews to one of the scandal sheets and they won't talk to the legitimate press. |
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The last time Regina told her troubles to her diary, she was moping because she had no one to talk to and felt all alone. |
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I use e-mail to talk to colleagues, but I'm a little bit of a technophobe when it comes to everything else. |
|
When it comes to compassion and humanity, everyone I talk to is furious over such behaviour. |
|
Dad did occasionally try to talk to me in a man-to-man, father-to-son kind of way. |
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Such meetings also give you the necessary knowledge to talk to your teen about what goes on at school. |
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As we bowl along, I sit back and talk to some of the other tourists in the bus. |
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Why would they talk to you in such detail about what went on behind the scenes? |
|
We meet monthly when members not only listen to visiting speakers, but also have a chance to talk to each other and gain moral support. |
|
If you don't like the table you have been assigned in the restaurant, talk to the head waiter. |
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They were quite willing to sit down and talk to us and even gave the council dates when they were available. |
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If you talk to people in the private sector about what happens in universities, it makes your hair stand on end. |
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If your cat continues to have trouble with hairballs, talk to your vet about what you should do to improve this. |
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They don't even talk to each other and managers tear their hair out just trying to get the schmucks on stage. |
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I responded monosyllabically that yes I would come and talk to him and that was fine. |
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Why don't you travel around a bit, meet some people, maybe talk to someone whose skin is a different color than yours? |
|
His stomach tightened in anticipation, knowing he was finally going to talk to the girl. |
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If so, you probably need to learn some more about hairstyles and how to talk to your stylist so she knows exactly what you want. |
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And if he won't even discuss it meaningfully in the first place, then yes, you might want to tell him to talk to the hand. |
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And don't talk to me about the series, we both know that I took major liberties with the last incident, but it's still better than the series. |
|
We want them to talk to each other in addition to their governments talking. |
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Remember, you have to talk to every single one in order to trigger the event. |
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He gave my upraised cup a scornful look, snorted, and left to talk to someone else. |
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Nobody can accuse him of not finding the time to talk to whoever wants to speak to him. |
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The only time colonists want to talk to members of an indigenous population is when they are giving orders to the natives. |
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The Tory leader had a go at scratching and mixing on record decks when he visited the Fusion Project to talk to young people. |
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When you really want to talk to someone you want to sit together in a quiet place and talk, not to be in the midst of a crowd of other people. |
|
We tried to talk to him a few times, but he was not interested in conversation. |
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There are many benefits to the time-honored tradition of speaking baby talk to children. |
|
His comment to the media was that he wouldn't, as a matter of principle, talk to a rabble that used this method of expressing their views. |
|
He gave the pot one final stir before turning around so he could properly talk to her. |
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Well, that's as maybe, but, I wonder, could you take me to this palace of yours so I can talk to my father? |
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I behave pretty stand-offishly, and consequently nobody but you makes much of an effort to talk to me. |
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But I'm never going to thrash it out with them because they think my taste in music appalling so I never talk to them. |
|
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I can stop this only if you are willing to talk to me calmly and sort out everything without threats. |
|
Don't facilitate negotiations or act as a go-between for people who are willing to share power but who won't actually talk to each other. |
|
Charles is still angry about it and according to his manager, won't talk to anyone until he calms down. |
|
Apparently, many journos disliked his doing an exclusive deal with a paper and refusing to talk to them at the World Cup. |
|
At first I thought it was just a passing fancy, but she's come back to talk to me about it several times. |
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Later on at school we had the children sitting in rows and they weren't allowed to talk to each other. |
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Meredith and I went to go play 'Whack-A-Mole' together, while Larkin went to get more tokens and Evan went to go talk to some guys from school. |
|
After a few encounters, I never found it appealing to talk to a rando again. |
|
There is no need to talk to understand the longing they feel for a new role in the European family of nations. |
|
I had a talk to Phil and asked him just what precisely he thought he was playing at? |
|
A leading adviser to the Chancellor of the Exchequer was due in Bradford today to talk to trade unionists. |
|
Always talk to your health care provider before using any medicated creams or ointments to treat skin problems. |
|
After all the helloing and such, he would sit down and talk to me in a gruff, military kind of way. |
|
He loved to talk to youngsters and at one stage he even asked me for a reference to get into church work. |
|
A collection of male senior employees gather in the boardroom to talk to Balls over coffee and Viennese whirls. |
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He is the oldest brother, and I went to him many, many times, for advice when I was petrified to go talk to my dad. |
|
Christine looked at Jacquin, she was debating in her mind if she should talk to him or not. |
|
Little did they think that the time would come in my life when I would depend upon being able to talk to earn a living for the family. |
|
She's very good at dialogue, and the high ratio of talk to narrative is one reason why her stuff is so readable. |
|
I think it's going to be a reality check to talk to young people across the way. |
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She had struggled all her life and to see and hear Scott talk to the realtors and his accountant and lawyer almost made her head swim. |
|
We should talk to them and use any persuasive power we have at our disposal. |
|
Even when she got them to talk to her, she had found that they were cold and harsh. |
|
The one attempt he makes to talk to her is rebuffed yet he's still stricken to learn she committed suicide. |
|
I didn't want to talk to Rachel about why I was stopping her and I didn't want her to continue. |
|
I joined with my mate Glynne Stentiford following a talk to our primary school by our local Akela, Mrs Cleall. |
|
The few regular carers on duty tried to talk to the quartet, hoping to mollify them. |
|
I'm just happy to have a shot at playing in the NFL and am thrilled that everybody wants to talk to me. |
|
I made a trip to Edinburgh to visit a couple of friends to talk to them about my ideas. |
|
She was dying to chat to me, but to be honest I couldn't be bothered to talk to this old boot. |
|
I wanted to talk to somebody about God, and sometimes I'd imagine meeting with the priest in his dark office beyond the sacristy. |
|
However, it may be appropriate to talk to a medical practitioner if symptoms persist. |
|
I had just flatly refused to talk to anybody for a few days but Beverly came knocking at my door. |
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But we felt that since you wouldn't talk to her, it was our job to set you straight. |
|
When we tell them why, they nod good-naturedly and talk to the rest, and laugh gently at Katherine's weak attempts at Konkani. |
|
We were always a close family, we would talk to each other, and we pretty much got along. |
|
Clyde could sit there straight-faced and talk to you about anything, lying to you the entire time, and you'd believe it. |
|
The ABC can never be all things to all people, but it can be the means by which different Australians talk to each other. |
|
The kura had a policy of seeking parental permission before its students could talk to police. |
|
I prefer to talk to people like this, one to one, heart to heart. |
|
|
Diane Schmitt, a recruiter in Prescott, Ariz., let Bart talk to a handful of her recruits, at one of his first whistle-stops, which included Oklahoma, Ohio and New York. |
|
And before he went over to talk to them, he came over to my office, and he was moaning and groaning. |
|
Because Chirlane and I have had to talk to Dante for years, about the dangers he may face. |
|
His wife, who arranged the whole deal, kept trying to talk to him, but he couldn't take his eyes off Tommy Lee, who looked touched by the affection the dude had for him. |
|
Always willing to talk to the media, and skilled in putting his view across, he reserved most of his energies for negotiations at the highest political levels. |
|
Having put a few drinks away, it wasn't hard to go and talk to her. |
|
Here, a team of 60 is hard at work modernizing the way American diplomats talk to each other confidentially. |
|
To add to the conspiratorial flair, they added that the DA told them not to talk to the FBI or the CIA either. |
|
When Wu, as minister of pubic health, went to Henan on an official visit, she asked to talk to Gao. |
|
But, you bet, I'll talk to the president about it this weekend. |
|
You should definitely talk to your landlord about reducing your rent. |
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New banking providers also have to recognise, he said, that there are still millions of customers who have never used a telephone to talk to their bank. |
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The histrionics continued as he got out of the car, went into makeup and sat down to talk to Ted Koppel. |
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Do you require people to be delinquent before you talk to them about modifying their mortgages? |
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I thought that you said that you never would talk baby talk to her? |
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I still wait for people to notice me and come and talk to me. |
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The problem is the advocates can't talk to the defendants, and have no way of finding out if they have alibis or innocent explanations for apparently suspicious behavior. |
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Now, after an emotional reunion and a huge stroke of luck, the three firm friends talk to each other every day and their wives have become the best of friends. |
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Here you can sample the produce and talk to the knowledgeable guides, who'll also show you the rows off vines planted on the rocky soils of the hills behind. |
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Kyra, have yourself a fantastic evening and I will talk to you tomorrow. |
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Neubauer says that she was numb and disoriented and scared to talk to the police. |
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It's been great to talk to people who have had the same surgeon I'll have, and it's interesting to read about people at different stages of their journey. |
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Officials from the Department of Trade and Industry are visiting the colliery to talk to union leaders and to see for themselves the coal reserves still in the mine. |
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After a storm of protest, the conservation group agreed to talk to animal welfare groups to see if there was a way to save both hedgehogs and birds. |
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I'm giving a talk to the local section of the American Chemical Society, so I'll be off scarfing up a free meal and enlightening whoever shows up. |
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He congratulated her on her appointment as Minister for Agriculture and thanked her for taking time out of her very busy schedule to come to talk to the meeting. |
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She was on the first floor, after all, and it would not do if Nana found out she was going to talk to the miscreant sailors she was so pitted against. |
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They prayed or meditated but did not chant slogans or talk to each other, in order to skirt the blanket ban on public assembly. |
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So he called Chisholm and state representative Josh Zepnick and asked them to come talk to his congregation. |
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The truth is, I sought you out because I knew you wouldn't talk to me. |
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If you are going to stay in your home while work is being done, talk to your contractor about how critical areas like the kitchen and baths will be handled. |
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He claims he is a medium for holy spirits who talk to him in their dreams. |
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They fail to realize that elderly people, when reduced to a deplorable state of solitude, have all the more need for someone to talk to and interact with. |
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I just went to talk to my downstairs neighbour about a tree that fell down in our garden, and she gave me a sprig of rosemary, and a tied bunch of lavender. |
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We would be outside the outer glass box and talk to him via an intercom system. |
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She can reorganize her own molecules, make computers with her brain, talk to dinosaurs. |
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It would seem that these contemporaries of the fun society paint its dark side and all its ruptures so appealingly that they talk to the metaphysically homeless from the soul. |
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Both White and his captain, John Smit, said later that the referee had told him, in the seconds before the score, to go and talk to his players about behaving themselves. |
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Anyone who does not want to talk to reporters knows to skip a walk through the scrum. |
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Tricia Romano visited the set to talk to its star, Kyra Sedgwick, about the end. |
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