Sachio was strong, well-built man with fierce eyes and long hair tied back in a tight ponytail on top of his head. |
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Her dark russet hair was tied back, and her soft brown eyes were concentrated on some unseen thing. |
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Bending down gracefully, she snapped a thick reed from the ground, and tied it around her mass of curly hair. |
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Coral, her red hair tied back in a pony tail, came through the door with Nat by her side. |
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He had a saddlebag slung over his shoulder and a bright red kerchief tied around his neck. |
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Her leash was tied to a stanchion on the wall, preventing her from moving more than a few feet in any direction. |
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He had given her corsage made of carnations just like these with little pieces of Queen Anne's lace mixed in and tied with a blue ribbon. |
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They tied the knot soon afterwards and have been happily married for 16 years. |
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Leaves should be cut to about 10 cm from the shoulder of the bulb, then tied with raffia and hung in bunches in a dry room such as a larder. |
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She looked pretty similar to Amanda, except she had long wiry looking auburn-red hair tied into 2 bunches. |
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Prudie thinks you should take the high road, be a mensch, and send the significant ex a handwritten note letting her know you've tied the knot. |
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He was forced to farm Arab fields, tied at night, beaten and lashed with a whip for about a year. |
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She scratched out a note with a slightly shaky hand, folded it, and attached it to the leather straps tied to the skytyr's foot. |
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Sarah was just about to mount onto one when Fin without so much as a by-your-leave hoisted her up into the saddle and the tied her horse to his. |
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This was intimately tied to their notion that the way out of poverty was via waged work. |
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Steam puddings with dried fruit or jam for flavouring were boiled in basins with cloths tied over the top. |
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The growth of these regions, which are not tied to tradition, has fueled huge advances in the technology and philosophy of winemaking. |
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Her hair, once strawberry blonde was now tied into a neat gray knot at the nape of her neck. |
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Around her waist was a wrap skirt that tied in the front, brightly patterned with dark and sky blue flowers. |
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After my ex flew the coop, I tied my wedding ring to a helium balloon and let it loose in the wild blue yonder. |
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The yashmak is tied around the back of the head with string and is sometimes also supported over the nose by a small piece of gold. |
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Now it is possible that in the first six months of next year, they move to an exchange rate that is tied to a basket of currencies. |
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We put clove hitches on his ankles and wrists, locked the clove hitches down with a half hitch or two on top, then tied these to the chair. |
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Her paws were tied palm to palm, with not only a rope around her wrist, but with string binding finger to finger as well. |
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This book is beautifully presented and tied with a red ribbon complete with jingly bell. |
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Then it was inspected, and frayed yarns were replaced, and broken yarns were tied with weaver's knots. |
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His second wife, Bettye, tied the knot without mentioning that she'd been married before. |
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Using the spikes of his ballista, all tied up into a belt, Ryud holstered it up to his shoulders, intending it to shield his charge. |
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Her apron bib had a strap that went around her neck and the waist strings were tied behind her back. |
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Plus it's much more flexible by way of I'm not tied to a particular area for an undue amount of time. |
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And when that went, we just tied the boat up nearby so we could just get in and go. |
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These are plaited into single strands and a loose wad of silk tied to the end. |
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She haltered the strangely docile stallion and tied him up in the tie racks, next to an extremely irritable paint gelding being groomed. |
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She tied up her hair in a bun and jammed a shapeless felt hat down over it. |
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The sling was tied with a water knot and loaded with an end-to-end pull on the loop. |
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She tied me up to the tree and started kicking me around until I lost my consciousness. |
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Their younger schoolmates in preschool and kindergarten tied fabric scraps together. |
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A landlord who was tied up and threatened at knifepoint while balaclava-clad raiders ransacked his Brentwood pub has told of his horrific ordeal. |
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In the first tale, Chinese soldiers tied reed pipes to kites and flew the kites at night. |
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But the Clarets chief has his hands tied by the club's financial position and he is struggling to match the package Ipswich are offering. |
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The front of the train was decked with seven sprays of white lilies tied with black ribbon, one for each decade of Mr Hartley's life. |
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Aaron quickly removed his shirt and tied it securely around Brynne's wound. |
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Her yukata was large on her, but still clung to her curves where the obi tied around her waist. |
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From there, signals are sent to a radio and a solar-powered relay station 11,000 feet up a mountain, tied to a tree. |
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The pito or umbilical cord symbolically tied that child to its tribe, its whanau, its hapu, and the land it inherited. |
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Foreigners unfamiliar with local customs often find themselves tied to a post and receiving fifty lashes. |
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Sean Collins, who tied for the team lead with 22 goals, is back for his junior season. |
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Most embarrassingly, Mussina tied a major-league record by allowing six doubles in one inning. |
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Prosecutors say he is tied to the crime by witnesses, blood spatters, ballistics and DNA analysis. |
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I selected a small gold bead mayfly nymph tied on a size 12 hook, as it was white and clearly visible in the murky water. |
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A total of 17 tables were filled on the night and three teams tied for first place. |
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His long, dark brown hair was tied away from his angular, handsome features with a leather thong. |
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Inukai suggested that the fate of the wolf and wild dog was tied to that of the deer. |
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This week the container ship arrived in port at the same time as a number of longline fishing vessels were tied up at the wharf. |
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Last year Garcia achieved his best placing in the Open when he finished tied eighth. |
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The ingenuity of the contraption was that a string was wound around the alarm winder and the other end tied to the bolt. |
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The drawings show the upper tag end 40 tied in another water knot for convenience of illustration. |
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I shed my clothes and pull on black jeans, a black shirt and black shoes and quickly tied my hair back with a black hair tie. |
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They don't take part in all the trial proceedings not because they are lazy but because they are tied up with other engagements. |
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She'd been wearing a loose turquoise tunic, tied with a black sash at the waist and matching black leggings. |
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My previous attempt at the record was a valiant attempt to drive the car while tied up by one leg. |
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Although tied to the same markets and products, their ability to cooperate was severely tested by crises that revealed different interests. |
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They appear to be tied up in a political knot while dealing with the Sri Lankan government, which is itself locked in internecine party warfare. |
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His switch to study theology with work in the Anglican Church may well have been tied up with the beginning of the First World War. |
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He has some money in a building society account, but a lot of his capital is tied up in shares. |
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This is because an equal, if not greater, proportion of our assets are tied up in share-related investments. |
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It works at the same time to bring to expression a female eroticism not tied to a biographical trajectory of wifehood and motherhood. |
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Most of the selection I saw was of the backless sort which tied like a halter top around the neck. |
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Because of their Kesh, Sikh men wear their hair tied up in a bun and hidden by a turban. |
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Brett Favre, whose 27 touchdown passes tied for the NFC lead, has quarterbacked the same team longer than any NFL signal caller. |
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These days with a husband and young child, she's more tied to her New York home. |
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For tonight, he had tied back his hair in a tidy queue, and his eyes seemed especially bright from his sapphire-colored tunic. |
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She was wearing a mauve suit, sharp black heels, and her jet black hair was tied in a bun. |
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Her life is now irrevocably altered, she is tied to him for the rest of her life. |
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They do, however, have their own politics which are tied up with ruling classes, nationalism, etc. |
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The alabaster sculpture of a crouching naked man, with his hands tied and his head covered by a hood is on display at a Baghdad gallery. |
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I am not tied to any party anymore but more finding out if that balance works. |
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Since kinescopes of Susskind's shows are tied up in litigation, this cannot be confirmed. |
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She tied the string attached the sheath to her belt and looked back into the crate. |
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But fertility, of course, has always been tied up with deep emotional and moral issues. |
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The gold, satin curtains, decorated with glitter, were tied back making them sparkle in the sunlight streaming through the crystal clear windows. |
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His presentation centered on the history of dairying, from a single cow tied to the fence to the megadairies of today. |
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Cassie had luxurious brownish-black hair, which was tied back into a bouncy ponytail. |
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This evening I was hopping around the bedroom after coming out of the shower, towel tied around my waist. |
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Was it Matisse or Cezanne who, aged and infirm, incapable of clutching a brush, demanded that one be tied to his hand so as to continue his work? |
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Dasan took his time to makes memorials for all his people, 500 crosses with an amaryllis flower tied to it. |
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Then he tore off a long strip and tied it about his forehead in order to disguise the red marking. |
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That is tied up with the elements of the offence, of course, in the first place. |
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In many ways the local authority has its hands tied and is in the same unenviable position as councils across the country. |
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He tied Charcoal's leading cord to the tree, and she gave him a disapproving gaze. |
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These vicious killers will surely strike again if the owners fail to ensure that the dogs are not confined to kennel or tied up at night-time. |
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The second niggling point is the large proportion of sales made through tied agents. |
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Basically, the water knot is two overhand knots, with the second being tied on top of the first. |
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Research freedom is also tied to teaching which is also tied to administrative duties. |
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A striped scarf becomes a runner, and a half yard of silk can be tied around a pitcher in the style of an obi, a broad sash worn with a kimono. |
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He was tied to the things he hated, or claimed to hate, like Prometheus lashed to his rock. |
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Without bothering to dry her hair she loosely braided it and tied a black ribbon at the bottom. |
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But at the end of the first week in January, the weather is blowing hard and all boats are tied up. |
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Much of the company's success has been tied up with its campaigning approach to the pursuit of social and environmental issues. |
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I tied on the sinker with its attendant fly and tossed the whole lot downstream into the rapids at the pool tail. |
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Happiness, in this scheme of things, is always tied up with what happens, especially what happens by luck or chance. |
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In that performance, the magician was tied with metal chains and secured by 50 locks. |
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The teams not only tied but scored their points in exactly the same way as each other, sharing six tries evenly. |
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Bows of all types from embroidered bows on necklines to traditional tied bows on corset style bodices will feature often, especially in knits. |
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Her hair was tied back with two leather thongs to keep it out of her face while riding. |
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The ceiling is hung with lamps of every shape and size, from glass floats tied with rope to whimsical creations made of seashells. |
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As usual, he wore his long, straight colourless hair down, and tied a blue designed headband around his head. |
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The Fallopian tubes are cut, tied or blocked, often through keyhole surgery. |
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I leaned down and worked to undo the cords that had been tied around her wrists. |
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Last season he scored 13 goals, which tied for the lowest total of his career. |
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Maggie stepped up and started pulling at the frayed knots that were tied around his ankles. |
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He tied him up before attacking and binding the two other members of staff. |
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They tied her to a chair and burnt her with petrol over a period of 24 hours, and it took her 12 days to die. |
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To prevent the movement of further machinery, pickets later tied a specialised bicycle lock to the gates of the factory. |
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Finally, the quires of pages are bound between two wooden covers and the spine is tied with damp leather. |
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The evil eye in Bedouin folk belief is tied to the fear of envy and jealousy in the eye of the beholder. |
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When the teams tied for the pennant at the end of the regular season, they played a three-game playoff. |
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He must have really tied one on last night, though he couldn't remember the details. |
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In the event of a tie, the tied players roll the discard dice and are dealt the number of cards indicated by the dice. |
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You may decide that the knots need to be tied tighter, looser or in larger or smaller sections. |
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Your hair will not be shaved, but it may be tied back into a ponytail if it is long. |
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He flipped up the collar of his shirt and tied a Windsor knot, then patted the tie and his collar flat again. |
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A lorry driver kidnapped by armed robbers and tied up in a warehouse said today he thought he was going to die. |
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Miss Lees was tied up but managed to escape and hid from the gunman for several hours while he searched for her with his dog. |
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The robbers held them at gunpoint and tied them up before escaping with a substantial amount of jewellery. |
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Any other way of living would be like having a ball and chain tied to your ankle. |
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Each wore a knife, tied around the waist by a strip of plain leather, and sheathed in a simple sheath of the same brown leather. |
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She has no time for the traditional view of Pakistani women spending their life tied to the family home. |
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She tore two strips off the clean partitions of the bandage and tied them around the bridges of her feet. |
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It seems to be tied up with a rather Victorian work ethic where poor people are demonised for idleness and deserve their fate. |
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Trading standards staff in local councils have their hands tied by government guidelines. |
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This week the container ship Southern Express arrived in port at the same time as a number of longline fishing vessels were tied up at the wharf. |
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Her hood had been left back and her glossy raven hair had been tied up with a deep lilac ribbon. |
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For most of them, a huge portion of their net worth is tied up in company stock or company stock options. |
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And it's now officially the strongest hurricane on record, in a season which is tied with 1933 as the most intense ever. |
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Edgar tied a bag shut and put it in his horse's saddlebag, then mounted up. |
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If we are tied to a specific date, though, we have no choice in the matter. |
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Her dress, made from satin of the deepest blue, was tied at the back of her neck, leaving her shoulders and back bare. |
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He tied the man to the driver seat using some rope in the glove compartment and lashed his hands to the steering wheel. |
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She scratched and clawed at him but he forced her into a chair and tied her hands behind her back. |
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Her handwriting is abominable, like one-legged chickens tied together and walking from and ink well onto paper. |
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Jude tied his three gourds to his belt, then walked with a measured pace downstream. |
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Keiko admired herself in the full-length mirror as she tied the sash around her teal kimono. |
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Forage crops, pasture, and rangelands are important in feeding ruminant animals tied to the meat and dairy industries. |
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That red tape is a result of an endless stream of initiatives from the government, which are usually tied up with the private sector. |
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His long, shoulder length hair tied in a queue, he walked toward the small stable where his horse was waiting. |
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We're so tied to the Middle East because of the oil industry, so what happens there directly impacts us here in Calgary. |
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Anyway, I didn't quite succeed at getting those stupid waves out of my hair, so I tied it up. |
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She said her attackers gagged her mouth and tied her to the bed before making away with the property. |
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Both the Senate and the presidential campaigns are tied together somewhat, although there will be people that will split the ticket. |
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She has reddy brown extremely long hair usually tied in a plait and she has two dreadlocks behind each ear. |
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Her black hair was tied back very loosely, which made several tendrils escape and hang wispily around her angular face. |
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They are made of hollowed out tree trunks with cowskin stretched on either end and tied with rawhide strips. |
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They tied me up like a beast and then they were kneeling on me, kicking and punching. |
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Yes, this does help make our operation more efficient because we are not tied to very specific collection times. |
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The previous relationship produced four children, and while she was tied to the stove she thought her singing career was over. |
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Before that we didn't really go out and I suppose you could say we were tied to the kitchen sink a bit! |
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Jodi began to pull at the remaining knots in the rope that tied her other hand. |
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At eleven o'clock she was knocking on his door, her stomach tied in a knot and her hands shaking slightly. |
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The striker is tied to the club until October so holding on to him to the end of the season may be the more financially astute move. |
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All workers must wear hard hats and safety glasses and those working on structures must be tied off with a full body harness. |
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Opponents of the penalties claim officers were too tied up in red tape to enforce the legislation. |
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I waited until the puppies were weaned then I tied red bows around their necks, put them in a box and headed to Mrs. Rooney's home. |
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Not for nothing is Alastair clad in the finest cloth, his plaid trimmed in gold, his stockings tied with silk garters. |
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The girl, on the other hand, wears her glossy red hair long, tied back into a ponytail, and she had glittery black eyes. |
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Masked raiders tied up a security guard and stole thousands of pounds' worth of computer equipment from Motorola, a court heard. |
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In fact, I wouldn't recommend taking the advice of a tied agent under any circumstances. |
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The driver had found a handkerchief and tied it round the radio aerial as a makeshift white flag. |
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President Georgi Purvanov says Bulgaria does not want to be tied to laggard countries in its bid for European Union membership. |
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He pulled out a small, rectangle-shaped box, wrapped in pink wrapping paper, with a white bow tied around it. |
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Michigan's no-fault insurance law provides unlimited lifetime coverage for medical expenses tied to auto wrecks. |
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The poor wretched beast was tied up on a rope that was too short to let him lie down. |
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He was not gagged, which was a blessing, but the rope was tied tight and limited any movement to a caterpillar-like wriggle. |
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This might include some form of direct subsidy, tied to acreage or land quality. |
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He tied the rope to a sturdy pipe just barely jutting out of the roof, and rappelled down the shaft, sadly only making it halfway. |
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For a hawk at hack, food is often tied to the hack board to discourage her from forming the habit of carrying. |
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But then I tied a Hunter's Bend and another similar knot, comparing it to the pictures. |
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He lingered in the doorway and waited as she hastily fastened the laces and tied the anklet around her heel. |
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Wyatt said he pulled the laces out of two pairs of shoes and he and Rattigan both tied her up. |
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The women had been tied with shoe laces, the men with nylon rope, and plastic shopping bags were used to blindfold them. |
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The bodice laced up in the front with cream-colored ribbon, which tied off at the waist. |
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She tied her pocket closed with jute twine by lacing it through holes she punched in the corners. |
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Strict rules at secondary schools meant that girls had to keep their hair short or wear it tied back in ribbons of the regulation colour. |
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The game remained tied at the end of regulation play, and went into a 10-minute sudden death overtime. |
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Alexia reached for the apron and tied it around herself with some difficulty. |
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John's father, Joe Kennedy was a bootlegger during the prohibition and was also tied up with Mafia. |
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Somehow this is all tied in to the treacherous mountain trails, where a mile as the crow flies can take twenty miles of switchbacks. |
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After the Chicago game, the Lakers had trailed or been tied entering the fourth quarter seven times this season and had lost all seven games. |
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Right now we have a cost-of-living increase, that is tied more to wages than actual inflation. |
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Cutting off the sleeve, I tore it into one large strip, and tied it around my wound. |
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Older women often wear a large kerchief or scarf over the head and tied under the chin. |
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The nearby floating stairs are cast concrete bolstered by steel ziggurats tied into floor joists. |
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The Romans captured this slave girl, tied her to a stake, tore open the back of her dress, and started whipping her. |
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She was dressed in a simply shift, all traces of make-up gone from her face, her hair tied back with a plain ribbon. |
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In fact, gun ownership or enjoyment of sport shooting doesn't seem to be tied to wealth or social class at all. |
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In fact the last American to come close here was Daly two years ago when he tied for third. |
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The halter-neck dress was tied around her neck, leaving her smooth olive-tanned arms bare. |
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When I came to, I found myself tightly tied to a steel chair guarded by a few shifty men guarding me with loaded guns. |
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Nicanor wore a multicolored striped oxford shirt with the tails tied at his waist. |
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You can learn a great deal even when your boat is anchored or tied to the dock, especially if other boas are moving about nearby. |
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Deals with Blockbuster, Hollywood Video, pay cable, broadcast television and other ancillaries are also tied to theatrical release. |
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The prisoners were lifted to their feet, had their ankle bindings cut and ropes tied loosely round their necks like animal leads. |
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They ordered the Pueblo sailors to the well deck, where they were tied up, blindfolded, and told to keep quiet. |
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The reigning league champions are tied with three other teams on six points but lead the table on better goal difference. |
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Fishing boats were tied up last week as crews earned a well-earned rest after a long haul from the last decent break at Christmas. |
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Once they had finished thrashing me, they tied me up again, but this time I managed to keep my ankles and wrists slightly apart. |
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The key always sat in the keyhole, with a red ribbon tied to the end of it. |
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Hoss bent and tied the rope around the small pile of cedar shakes at his feet. |
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Floral artists form perfect nosegays with bundled stems wrapped and tied in raffia ribbons. |
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Some architects were dabbling with it from the very beginning, he says, but most were still tied to hand drawings and drafting boards. |
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She wore her hair tied back, which only accentuated her large face and fleshy jowls. |
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He was wearing a loose fitting sky blue kimono with a long sash tied hurriedly at the back. |
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She stood in the doorway, in a black keyhole halter that tied in the back and white jeans. |
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Shivering slightly, I tied the horse's well-used rein to a rotting stake in the wooden fence and stepped inside. |
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Each gauge was firmly tied to the base of a single tail feather with a thread. |
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It is a tall growing indeterminate plant which should be staked and tied for best results. |
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Tall perennials will look and fare better if they are staked or tied up to avoid slumping over on the ground. |
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Shipwreck D is so well-preserved that cord tied in a V-shape at the top of the ship's wooden mast is still clearly visible. |
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I felt him at my back, his arm over my side beneath the covers, reaching into the sheet tied around me. |
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Whispering soon ensued, and the crew member led my shipmates to a little boat tied up to the side of the ship. |
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A strip of cloth was tied around his right shin, presumably to hold the bottom of his pants together from a rather large tear. |
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The rates are tied to interest rates for short-term Treasury bills at the last auction in May, which was held Monday. |
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Federal student loan rates are tied to interest rates for short-term Treasury bills set at the last auction in May. |
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The pieces are tied together less by logic or plot than they are by emotional links. |
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He was spotted golfing in LA with his luscious locks tied halfway back into a man bun. |
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In next to no time, I stepped in and tied a perfect lattigo knot in nothing flat. |
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Canice tugs at a rope tied to the root of a riverside mango tree and pulls in a cylindric handmade bamboo trap. |
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They told them to dismount and then tied them up and ordered them into the American vehicle. |
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She was very clean and smart looking, with her fair hair always tied back neatly in a ponytail. |
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Her soft, wispy fair hair had been pulled into a loose bun at the back of her head and tied with a black ribbon. |
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Cold-stiff hands and aching shoulders hauled on the guys tied to the fore and aft cleats of the whaler until it was drawn back on board the ship. |
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In fact, she'd struck up the friendliest relationship with Boxer, the old schnauzer always tied up in Tom Sawyer's yard, two houses down. |
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Against the former I pulled up the hood of my windcheater and tied it firmly down over my cap. |
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The President's talk about accountability is tied to the idea that schools should be run more like businesses. |
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Many would seem to be tied into contracts which began before the surge in fuel prices took hold. |
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But they should be even stronger in 2000, as 19 starters return from a team that tied for the Mountain West title. |
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For decades this film archive was tied in legal knots and available only in miserably inadequate video prints. |
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For a flogging, three halberds would be bound in an upright triangle, with a fourth tied horizontally across at chest height. |
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It was pulled back into a short rat-tail, braded and tied with a blue band, the rest was short, an almost shaved look on the sides. |
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I pulled two hairpins from my thick hair as it fell down, still tied back by a black ribbon. |
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The bridge was a line of old barges that had been crudely tied together, the deck a mishmash of welded patches of dented rusting metal. |
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She tied the mass of curls in place with a silver scrunchie and sprayed it lightly with hairspray. |
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She had her hair carelessly tied back but tendrils were already escaping the elastic band. |
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Accordingly, the successful acquisition of fruits cannot be strongly tied to the evolution of routine trichromatic vision. |
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She tied her blue and white tennis shoe as the school bus drove up in front of her house. |
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His hair is tied back into a mantilla more customarily worn by the women of the singer's native land. |
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A bundle of giant nerve fibres tied to the mantle give them very rapid reflexes. |
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She also wore a Priestess's outfit, made up of a white large-sleeved kimono with a red hakama that was tied to the obi that kept it from falling. |
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They all had rudrakshas, tulasi-malas, jasmine flowers tied up in their hair, and they were all praying, doing meditation and chanting mantras. |
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In a traditional yurt, the framework is covered with felt mats and tied down with hair ropes to prevent the mats from blowing off in stiff winds. |
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His braided hair fell down over his shoulders, his eyes were jet black, and he liked to wear a piece of purple silk tied around his hair. |
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They tied them up and moved them to a part of the building adjacent to the canal bank where they remained bound with tape. |
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I woke up, and after a moment realized that I wasn't tied up, and that I was moving. |
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Then we escaped and tied him up but he escaped and took the wagon and left. |
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In the event finals, she won the gold medal on balance beam, tied for fourth place on uneven bars, and placed eighth on vault. |
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She pointed to a grim looking giant bald monkey tied to a stall with a bright red glowing collar around its neck. |
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The bunch of white calla lilies she had bought lay on the seat beside her, tied with white ribbon. |
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A belt that held the sheath of a sword was at his waist, without blade, and his heavy dark gray tunic was tied at his neck and covering most of his body. |
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Of all the murky dealings tied to the political heiress, why the fuss over numbers so illogical? |
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Then he brushed his knee-length hair one hundred strokes, braided it, and tied it back with a piece of green ribbon, simply knotting it instead of tying a bow. |
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They'd tied her up with cables, which looked too strong to move. |
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She wore a purple yukata that was tied at the waist with a thin black obi. |
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His hair, a soft ginger-brown color, was short and shaggy from his brow and over the crown of his head, but lengthened a sizable amount in the back, where it was tied off. |
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They tied calico filled with heated salt around my neck for my tonsillitis and cared for me day and night. The boys visited me and slipped baby powers under my pillow. |
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This has tied in well with the rationalisation of the booking process. |
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After she tied her running shoes, she jogged downstairs and outside. |
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In an annual commemorative ritual tied to sun and sky, a shaft of light will illuminate the void between the time of the first and second attacks. |
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It was a pair of matching katanas, one edged swords sheathed in rusted hold sheathing with red ribbon tied around the hilt that dangled to the side. |
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I don't drink but I feel like I tied one on the previous night. |
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She had a black jumper or cardigan tied round her waist and was carrying a pair of black suede boots, inside which were a yellow t-shirt and a creamy coloured purse. |
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You come from a political culture wedded to the short-term, to an initiative a month, all of them tied to the careers of thrusting ministers desperate to make their mark. |
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Neighbours in the German town of Schwelm, alerted by the 16-year-old's cries for help, called police who found the boy tied to the bed with a tow rope and wire. |
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Gohan tied the boat up while Camille and Marle waited for him. |
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People who believe they have shares tied up in the company will have to wait until High Court-appointed liquidator Tom Grace adjudicates on their claims. |
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And, as we so often see, the compensation is only haphazardly tied to job performance. |
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As a rookie last season, he tied for the league lead in offensive boards. |
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In this American dream, we are emotionally tied to the people and land of our communities. |
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He was found barely alive in the woods near a commuter train line, still tied up, naked, and badly burned. |
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Triple Olympic champion Ludger Beerbaum of Germany finished tied for 16th. |
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She quickly braided her hair and tied a white ribbon at the end, grabbing a matching straw bonnet before heading downstairs to join her husband for breakfast. |
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He bandaged her wounds and tied them tight to stop the bleeding. |
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He tied firebrands to the tails of 300 foxes to scare away his enemies. |
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If, however, you really want your luggage to be first off the plane, and guarantee it arrives in mint condition, pack your kit in a cardboard box tied closed with string. |
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First, it's being tied into a wider junior ministerial reshuffle. |
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He is also concerned that they have led to significant grade inflation because they are closely tied to the grades that students expect to receive. |
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The pile is formed by knots, which are tied round the warp threads, and held in place by the weft, which is passed back and forth and beaten down securely. |
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In such cases soft sheer materials such as ninon, voile, and marquisette are used. The curtains may be hung straight to draw or they may be tied back. |
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A dozen officers were tied up with filling out reports for two and a half hours before they rounded off their shift with a patrol in the police van. |
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The songs they sang were traditional and tied in with pre-Victorian mid-winter celebrations where the Lord of Misrule presided over jollities which were rather wild at heart. |
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An easy conversion tied up the scores and so it remained until half time. |
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Reihan Salam cogently argues federalism is on the wrong path due to powerful incentives tied to federal funding. |
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The platoon tracks could occasionally kick out four sandbags tied together as casualties that the first sergeant could take back to the battalion aid station. |
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This can result in the child having conflicting feelings of wanting the love which is tied up with the abuse, making them feel like they wanted the abuse. |
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The formula didn't work as it was tied to economic growth, not the increase in healthcare costs. |
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Her deep sleeved robe of pure white was tied with golden cords around her petite waist, the light, airy hem of her skirt danced around her ankles as she reached them. |
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Opera has been closely tied up with social and political issues. |
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Unlike Roberts's fall from a bridge, Greene had less hesitation about being tied up on train tracks. |
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The footage showed apparently horrific conditions where disabled children were tied to their beds or imprisoned on cots. |
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She appeared in a Santa Ana courtroom on Thursday wearing a dark blue prison jumpsuit with her hair tied up in a bun. |
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The father was calm and had long black hair that was tied back. |
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