He had to drive through a nasty hurricane to get there, which was interesting, but that's not the best part of the story. |
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First I realised that there are situations in which a smack on the bottom or a slap on the fingers was the only way to get a message across. |
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Because of his concerns to get a job done right, Peter Saville and business have long had an uneasy relationship. |
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We also worked to get representation from the millions of workers in the unorganised sectors. |
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You could hardly choose a more dramatic place in which to get back to nature. |
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First my neighbor steals my plants, and then I have to administer the smackdown to some poor senile old lady to get them back. |
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The fresh aroma of coffee was just enough to get any sleepyhead out of bed. |
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Out on the ice, however, as the crew unpacks the parachute, she begins to get anxious. |
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The package.def files describe how to get, verify the download, unpack, configure, build and install the package software. |
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And if you don't want to get caught, prepare for a diet of unpackaged fruit and vegetables, raw meat and potatoes. |
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The Times ought to be ashamed for its scheme to get unpaid members of the public to contribute to its website. |
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The message I want to get across is that what seems like a small amount of money over here can make a huge difference over there. |
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A couple of months ago it was snowing and sleeting but the group still managed to get people out. |
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The trips are described as the ideal way to get an introduction to the sport of fishing and meeting like minded people. |
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Now that I have reached my preferred weight, I want to get muscly by this summer. |
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I tried to figure out the best way to get there, but it was obvious that the usual streets I would take were unpassable. |
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And on top of that you can bet your bottom dollar that we won't be rushing to get your car ready after this outburst. |
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But you can bet your bottom dollar that the guy who owns this personal site is going to get a high bandwidth bill this month. |
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It would have been impossible for me to have left part of that cup undrunk... but for the fact that this morning I had to get up early. |
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So far he's been lucky to get away with it or else the council in the London borough where he lives has been particularly lax in chasing him up. |
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Two days later, investigators were still trying to get to the bottom of what actually sparked the blaze. |
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Educated young people who had failed to get into university were unfitted by their education and aspirations to enter industry. |
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It's like borrowing a book from a friend who has underlined the best passages for you to skim to get the guts. |
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As a boy, resolutely unphysical, I supposed I should exercise in order to get girls. |
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Robert was calm and unflappable and never seemed to get upset whatever stresses he was under. |
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It likely will have the ninth pick but would like to move up a bit to get an athletic small forward or power forward. |
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This gives them stock portfolio insurance, something which small fry players would obviously like to get, but can't find anyone willing to issue. |
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The trick for internet retailers is to get you to believe that some of the products in your cart truly are must-haves. |
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I'm going to try to understand the various important issues, and try to get to the bottom of what's true and what's not. |
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I decided to do my own mini-analysis to get to the bottom of the hotel ranking mystery. |
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Embsay are another side with the potential to get into the title race if they can convert their unplayed games into maximum points. |
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Even in the advertising industry, it seems that you have to show small-minded, petty acts of vandalism to get noticed. |
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The slice slows the ball's speed down giving you the time to get into a better position. |
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The tank seemed to get dirty and smelly very quickly, and we found we had to clean it out far more often than we had to with the tropical fish. |
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I returned to the bosom of my loving, supportive family and proceeded to get myself a job. |
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He has quite a tale about trying to get a hotel room and the pathetic computer system that was at the bottom of all his woes. |
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Amongst the singing and chit-chat someone was asked to get something from the shed at the bottom of the garden. |
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It does take a while to get used to, but remember, to teach your dog anything, you must be the leader and the boss. |
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Watch out when you go traipsing down memory lane, you're liable to get stuck on some hitherto unrecalled hidden pathway. |
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Given the narrowness of their margin, they have a very limited ability to get anything done. |
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So, you say that you'll have to get a hold of her sometime and really show her who's boss, that she needs to know how bad she has been. |
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She leapt at them, hissing and howling and growling, trying to get at them, to show them who's boss around here. |
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To say that people ought not run and that people ought to get out of this race is bossism that belongs in the other party. |
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It was when changing my daughter's nappy that I suddenly realised the best way to get good service in a restaurant. |
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The project aims to get parents to use reusable nappies on their babies rather than disposable nappies. |
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On the reserve, trying to get a retailer's take on the switch to cheap contraband smokes was tantamount to being spotted as a narc. |
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You could say that it is about as unpretentious as it is possible to get, without actually being a fish-and-chip shop. |
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Felix began to hiss and scratch at his mistress's back as she held him in her arms in an attempt to get away from the small Boston terrier. |
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Lots of freelance narcos are now claiming that they were paramilitaries all along, to get immunity. |
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Therefore you need to get in quick while there offering a professional service for an unprofessional fee. |
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When we get saddled with unsaleable items, it costs us money to get rid of them. |
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It's so warm out and since I was slaving away in the hot kitchen, I opened up the windows to get some air circulating. |
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He owes it to Parliament to get his legislation right, and not to continuously expect ratepayers to pick up the bill for his botch-ups. |
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She spent all that time asking me which one to chose and she decides to get both of them? |
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Unfortunately, the narrowness of the survey has tended to get lost in media coverage of it. |
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He always seemed to be the first to get his reply in, quick-witted and clearly smart. |
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I had been so deep in thought that I hadn't heard her trying to get my attention. |
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These days enable both parents and children to get a feel of what a school might be like. |
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In play therapy it was possible to get clues on the issues bothering the child. |
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Your only hope for a good time is to get smashed ASAP and allow the spirit of the Broken Record to possess you as well. |
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I'm less bothered about my bus shelter now, though I would obviously prefer there to be a stop there so it would be more convenient to get a bus. |
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Eyewitnesses spoke of people having to fight their way to get near the image, while roads round the temple became bottlenecks of traffic. |
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The introduction of tabs was the point where I started to get a little narked. |
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Okay, I'm being narky but it is too easy for us all to get carried away by the moment. |
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Too old or too slow, it's time for these perennial contenders to admit they need more than Botox to get rid of their wrinkles. |
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I felt like I needed to get back to nature, so I started planning a camping trip. |
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Babies who go to bed with a bottle of milk, formula or juice are more likely to get tooth decay. |
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I completely froze when I was handed the microphone and very nearly bottled it, but I managed to get the words out. |
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David Brennan was bottled up in the right corner but managed to get the ball back across the goal. |
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My objective was to get people or somebody in authority to go deeper than the reasons that I really gave. |
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We were thrown in at the deep end when we won a major global project with a London bank and we needed to get moving quickly. |
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And I'll thank you land grubbers to get out of this here line and make way for folks who got a real need to cross first. |
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The grubber was used to break up the land to get it ready for sowing and planting. |
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A friend of mine maintains he survived because he wore slip-on shoes from which he managed to get free. |
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I shall remember that, should I be unfortunate enough to get shot down but fortunate not to get killed in the process. |
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It's really important to get beyond those completely unfounded generalizations. |
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With a mutter or two the chap retreated into a sulk and decided to get on with his reading material. |
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You tap the button to get the slider moving, tap it again to gauge your distance and then time your final tap to determine the direction. |
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He was able to get his curveball over and was in control with his slider and changeup. |
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Feeling muzzy, I turn towards the keypad where the code to get in is meant to be punched in. |
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It took us quite a while to get them unglued, but we managed to do that this morning. |
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Now it has emerged that the money spent on repairing him made it uneconomical to get a replacement this year. |
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Pulling a trout out of a mountain stream is a time-honored way to get back to nature. |
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Fastbuck medical chains are muzzling doctors from telling patients things that could affect their health and ability to get better. |
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Even then, it's hard to get semantic judgements or mentions of ungrammaticality from a corpus. |
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She said her weight loss had inspired her to get to work and help other people to slim down. |
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With half of all Britons overweight, the government's plan to get us to slim down looks like a daunting task. |
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I think we're going to have to go to our allies in an ungrudging way and say, what is it going to take to get you guys in this thing. |
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The problem is that entry level jobs are generally where uneducated people go to get skills. |
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More than six years after a York travel and hotel company collapsed, unsecured creditors are finally set to get some of their money back. |
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Chan told Lee that many Indians and Pakistanis living in Hong Kong were finding it hard to get naturalised. |
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After a short distance, the driver was able to get out and run away unharmed while the thief climbed into the driving seat and drove off. |
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I forced myself to get up and, with what little strength I had left, began running after the horse and sled. |
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They hadn't been able to get their hands on sleds, but a sleigh ride was always fun on a snowy evening. |
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People don't like some of the tactics adopted by some unscrupulous evangelists to get people to convert. |
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While trying to get my foot balanced on one of the mossy boulders that jutted out of the water, I lost my footing and slipped again. |
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He tried to get his footing but slipped and fell right into the woman's lap. |
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She desperately searched for good footing, slipping and sliding as she tried to get back up. |
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How can he be allowed to get away with such blatant, unhistorical nonsense? |
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There's naught to get my teeth into, naught to be telling me what they mean. |
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Under such circumstances, it is natural for the public to resort to other means to get justice. |
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They managed to get the 120 lb harbour porpoise into a water-filled rubber dinghy, after it twice gave them the slip. |
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While it is not necessary to get into the myological detail, they do effectively make the point that the girdles were large and well-muscled. |
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Overall we can think of the slaveholder as more able and more eager to get more slaves. |
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I have been going absolutely bonkers trying to get a doll which is absolutely-to-my-liking finished. |
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Montrose was charming and gallant, a superb natural soldier with a rare ability to get the best out of his tiny army of ill-equipped Highlanders. |
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People shouted a warning to the 26-year-old, but he was unable to get out the way and was thrown over the car's bonnet, landing on the road. |
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The family were alerted to the presence of smoke by eldest daughter Ellen, and they all managed to get outside the house unhurt. |
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A lot of unemployed people come to the centre trying to get computer skills to improve their chances of getting a job. |
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You don't really think that Bush likes to get out there and slop the hogs and move the hay around, do you? |
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Also the private entrance onto the Green is used as a public highway, for a slip road when the town is impossible to get through. |
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Apparently she believes the logical way to get rid of a horrible old gas cooker is to leave it on the nature strip. |
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Another point is that unemployment is a trap that can be hard to get out of. |
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Check out the easiest ways to get rid of everything from your unibrow to the hair down there. |
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One of the main reasons is it's very difficult to get unemployment figures over a century. |
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They also offer some important thoughts about how an article this slipshod managed to get past peer review. |
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Since cross winds will drift the slipstream downwind, a pace line must echelon to get the benefit of drafting in a cross wind. |
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I tried to pull over to the side a few times to get out of his slipstream but it still wasn't enough. |
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It'll take about a year to get the packages totally uniform across the country, says SVP-marketing Doug Seserman. |
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I had hopes to get out and catch a few mushrats but I'm not sure there are any left alive. |
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Well I have no idea and I think the mystery will never be explained, but now do you see how easy it is for me to get mixed up. |
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It's typical of me to get the technicalities right and then go and make a boo-boo in the text. |
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However, to try to get uniformity of standards countrywide, when the changes were made the lower levels were not left behind. |
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How I managed to get through that period relatively unscathed I have no idea. |
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Dean helped the lady, while Russell scooted over to the coats to get a better look at the mystery shopper. |
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She wears retro shorts, crop top, and snapback to get an iced drink with her sister. |
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And there's nothing like the prospect of boodle to get people under the same umbrella. |
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He returned to the bombed-out building twice a day for 17 days to get files and other things. |
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It's easy to get mystical and New Agey about this sort of thing, for there's nothing easier than creating mysticism where there is mystery. |
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In order to get the best daylight and unimpeded views, Jim rose at 5am each morning during the summer. |
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If you've got an appetite for salsa, Latin soul and boogaloo, you're about to get your fill for absolutely nothing this year. |
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Obviously we'll do the show and then right after that I have to boogie out to get to Texas because we start running the following day in Texas. |
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This extra dose of reality also means the irritating hack's native wit and exemplary patter is no longer enough to get him out of trouble. |
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She attempted to get her curls to regain their bounce, and she managed to do a good job. |
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She didn't remember how long it took her to get to sleep or even falling asleep. |
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The bounce tends to get lower and slower at St George's and defending a total is often preferable to chasing. |
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She dropped her book bag and cardigan in the middle of the kitchen floor in her haste to get down to her basement bedroom. |
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What can the booker do if he has this specimen with all this talent, but does just enough to get by with the victories every week? |
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At home I finally managed to get to sleep for a while but I was awake again at eight. |
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Many key workers are shift workers and no consideration has been given as to how are they meant to get to and from work at unsociable hours. |
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These people, according to the entrepreneur, have to run around picking up bolts of fabric to get clothes stitched. |
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The relatives of the dead had fought to get a tribunal, but were also wary about it because of attacks on it by Conservatives and Unionists. |
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It takes 50 or 100 rounds before you really start to improve, but after 200 rounds it's easy to get sloppy and careless. |
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However, in order to get an edge in sales, alternative means of book selling must be employed. |
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We need to get out of our cars and out of our locked homes and into our local coffee shops, bookstores, and clubs. |
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In mighty bright white, with black details down the sides, it's understated, easy to get dirty but still nice and without a hint of naffness. |
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It bounced right back at me because the return address was incorrectly formed and I can't make out how to get it to its destination. |
|
I tactfully informed her I had at long last managed to get to sleep and her call had woken me. |
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Games developers in the city will have a unique opportunity to get close to a potential major player in the industry. |
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Most of the group managed to get to sleep, except for a girl that just stared at the moon. |
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She tucked the letter back in the journal, and crawled into bed, and managed to get to sleep. |
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I was too tired to get up and go to school for 8 in the morning so I just slept in. |
|
Not wanting to get his valenki wet, Ivan Denisovich takes them off, then sloshes the water onto the floor. |
|
They included the height of the flats, the car parking, the number of units and the re-organisation of the site to get more communal space. |
|
Meanwhile, my sleeping in this morning meant Katharine had to get her own breakfast. |
|
Everyone seemed to get along, worked together, and presented a united front, so where was the war? |
|
However, one thing is certain that it's time to get out the nails and hammer, locate the wood and wheels and build your own flying machine. |
|
Personal bankruptcies are booming precisely because it's so easy to get in debt. |
|
That's when transmitted radio signals bounce off barriers and take multiple paths to get to a receiver, resulting in interference. |
|
If a facility executive fails to get that buy-in, the new software can boomerang. |
|
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Having a smoke detector in the home gives people more time to get out if there is an emergency. |
|
After a summer of slouchy boho, flowing fabrics and flouncy layers, it's time to get into something less comfortable. |
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What better opportunity are you going to get to show off your moves on stage for a room full of drunk strangers? |
|
Society is frankly an unjust place and things go wrong but we have to get on with our lives and deal with them. |
|
Short bouts of exercise are undoubtedly a good way to get fit fast, but what about the psychological benefits of slow, steady distance work? |
|
I'll probably have to get used to it again, living out in the boonies as we do now. |
|
A woman of undoubted ability, she has been asked several time to get involved in politics. |
|
So far it just a lot of unreturned phone calls, unresponsive board members and disorganized NGOs trying to get me to do their job for them. |
|
Still, this loss is tolerable, because the amplifier boosts the signal level enough to get it to the donor site. |
|
Unfortunately, he is a compulsive liar whose naivety and innocence allows him to get away with the most convoluted stories. |
|
You tend to get a little slovenly without the pressure of public appearance. |
|
So he has seen unrestrained Leftism close-up and has had strong incentives to get his thoughts on Leftism clear. |
|
He supported famous Korean painter Lee Jung-sup when he was an unknown artist and enabled him to get an exhibition. |
|
The label Frankenfoods is, as always, the way to get press, and a decent metaphor for the ambiguous nature of the unknown quantity. |
|
Robin returned home to fill more bottles, which he loaded in the car unlabelled in order to get back quicker. |
|
Professor James Moriarty, Sherlock Holmes's mortal enemy, wants to get his hands on a revolutionary new bombsight. |
|
He was in a burning building, the fire was below him and it was a long way down to get out. |
|
A knife is helpful here to get things started, but they unlay easily once you've gotten it going. |
|
They were hoping for BBQ, but it was impossible in the traditional sense, as it used a slow cooker to get the moist meat that we all desire. |
|
The succession of unexecuted missions was wearing on the morale of the SF soldiers, who were eager to get into the fight. |
|
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I have a couple of desktop machines here which purport to be bootable from a USB drive, but I haven't managed to get either to do that trick yet. |
|
This is both a strength and a weakness, as we will see, but ultimately it is the nature of the beast and nothing to get upset about. |
|
But, like the barrier, neither bullet had my name on it and I managed to get away. |
|
The way that anyone can change foreign policy is to get elected to office, so you've no one to blame for making poor decisions in your name. |
|
The site is the best place to get the unadulterated lowdown on what your MP has said and done in your name. |
|
While we're in the Philly area, it keeps occurring to me that he seems to get a lot of namechecks yet I've never investigated his music. |
|
I wanted to get up and go for a run, but I had a faint headache that was nonetheless making me feel fairly queasy and nauseated. |
|
He wanted to get close to her, but didn't want to admit his unrequited feelings. |
|
There was a much improved performance and we were unlucky not to get at least a draw. |
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Altogether a nasty piece of work, but a delight to get into the head of and write. |
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Your behaviour makes it clear that you are a nasty piece of work who abuses those who love you in order to get what you want. |
|
I've allowed myself to get lazy about following what's going on nationally and I've got to bone up on a lot of stuff. |
|
That fat, overweight, pompous slug would never be able to get me himself, she thought, without sending one of his henchmen to retrieve me. |
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I tasted it once and had to take a slug of sour mash to get the sweet out of mouth. |
|
Look, after a night out on the booze, I'm sure we all know how hard it can be to get up in the morning. |
|
We did try to get the current owner of the locomotive to donate one of the nameplates which could be displayed at Blackpool North. |
|
After narrowly avoiding some jail time, he returns home only to get kicked out by his boozehound mother. |
|
Yes, but the boozers are much more noticeable up here in the north because they drink simply and solely to get legless. |
|
I feel uneasy, a bit nervous, and very eager to get the move done now and all these boxes unpacked. |
|
From alcohol they progress to opium, thence to heroin, allowing their language to get boozily baroque and even less penetrable. |
|
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As a 19-year-old, he knocked 23 balls over the fence to get a.513 slugging percentage in A-ball. |
|
As I came over the top of the hill, I looked around to get my bearing and admire the view of the sleepy town of Lagos. |
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I just want to get dressed up, meet my friends, have a laugh, have a bop and not worry about that bleeper. |
|
This gave me time to bop him on the nose to get him off me and hastily escape before he came back for more. |
|
I bet local residents thought they were going to get to sleep in this morning! |
|
On non-washable materials try a little borax or hydrogen peroxide to get the last traces out. |
|
He lives there with Cynthia, paranoid that the nasties out to get him in the first film will return. |
|
Some mornings she lay in bed for hours, replaying the crash in her head, unmotivated to get up and uninterested in seeing herself on crutches. |
|
My decidedly laissez-faire parents assumed that if I were to engage in the unnameable, I was too smart to get pregnant. |
|
Along with Dawn, Angie, Julia and Kevin, Baz left his Lawrence Street watering hole after a few slurps in good time to get to the airport. |
|
It takes about five minutes to get to the surface without bursting your lungs or doing some other nasty damage to your body. |
|
Like a cartoonist exaggerates a big nose for effect, we use the full power of nasty words as explosives to get our point across. |
|
Now, while there were a lot of interruptions, each side did have a chance to get across their bottom line. |
|
Rabbit, feeling incredibly unwanted and unneeded in the conversation, decided to get to work. |
|
Any unfancied teams remaining in the competition by that stage have done well to get that far, and can expect to meet a sticky end rather soon. |
|
The cork is moved up and down on the rotating mandrel to get the cork bored out to the correct size. |
|
The story went that their daughter was bored silly after a couple of days at the resort and cried to get back home to her friends. |
|
Holidays like Thanksgiving give the opportunity to get together and celebrate familial bonds that are like no other. |
|
I have until Friday at 12 to get it done, which means working all day today and tomorrow and possibly having a couple of sleepless nights. |
|
The surest way to set the heart pounding and the palms sweating is to get a sudden mental flash of the person you are meant to be interviewing sitting in their smalls. |
|
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Once a murmuration gets this large, the best way to get rid of them is through a major concerted effort, as officials were doing Monday evening, he said. |
|
He started chewing the police car's tires, biting the bumper and generally snarling and slavering, trying to get at the cops, who chose to stay put with the windows rolled up. |
|
He laughs and says he does not expect his slaves to be honest, as the system of slavery forces them to resort to cheating and dishonesty just to get by. |
|
They would be back in L.A. a whole month before Uni resumed, but, as Jessi had said, it would be good to get settled prior to the hard slavery of the final year. |
|
He is careful with his weightlifting, not wanting to get muscle-bound, which would rob him of the upper-body flexibility he needs to produce bat speed. |
|
Since the good rain, snails have bred up, take action now to get a Muscovy ducks, or remove the snails by hand or use snail bait, particularly on seedlings. |
|
It also hopes to get at least six unemployed people back into work. |
|
Of all the guys who have switched uniforms this season, maybe the hardest to get used to will be Lynch, who personified the Bucs' defense with his sledgehammer style. |
|
All I wanted was to stay friends and to get on with my life. |
|
After some passionate kissing they cuddled up and managed to get to sleep. |
|
Just as I start thinking about trying to get to sleep, I drop off. |
|
After we decided the thing was not going to burn, the bombardier got in the nose to take out the bombsight and I got in the cockpit to get the classified papers. |
|
Each actor studied their real-life counterpart, boning up on their life stories to get a keener, truer sense of how they would have behaved and talked. |
|
There are many unexplored ways to get a computer user to work faster. |
|
A friend of Adam's had co-signed a form to say I was bonded to him so there was no way for me to get out of the place, although I did run away once. |
|
A man who was branded wacko Jacko turned out to get the biggest sendoff we will probably ever see. |
|
The miners themselves went on strike again and again, trying to get their wages raised. |
|
But 2014 is the year to get offline and on the road to check out some of these kitty-centric locations. |
|
Some of the crew are holding me and others are trying to get me unglued. |
|
But that was Oliver expunging all this anger he had from not being able to get Platoon made yet, which was his baby. |
|
|
Lipper expects a diverse reaction, but she hopes to inspire not just women, but men as well to get onboard with gender equality. |
|
The president should engage directly with President Vladimir Putin to get the Russians onboard. |
|
He was at his most sensible best, organising funds and trying to get the decidedly unheroic Greeks to fight as if they were their glorious ancestors. |
|
And a bunch of kids, probably cadets or something, are standing in the middle of this unholy mess and holding up handwritten signs indicating which way to turn to get where. |
|
Our climate is not always ideal for this palm, but if you want to get a plant going, take the unhusked nut, or the seed, and place it on its side. |
|
If you are travelling in the left hand lane, and you see cars coming down the slip road, it may not be possible to get into the middle lane, because of heavy traffic. |
|
I don't suggest that guys aim for a perfectly arched eyebrow, but waxing is a good way to get rid of eyebrows that are out of control and keep that unibrow out of sight. |
|
Sadly I wasn't able to get a shot of the three guys, who looked like they were on the way to see their parole officer, pushing unicycles across the main bridge. |
|
More often that not, Davis seems to get dismissed as a provider of intriguing visual fun, pretty much in the mode of op art. |
|
Two seconds into the opening credits I was trying to get my daughter out of the room by any means possible. |
|
Pre-election federal spending announcements are so lucrative that one strains to think up ways to get some of the boodle directed toward native communities. |
|
I'm working with you everyday to get those chubby legs of yours to assume more responsibility, but this is a hard slog as your are so very stubborn. |
|
He's been slooshing warm salty water about his mouth to help the healing process but I was able to get a large bottle of Retardex, which is even more effective. |
|
If we want to make sure that our money and civilian efforts are optimized and maximized, we need to get serious. |
|
A decision by the Hydes in 1955 to take an extended visit to Japan was tied in with the wish to get to know another great bookman, Shigeo Sorimachi. |
|
This is a unique opportunity to get hands on experience of museum work. |
|
It's going to have a week to get the smoky fish smell out of the kitchen. |
|
I can tell she is eager to leave orchard Corset Center to get home and prepare a meal, and herself, for the holiday. |
|
The tone is reminiscent of a weepy young girl used to being able to get her way. |
|
The only thing that popped into his sloshed mind was how to get home. |
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The Canada-Sweden game that followed was also a nail-biter, but Sweden controlled the second half and put a couple in late to get a well-deserved win. |
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Am relieved to get back to office and resume slouchy work-desk posture. |
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It's about a future in which savage Australian booners drive fast and fight furiously to get enough gasoline in order to drive and fight to steal more gas. |
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Seeing the camera, everyone acts boorishly and jostles to get in front. |
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Rick looked up at the ship, it was moving too slow and too late, it might get off some shots but not enough to stop them or to get the breach out of the way. |
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Wash interiors of appliances used for food preparation such as inside of fry pans, slow cookers, etc. taking care not to get electrical parts wet. |
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Their little son, Arelan, runs around with his toy gun, but his father, Osman, had to get a real one to protect his house. |
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So I put his books up on a high shelf and tried to get on with the unloveable Red Brigade of deconstructivists and post-structuralists I was supposed to identify with now. |
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It's almost amusing, until one of them sinks into a pool of oily sludge and wings greased, struggles helplessly to get free as the others fly off. |
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If you are successful and you get a body armor that will stop a certain size slug, he's going to come at a different angle or he's going to get armor-piercing slugs. |
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I'm hoping to get a few more from lollygaggers and slugabeds. |
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Having no towel, she had to get out and stand for a while, sluicing the water from her body in an attempt to dry herself enough to put her clothes back on. |
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Without a floor mat, snow and slush can soak into your carpet, through the carpet padding, and you will hardly notice that it already caused your floor pans to get rusty. |
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Gleneagles Hotel has managed to get a massive reduction in its water bill after threatening to dig boreholes in its grounds and create its own private water supply. |
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In fact the fence where a fullgrown lion and tiger are kept is so low that I was able to put my arm over the fence to get an unobscured photograph. |
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Then they have to get the wholesaler on the line and find out which dealer purchased the gun from the wholesaler. |
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But happily, by following these simple guidelines, you are sure to get through with flying colors. |
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Graphically, Big Brother is very cartoon-like. The graphics are nothing to get excited over and besides a few supposedly exclusive video clips, it's all rather unornamented. |
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The moment he's sitting in his smalls centre stage, rocking backwards and forwards, moaning to himself, a suggestion is made that perhaps it's time to get out of Dodge. |
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It's going to be small potatoes compared to the bruising he's going to get from Republicans, including the president, if in fact he gets the Democratic nomination. |
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On a hot griddle, sear the edges to get a sealed bar effect, then place in a roasting tray with the unpeeled garlic cloves scattered throughout the dish. |
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Smaller companies have lower cost bases, and they are more likely to be able to get value from 10-million-barrel fields which would represent small change to the majors. |
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Shy, plump, wearing a hand-knitted blue angora bolero, slaved over by my mother unpicked more than once to get it just right for the big occasion. |
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I did this in an effort to get some much-needed answers for the Wilkins family. |
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As it is, the wind is certainly howling and the snow is certainly blizzarding and the roads are unplowed, but if we had to get out to get somewhere, we could. |
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While my better half was absorbed in details of converted temples, under-floor heating, and plunge pools, I was able to get on with a little botanising. |
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With her open Midwestern face and winsome smile, it was easy for her to get into conversations. |
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After all, to get a FISA judge to grant a warrant, you at least need to know the name of the person you want to wiretap. |
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There was no room to budge but we were all anxious to get to the Provincial House and find out how it had withstood the quake. |
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That was a cue to get to the bottle-o and buy him a six pack. |
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It took Emily at least twenty minutes to coax Callie from the bathroom floor, and even longer to get her dressed in a long-sleeve shirt and pajama bottoms. |
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When the bottom of the harbour schemes were uncovered, the government of the day changed laws and even backdated changes to get back the tax revenue that had been lost. |
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Are you reliant on the bus, car or train to get from point A to B to C each day? |
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But before long, Morgan was ready to get off the wonk and back to the Oval Office. |
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Most of them just need jobs, and these jobs are extremely easy to get because of the undesirable, and downright horribly nasty and cruel, nature of the work. |
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Slippers and shoes with velcro closures are fast and easy to get on and off, which makes them a good choice for bouldering and climbing in the gym. |
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Owens said Udall just wanted to get all the facts out about the Bush-era black sites. |
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A model of patience, persistence and perseverance Marvan has taught not only the cricketers, but all of us, how to get a task nobly accomplished unperturbed and unruffled. |
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Up until the 19th century abortion was illegal, however this meant that women were forced to get rid of unwanted pregnancies in unsanitary and dangerous conditions. |
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For somebody to get four months is absolutely unsatisfactory. |
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