To some he appeared disorganized, slapdash, cheerful to the point of flippancy. |
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Why don't they just get to the point and start making dopamine reuptake inhibitors? Would they be addictive? |
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That raises the intensity level to the point of making each practice truly productive instead of just a walk-through of the plays. |
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You might want to hear a prettier version or be waltzed through a magical forest before I get to the point. |
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Malcolm Fraser as prime minister and Bob Hawke as ACTU president had a habit of driving themselves to the point of collapse. |
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More to the point, we are a nation of accountants, consultants and financial advisers. |
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I cleaned my plate, to the point of taking a corn tortilla and mopping up the last cheesy queso smear. |
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Certain fields around the community have become waterlogged to the point that cultivation has become impossible, he pointed out. |
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Among the dishes made from barley, barley porridge is more delicate than oatmeal porridge, to the point of being rather insipid. |
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It's simple, it's to the point, there's a lightness of feel to it, and it achieves results. |
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Audience participation was animated to the point that the quizmaster had to hush the audience during the tie to pre-empt prompts. |
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The small target, defensive quality of so much of the campaign has wearied me to the point of querying the worth of the democratic process. |
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It went on like that for a few months until it got to the point where we were truanting from school every day and smoking weed. |
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His voice was completely at odds with the content of what he had just said, light to the point of jocularity. |
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Although his subsequent post still has some bearing to the point of the article I linked, his behavior is reprehensible. |
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The injury has progressed to the point that the heads can dislocate or come out of joint. |
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My temper has been short to the point of exploding, I have raged at the smallest thing. |
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It's got to the point where even if I put the bathroom light on they scream abuse at me. |
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By now, you've probably alienated the Judaizers to the point that they will no longer listen to you. |
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In the late Seventies and Eighties the production of westerns declined to the point that several critics affirmed the death of the genre. |
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Thence proceeding westwardly along the south bank of the Cornwallis River to the point of commencement. |
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I've rambled on for quite a bit, and, as is typical, I haven't managed to get to the point yet. |
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That means a long car journey and, more to the point, an argument about what music to play. |
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I got to the point where Mary whatshername was trapped in a jail and I gave up. |
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I find that if I concentrate on the geometric shapes and unfocus to the point of occular agony they rarify into a twisting tunnel. |
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If the petitioner can show that he and his class stand together and will benefit or suffer rateably, then his ill motive is nothing to the point. |
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They're slight to say the least and ordinary-looking to the point of affectedness. |
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By now, my katzenjammer had eased to the point where my head only throbbed if I made sudden movements. |
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It's got to the point now where there are so many signs that they blur into a background hiss of white noise. |
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He did appreciate the chickens again, though not to the point of kecking, and thought that any farm animal that made noise was amusing. |
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To help you to keep to the point of your letter, you can draw up an outline to plan your letter. |
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More to the point, it has facilitated many reactions that depend upon acetic acid as a reagent or solvent. |
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His research is thorough and complete, even to the point of documenting the incomplete record keeping of German flying squadrons. |
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Demidenko fusses around with agogics and tempo fluctuation to the point where the music's unity and cumulative power fall by the wayside. |
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I had gotten to the point where I felt like I was rowing against the stream. |
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The band, as could be expected for one that toured so much, was airtight in their performance, almost to the point of seeming robotic. |
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And it gets to the point where you have to put your foot down and just say I'm sorry, but this interview is over. |
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Weiss has been knocking around L.A. for decades, to the point that he's now considered a fixture on the scene. |
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More to the point, though, they've settled on a workable sound and they use it quite effectively. |
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More to the point, France was no longer a world power, and its relationship with its colonies was particularly fraught. |
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Rawlins operates on the streets, filtering the ghetto life around him through a world view that is cynical to the point of world-weary. |
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It takes years to build up your image and esteem to the point where the your inner sense of worth meets your outer sense. |
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The author refines a paper to the point that it is ready for exposure and discussion. |
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The language in the book is terse and concise, almost laconic, and very much to the point. |
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Its to the point now that I don't even check the guide on Tuesday nites to see what fights are being aired. |
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Watching tournament play reignites some of that interest, though not to the point where I would ever enter a contest. |
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More to the point, might he have to resign if he blew up two trains for a lark? |
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The trouble is, I'm a bit of a veteran, having played both Tekken 2 and 3 to the point of repetitive strain injury. |
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She looked like she was fed laughing gas involuntarily to the point where she couldn't be happier. |
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Airlines have shrunk schedules and staffs to the point of eliminating what were laughingly referred to as meals on many routes. |
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I was revising for my exams at University and got to the point where I was loaded with facts, so I took off for a walk round the lake. |
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That's because, left unchecked, black rhino populations can grow to the point where females are competing with other rhinos for food. |
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On the physical level, a car crash which brings you close to the point of death may leave you paralysed for life. |
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Men jumped from the ship into lifeboats, overcrowding them to the point of capsizing. |
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The pastry was light and the pears and ice cream moreish to the point of danger. |
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His habits and tastes were profoundly bourgeois, and he was regular in his habits to the point of rigidity. |
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Imagine you are making jam and have gotten to the point where you pour the steaming liquor of fruit, sugar, and pectin into the jars. |
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So, to come to the point, there will also be room for some hesitancy about determinism and freedom. |
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Always suspicious to the point of paranoia, Constantius struck at the roots of conspiracy. |
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Despite his rotund appearance, the professor was physically fit to the point of being rather scary and unnatural in his movements. |
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Under the scheme diamond producer countries would control the production and transport of rough diamonds from the mine to the point of export. |
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Even more to the point, it makes you wonder how on earth it got past the usual film-industry round of development meetings and off the ground. |
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More to the point, he'd lost his interest in life, preferring to dwell on the past rather than look to the future. |
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She had lived ascetically to the point where she destroyed her fragile mental and physical health. |
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And it got to the point where I was working two jobs at a time and we were still just barely scraping by. |
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Add to the point where the glaze is a little on the runny side, but not too thin where it won't stick to your brush. |
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The color photography is muted throughout, with the exception of the red, which is astonishingly vibrant to the point of overload. |
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I was reckless in my ways, dangerous and unpolished to the point of being branded a rustic. |
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You just want enough pressure to deliver the spray, but not atomize it to the point that it can be easily carried by the wind. |
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Often we are not battered to the point that we display horrendous scars, visible bruises or lumps and bumps. |
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Teeth subject to intrusive luxation have been intruded into the alveolar bone, which may occur to the point that the teeth are not visible. |
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Through this and future augmentations, we hope that the population levels increase to the point where the species can again sustain itself. |
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I mean, they were such a beloved tag team in their day to the point that several sports forums that I visit had folks mention his passing. |
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He beguiles his friends and infuriates his enemies, to the point where they can hardly mention his name. |
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Spam clogs our mailboxes daily to the point where it threatens viability of e-mail as a communications tool. |
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She manages a brash, confident, and sassy manner that works well in the part, but is not overdone to the point of being unwelcome. |
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By the album's last few tracks, the fills outweigh the backbeats to the point where he's pushing fusion jazz territory. |
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The narrative technique is traditional to the point of being old-fashioned, as mentioned above. |
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The foreground music irritated us just that little bit to the point it makes a calm chap feel tetchy. |
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A dancer attempts to run up the slope, but repeatedly slips down, to the point of tedium. |
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He is particularly scathing about one member whom he characterises as callous, spineless and non-confrontational to the point of duplicity. |
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More to the point, however, is that I used to run a marketing department and I've done some telemarketing. |
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The next several weeks Landon's recovery progressed to the point where he had some movement in his arms and could maneuver in a wheelchair. |
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Maybe your boring office job is frustrating you to the point of complete despair. |
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As I said he was in a bad temper most of the time, frustrated to the point of tears by his incapacity. |
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As I rolled backwards into the warm waters I was surprised to the point of grunting in contentment. |
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Miles, the more successful, exaggerated the decorative qualities of his father's style to the point of mannerism. |
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Lucius has an amazing charisma, to the point where a previous guard practically became his manservant. |
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Patients feel that modern medical science has become too commercial, almost to the point of being labeled as unethical. |
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Still in control their concentration wavered to the point that the game became scrappy and disjointed. |
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First the Gulf, then the Balkan campaigns honed the syntax of 24-hour reporting almost to the point of banality. |
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The amount of background information in the link essays is generally superficial, sometimes to the point of banality. |
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His words depressed me to the point where I decided not to pursue script writing, even though I love writing scripts. |
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But more to the point, almonds mean marzipan, which also originated in the Orient. |
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Apply the spray to the point of runoff to as many surfaces as possible, especially joints, seams, cracks, ledges, and corners. |
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More to the point, for all his maundering about the estate tax, it hasn't done anything to break up the great fortunes of our era. |
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Some labels put all their eggs in one basket, pushing their meal ticket to the point of virtual overexposure. |
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If it does come, it would be triggered by the naked greed of a nation that is selfish and self-centred to the point of gross stupidity. |
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Fortunately, the logic on which this message rests is absurd to the point of self-contradiction. |
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This is wishful thinking pursued to the point of deception and self-deception. |
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His protagonists, with few exceptions, are driven to self-destruction or weakened to the point of being destroyed. |
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Other corporate labels distort classical definitions to the point of mutual self-destruction. |
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My mother distrusted the parenting abilities of all my friends' parents to the point where it was embarrassing. |
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Whether it was a chance meeting or a planned meeting is not relevant to the point we were making. |
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Given a fair wind and, more to the point, given the burden and standard of proof required to incriminate him, this story might well have worked. |
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Keiko rose her eyebrows, waiting for Anji to skip the melodramatics and get to the point. |
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He has refined his skills with the inside pitch to the point that people rarely talk about his beanballs anymore, if at all. |
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In one attack, a bar owner was repeatedly beaten to the point where he thought he was going to be killed. |
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We showed a lack of sensitivity to how deferential they are, almost to the point of taking pleasure in grief. |
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That way he'd scare the bejabbers out of her, and unnerve her to the point where she really WAS ready to cry. |
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Coventry's opening was brisk and sufficiently to the point to put Tottenham on their mettle. |
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You could also attach the halyard or topping lift to the point on the boom where the sheet attaches, as well. |
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More to the point, would Ansel Adams have used digital cameras if he were alive today? |
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The chapters are brief and to the point, making the book easy to read, and to put down and pick up. |
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If the safety of teenage girls is the objective, then money spent on taxis home is more to the point. |
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More to the point still, is this potential to anger particularly strong in the media? |
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More to the point, if I made a copy of a cassette, the copy would be inferior to the original. |
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Why is she phoning me and more to the point, why is she phoning me at 9 in the morning? |
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More to the point, this marks a subtle shift in the nature of what a computer is. |
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More to the point, I wonder how much those coffee addicts spend on their habit in a week? |
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In fact, more to the point, why stand for election to something you only want to destroy? |
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He was pale-skinned to the point of translucence and his sunken eyes were dark with fatigue. |
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The painkillers slowly shut down their kidney function and they toxify their liver to the point where it just can't work any more. |
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Ironic, too, that he's diffident to the point of sheepishness, even in front of the most adoring audience. |
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People have grown accustomed to political shenanigans to the point where it's considered a form of entertainment. |
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Probably more to the point, he was in charge, and didn't want comments from any minions who might happen to notice. |
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My eyes darted to the point of the noise and saw a small shiny black object with earphones. |
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She had very bad shin splints to the point of a stress fracture after taking classes on a concrete floor. |
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His vision of America and of life was tough, irreverent, astringent almost to the point of misanthropy. |
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In some schools it is common not to be consulted if a child is misbehaving until it gets to the point when it has become very bad. |
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She was trim and aware of her body, unafraid to diet to the point of starvation until she had matched her physical presence to her mind's ideal. |
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I find that the opposition to this bill is far-fetched, to the point of being ridiculous. |
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These young birdling things are driving me to the point of borrowing a gun. |
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How do you get to the point where you can create something without wanting to tear it to pieces five seconds later? |
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It got to the point where I actually managed to convince myself it was the truth. |
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It's comforting, I suppose, to think that the Government cares so much about our safety to the point of mollycoddling. |
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He spoke little, and when he spoke he was always brief, but what he said was usually decisive and always undeviatingly to the point. |
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The leaked programme for the next legislative session was undramatic to the point of self-parody. |
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The album tends to be fairly formulaic in parts, though never really to the point of being unenjoyable. |
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It wasn't as if he was speaking Gaelic, his first language, simply that his Lewis lilt was unfamiliar to the point of incomprehension. |
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They are intense to the point of being slightly odd, but only a fool wouldn't love them to bits. |
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We can only estimate the relative expansion slippage rates and contraction slippage rates compared to the point mutation rate. |
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I won't go into the idea in detail now as it's unimportant to the point I am trying to make. |
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Drier styles became more popular, to the point where admitting to a preference for sweet red fizz was the ultimate in naffness. |
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This is evaporated and coagulated by slow heating, often carried to the point at which the product is quite dry and crumbly. |
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These unliberated tendencies irritate some feminists to the point of recklessness. |
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He heard his voice slur almost to the point of being unable to understand him. |
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Grabbing my camera I stepped out and along the lane to the point where there is a view of the sky unobstructed by houses. |
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It took a long time from the moment when the idea was born to the point when the work was actually started. |
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And Clarke, of course, made his name with Fred Dagg, a character who appeared unperturbed to the point of coma. |
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I hope this system will improve our reliability to the point where the only outages we suffer are really the extremely unexpected black swans. |
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In a lot of scenes I come on and do these very brief, very tense monologues, and go off, each time to the point of breakdown. |
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She decided to go straight to the point when she noticed my blank and confused expression. |
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It got to the point that I could make them blindfold, in about four minutes with no recipe, because I did it every single day. |
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To top it all off the staff members were unaccommodating to the point of being rude and unnecessarily shifted passengers around mid-journey. |
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When they didn't, she felt utterly shattered and unappreciated, to the point where she is now talking of resigning. |
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Meygan was laughing so hard she would have shaken the ladder to the point of unbalance if it weren't for Rachel and Nikki holding her steady. |
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He says the problem got so bad that it began affecting his asthma, to the point where the air in his apartment became unbreathable. |
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I am uncertain how, in those circumstances, she can reserve her position in relation to the point. |
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We live in an age of sizzle over substance, of hyping everything to the point of utter annoyance. |
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People in many other cultures view this insistence on getting to the point as rude and uncultured. |
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The rest of the cast either underplays their role or overplays it to the point of being far too cartoonish. |
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It will grow to the point where they'll be able to incorporate it into some aspects of their body shop. |
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I think we understood each other's situation, almost to the point that you become protective of each other. |
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While the mass populous is being pumped with merriment to the point of nausea a single Misfit can be seen in the distance. |
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It was a calculated, callous attempt to undermine Castro and the Cuban Government, essentially bludgeoning the Cubans to the point where the country would become ungovernable. |
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That way, the Senate still slows things down, but not to the point of incapacitation. |
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I want to get the entire site to the point where I don't feel compelled to redo it ever again, and where what I'd done is not completely embarrassing. |
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Worse still, the electro beat that underscores most of the album wears thin to the point of redundancy by the time the closing track rolls around. |
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On the larger front, it's gotten to the point where I now start to twitch even before clicking on-line. |
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A student nurse ordinarily in excellent health starts having menstrual cramps and hyperventilates producing all the symptoms listed above, even to the point of tetany. |
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How could things in Ukraine have deteriorated to the point where Putin was now engaged in such a reckless act of aggression? |
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It may cause a traffic jam or a tailback to the point of gridlock. |
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She remained always allergic to sanctimony, impatient with convention, honest to the point of impropriety. |
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As with any exercise, it can be overdone to the point of diminishing returns and negative health consequences. |
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We worship our sporting heroes to the point where while they are on top they can do little wrong and more often than not we cut them some slack if they slip on a banana skin. |
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More to the point, his suffering and unhappiness had taken their toll. |
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Geraghty's professors are by and large men timid in scholarship, locked into mindless routines and shy to the point of cold rudeness in personal dealings. |
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So she has to be perfect and self-sacrificing to the point of self-annihilation. |
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The potential new species strides ahead up the fitness curve, leaving its more poorly-adapted predecessors languishing behind, to the point when they are driven to extinction. |
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It's to the point where maybe I should get credit in their mastheads. |
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Sadly, this was the point where I realised that Fuel have made the mistake of carrying on their signature riffs right through the album to the point of repetitiousness. |
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More to the point, he fells a victim to an obvious amphibology. |
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The upshot is, you can expect to be touched, even to the point of tears, as well as moved to chortles and guffaws. |
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And the onslaught of the elements has helped raise tensions to the point where a new explosion is expected any day. |
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For her part, Michele, in interviews, is eloquent, to the point, and assured. |
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The housing plan, whose details were at last announced this week, has also been encouragingly to the point. |
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Back to the point, it has been leapfrogged by several other visualizers. |
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Once your plant has gotten to the point of being limp, leathery, and wrinkled, reviving the plant is usually a long process and often unsuccessful. |
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The writing of Across the River and into the Trees drew on his wartime experiences and seemed to merge his exaggerations with his fictional hero to the point of self-parody. |
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Even the Native Americans, who were massacred almost to the point of extinction, escaped the curse of race slavery. |
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We observed females from distances of 3-20 m with binoculars and a headlamp dimmed with a rheostat to the point where the female was just visible. |
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The woman was very vague to the point of being uninterested. |
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It even makes Cersei jealous to the point where she calls her out on it at the Purple Wedding. |
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For all its filthiness, Hysterical Literature is clean to the point of precision. |
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Given his record for stirring controversy and goading spectators sometimes to the point of violence, you believe that appeasing the audience is low on his list of priorities. |
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Air is first cooled to the point at which all of the gases in it liquefy. |
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Another whose calls I always welcomed was a young civil servant in the Board of Trade, an orderly man whose remarks and replies were brief and to the point. |
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He is shy, obsessive, self-critical to the point of parody, and liable to spontaneously combust when confronted by anyone who fails to meet his standards. |
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There continues to be the same emphasis on locking the human figures into their physical surroundings to the point where they are indistinguishable one from the other. |
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When he did engage, his answers were garbled to the point of incomprehensibility. |
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She is eager to please her lost father, to the point of self-destruction. |
|
Albertan opposition parties are tiny to the point of insignificance. |
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When those enemies are supposed to represent real people, however, this convention seems horribly misrepresentative to the point of being offensive. |
|
Diffident, brusque and self-effacing to the point of invisibility, he was not the first person you would choose if you wanted to mount a charm offensive. |
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However, Burns seems to feel that she made the transition to film without missing a beat, even to the point of acting as post-production supervisor. |
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I've cut down on the booze to the point where I go days without a tipple. |
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He was tall and thin almost to the point of delicateness, but he didn't look like a beanpole, and I don't think I would have described him as lanky either. |
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Listen, Lorus, his body has atrophied to the point where he can't move. |
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Sadly the rest of the second half was trite to the point of boredom. |
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Those charged are accused of blockading the lone road into the reserve and intimidating the community to the point where 400 members felt the need to flee. |
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Don't go into too much detail in the report. Just keep it simple and to the point. |
|
Work that alienates one reader to the point of antagonism can feel like a perfect fit to another. |
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In other words, the Supreme Court has defined democracy as a branch of capitalism, right up to the point of actual vote-buying. |
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Like all barbiturates, it can overwhelm alertness to the point of stopping the urge to breathe. |
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Got to the point where Onstad boiled over, cornered Johnny, bawled him out. |
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More to the point, Huckabee has a natural appeal to a party that has come to represent the bulk of working class white voters. |
|
For a notorious waffler, Beazley's speech was brief and to the point. |
|
The demand for his knives, tomahawks, powder horns, hunting pouches and other hand-crafted items finally grew to the point it became a full time endeavor. |
|
On the one hand this is an enormously generous, inclusive and warm-hearted book, but, on the other, it carries these qualities to the point of vagueness and idealism. |
|
|
Cold and clinical to the point of boredom, filled with emotionless commentary and business jargon, it was difficult to tell what effect this character was meant to have. |
|
These rules had been strongly enforced during authoritarian regimes to the point that people risked imprisonment or even death if they failed to follow them. |
|
Across the board, the mixes manage to obfuscate the content by either sampling to the point of irrelevance, cutting lyrics, or just submerging them deep within the mix. |
|
Trekkies are defensive about the minutiae of their sacred source material, sometimes to the point of pretension. |
|
It was rare that he got excited to the point of babbling about anything, but the thrill of catching and taming a wild horse was something she could easily understand. |
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He got to the point where he could estimate his hematocrit level by the color of his blood. |
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She performs a solo of impossible postures, in which she acquits herself with aplomb, but which leaves the spectator's mind and muscles tensed to the point of spasm. |
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More to the point, he makes his fascination palpable in this journey from the heights of the WWF to the depths of one-night stands in tank towns in Nebraska. |
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More to the point, if he really does want to use the DMCA to subpoena the information why not file a John Doe lawsuit and then subpoena the information? |
|
He was a natural at teasing Cody and bouncing his little brother around up to the point where Kayla wondered if the little boy was going to toss his cookies all over Landon. |
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The content of the preface was repeated to the point of meaninglessness. |
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We are driven back to the point, I think, as we so often are in public administration, that the answer lies as much in the wise exercise of discretion. |
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She says the humane Society would like to enforce spay and neuter laws to the point where there would be no purebred dogs left. |
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He and CR5 had made use of the ship's wetware downloading system to temporarily enhance his brain to the point where he could easily function in the absence of time. |
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He had neglected his army to the point where there were mass desertions and even defections to Mongol ranks. |
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More to the point, the maneuver is increasing the U.S. money supply by that amount. |
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More to the point, while the food was never likely to send either of us into raptures, it was certainly well above average, and very sensibly priced. |
|
More to the point, there was none of the provincial tweeness I had expected to find, only a bright but welcoming interior and a menu that made the mouth water. |
|
On the intercom she recognized Landon's voice and immediately understood he was extremely inebriated to the point where his speech was undecipherable. |
|
More to the point, what did I do to make a T-shirt company unfollow me? |
|
|
There are long lines of cars stocking up on gas, to the point most gas stations imposed a 20 liter limit. |
|
Floating on languid, perhaps to the point of tepidity, surfaces. |
|
Unfortunately, software development has not progressed to the point where ready-made modules are available to order and combined to create your software. |
|
I also hear that we have got so besotted with cleansing ourselves to the point of the driven snow that the bosses can't even be seen in a corporate box these days. |
|
Players score for cards melded according to the point values printed on the cards, and are penalised for unmelded cards when another player goes out. |
|
One school of thought is that it's designed to last long enough for a couple to rear children to the point where they are relatively self-sufficient. |
|
I rotated the kick-start to see if the motor was seized. I got it down smoothly to the point where it would start to rotate the motor, and then nothing. |
|
He seems impatient with you, almost testy to the point of animosity. |
|
At times his enthusiasm got the better of him, to the point where he began to have a total disregard for the white lines which mark out the playing area. |
|
The region behind the shoulder blades rises into a hump, and the neck is short and thick, to the point of being nearly immobile. |
|
At times Air Force and CAS efforts blended to the point of indistinguishability. |
|
Rolt and Robert Aickman has helped revive interest in the UK's canals to the point where they are a major leisure destination. |
|
We have got to the point where the efforts of staff to prop up the system are no longer enough to keep the system afloat. |
|
Though she's superficial to the point of noxiousness and obsessed with amassing cultural cache, her ridiculous affectations make up for it. |
|
McTaggart was supposedly beaten to the point that he lost sight in one of his eyes. |
|
Sally was generous and open-hearted to the point of foolishness, but that was her experience. |
|
Two of these evolve to the point of seafloor spreading, while the third ultimately fails, becoming an aulacogen. |
|
In most cases, if one species is removed from an ecosystem, other species will most likely be affected, up to the point of extinction. |
|
It became the Leitkultur of the Roman Empire to the point of marginalizing native Italic traditions. |
|
However, in 1913 this agreement deteriorated to the point that the FYN was forced to purchase its own locomotives and rolling stock. |
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Short, sharp phrases cut right to the point, and Tacitus makes no bones about conveying his point. |
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To come to the point at once, I beg to say that I have not the least belief in the Noble Savage. |
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People were weak to the point that they could not move, nor be able to obtain food and water. |
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Her addiction brought her to the point that prostitution was the only means she had to survive. |
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Spellings based on AAVE have become increasingly common, to the point where it has become a normalized practice. |
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Risk of infectious disease transmission related to use of a common communion cup is low, to the point of being undetectable. |
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The domination of sin is complete to the point that people are driven to evil. |
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Consider starting with zero backpressure and increase it only to the point where the screw comes back evenly and consistently during feeding. |
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In either case, the artery suffers restenosis, or narrowing to the point where healthy blood flow is again impaired. |
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This offended Philip to the point where relations with the League were severed. |
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Furthermore, California's domestic partnership law had been expanded to the point that it became practically a civil union law, as well. |
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Sintering is the process of compacting and forming a solid mass of material by heat or pressure without melting it to the point of liquefaction. |
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Agricultural marketing cooperatives provide the services involved in moving a product from the point of production to the point of consumption. |
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The overseer, Monsieur Goffin, led the men to the point in Martin Wery which he judged closest to Mamonster and they commence to dig. |
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Some well known and recognized papermakers have found fame in other fields, to the point that their papermaking background is almost forgotten. |
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They had rooted into their new occupations or moved on in life to the point where the mill was no longer suitable for them. |
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Compared with Europe where pigeon populations have exploded to the point they are both a tourist attraction and a public nuisance. |
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It's just kinda got to the point where it's beat up so bad it's not healing like it should. |
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Service reservoirs store fully treated potable water close to the point of distribution. |
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Hannibal marched his men back to the point in their path prior to their detour, near the broken stretch of the path and set up camp. |
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Oregon's linebackers have improved to the point you could call them the strength of the defense. |
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They have sexfought to the point of exhaustion, fallen asleep cunt-to-cunt, and awakened to renew their spitting battle. |
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This prompts me to probe the foundation of traditional deterrence theory, which evolved in the 1960s to the point of mutual assured destruction. |
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You shitskins are thinking you can victimize yourself to the point where the wiggers and liberals will just turn all the wealth over to you. |
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More to the point, merchandise has been transformed into a permanent spectacle, into a showlike theatre of commodities. |
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Then I think about Georg Cantor, burnt out at forty, and persecuted to the point of madness by people opposed to his ideas about transfinity. |
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Aphids are great fans of lupins and like to suck sap from them to the point where the lupin will wilt. |
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Although it may simplify matters to the point of naivete and vulgarization, such windowshopping may also tell us roughly what is on the market. |
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The Flo 4000 from Flo Healthcare brings mobile computing and vital signs monitoring to the point of care in one wireless mobile workstation. |
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I don't think we'll ever commoditize health care to the point that it'll be like buying cars. |
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More to the point, in falling over itself to honour dignity it's all rather morally simplistic and in several instances, stagily contrived. |
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It's slick to the point of vacancy, and even catchier numbers like Everybody Nose are clunking. |
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Ransomware operations have matured to the point that they are completely automated and carried out through the dark web. |
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Now I'll come to the point and switch to alphabetizing each word fully to see how readable it is. |
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Chapoutier's priceless vineyards on Hermitage are full of life to the point of scruffiness. |
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Q I have been gunsmithing for many yeans and have gradually built up my business to the point that I have hired two additional gunsmiths. |
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After that I progressed to all other drugs both illegal and prescription to the point where at 15 I started injecting amphetamines and heroin. |
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More to the point, it isn't half cold at the moment, especially at the unsaintly hour I have to drag myself into this place every day. |
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If there is a weakness, it is Fleming's determination to be a completist to the point of boredom. |
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We have gotten to the point if an anchor interrupts a talking point, you accuse them of being an operative. |
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