Little piped whirls of mashed potato, and crunchy steamed broccoli, carrots and mange tout, all toothsome and delicious. |
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Nevertheless, marketers are increasingly eager to tout their wares to Broadway's captive audience. |
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Maybe they should have Gough out on the doorsteps as a pitchman, dodging the election canvassers to personally tout the club's wares. |
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A handful of profiteers, cashing in on this occasion to barter superstition, are ready to tout articles relating to funerals. |
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The US government's only hope is Kevin's identical twin Jake, an ticket tout who is planning to marry his student nurse girlfriend Julie. |
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Hawkers tout their wares, housewives haggle and workmen of Venice's last working boat yard scrub barnacles from the bottoms of slender craft. |
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This is the blowback from all those aggressive public health campaigns that tout the importance of mental health care. |
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Whether it's pitch battles, boardroom corruption, manager's bungs or ticket tout scandals, the whole league stinks of sleaze. |
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Indeed the corner of my road in years past was one where ladies of the night would tout their business most evenings. |
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In Dungiven in County Londonderry in the 1970s I was told to respond to a tout who was on the run. |
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Our dishes arrived with a generous supply of potatoes, mange tout, and courgettes in a tomato dressing. |
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Three months later, he agreed to become a tout in return for the FBI paying his air fares and expenses in Ireland. |
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The farmers grew a mixture of export crops including mange tout peas, sugar snap peas and baby corn. |
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Here, wrapped in plastic, are small clusters of perfect baby corn and mange tout from plantations in Kenya. |
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Although I've travelled a lot without a valid ticket, I've never bought or sold to a ticket tout. |
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Choosing what's right for you can be a difficult task, and almost all sites will tout their wares as the strongest Salvia available. |
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Why hand your cash over to a tout when you could work your passage, get a more secure sleeping area and get in for free? |
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Perhaps the liberatory moment comes because you're not in thrall to the art object as such, but rather to the force of creativity tout court. |
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Anyway, this place has the hardest working tout or urger or whatever they're called in Australia. |
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It also prompted Bailey to tout the filly, trained by Frank Brothers, as a possible starter in the Breeders' Cup Sprint. |
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There are quite a few ornamental fences, and they all tout their own types of picket attachment. |
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Headlines tout the pros and cons of stock options in a volatile market. |
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At Chawri Bazar, in old Delhi, bicycle-rickshaw riders tout for business, while stray cows lounge around in the middle of the roundabout. |
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Other spots, such as one with a fly-casting road warrior, tout the rooms' coffee makers, data ports and locations ideal for extending business trips into leisure stays. |
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Beatty recommended her to the head of the William Morris Agency in Paris who signed her tout suite. |
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When they tout the virtues of this doctrine, they are being insincere. |
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They don't tout their wares on the internet or at UK property exhibitions. |
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That is unless you're prepared to shell out a hefty sum to a ticket tout. |
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You must get lost like everyone else in the covered bazaar and be picked up by a charming tout who will show you the Bey's bed and the view from the rooftops. |
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After a two-month trial, a former racetrack tout and his former accountant were found guilty of conspiracy to defraud people who invested in a racing syndicate. |
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They started calling me a tout and saying they were going to shoot me. |
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It is true that first-order predicate logic is so constructed as to admit no such distinction, but that does not mean that there is no such distinction tout court. |
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Our response to this argument is that not all Conceptual Art was generic-type art tout court, and that its reflection in painting is thus similarly non-generic. |
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The roots of post-structuralism and its unifying basis lie in a general opposition not to the philosophical tradition tout court but specifically to the Hegelian tradition. |
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Eager and determined to get that first break as a 3D animator, you've sorted out your showreel which you're going to tout around all the Soho post-production companies. |
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Avoiding the cab tout trap, we take a short and hairy bus ride through narrow and congested streets. |
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But every few years a news article will tout the increased popularity of rabbit as an American dinner item. |
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That big brain we so tout today was shaped by the mammoths we hunted, by the great cats and bears that sometimes stalked us. |
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Expanding an effort to position Caller ID as family friendly, Sprint this week will break a new TV, print and radio campaign in local markets to tout the service. |
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You know, it's easy for people, oh, he's a tout and informer. |
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Williams used his syndicated column and radio and television appearances to tout the act, without publicly disclosing that he was a paid shill for the government. |
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For most of his career at the top of rugby he left the minutiae of coaching to others, and only began to tout his tactical influence when his team started winning. |
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They tout engaging plot lines, sharp illustrations and alluring wines that capture immediate attention. |
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Occupants in the 2009 Fit will undoubtedly tout its roominess and its mostly unobstructed 360-degree visibility out its expansive windows. |
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It can take a whopping 23,654 miles of global travel before a combination of carrots, runner beans, chicken, mange tout and potatoes arrive in homes here. |
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From tour guides to chefs, glass blowers to club owners, they each tout different talents to hit the jackpot. |
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The Purple Rain artist does not want people being ripped off by ticket tout websites and took to Twitter to vent his anger. |
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And when the aura of sports reaches the stratospheric level of a Michael Jordan, tout le monde takes notice. |
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The Alice band crowd spoke posh, as I regarded it then, wore elegant pumps and ate mange tout. |
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Vienna, Austria based a tout le Monde Studios is owned and operated by Muammer Derebasi. |
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Passe un certain degre de coriacite ou de misere, la vie parfois se reveille et cicatrise tout. |
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To equate auletrides with prostitutes tout court is an overgeneralisation, which in turn impacts on the reading of the imagery. |
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Ah, Bess, my covess, strike me blind if my sees don't tout your bingo muns in spite of the darkmans. |
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They waft around with just an intellectual tome in hand and c'est tout. |
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Investment banks, magic circle law firms and international consultancies are permanent fixtures at Accra's plush hotels, where they are literally queuing up to tout for business. |
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Le tout Minsk turns out in protest, catching the authorities by surprise. |
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The Annalistes, especially Lucien Febvre, advocated a histoire totale, or histoire tout court, a complete study of a historical problem. |
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The stir fried vegetables consisted of courgettes, mange tout, bokchoi and spinach. |
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It's been a grim year for crooked ticket tout Michael Rangos, who first graced this column more than a decade ago. |
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According to a News of The World, the Chelsea skipper uses notorious ticket tout Tony Bruce as a fixer. |
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The operation was the latest in a series of initiatives designed to fine-tune the force's ticket tout taskforce. |
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The operation was the latest in a series designed to fine-tune West Mid-lands Police's ticket tout taskforce. |
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A TICKET tout who sold fake Liverpool tickets for six times the real price has been banned from all football games for four years. |
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A TICKET tout was banned from football matches for five years after being caught red-handed trying to flog seats to a crucial Liverpool clash. |
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Media controlled by Boris Berezovsky, the Putin sponsor reportedly denied entry to Davos by Swiss authorities, tout the new Napoleon to the skies and besmear opponents. |
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Extending the scope to cover holiday clubs and other similar products is a great step forward in protecting the consumer from what had previously been an easy target for the unscrupulous tout. |
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Our daughter had sweet and sour king prawns with onions, cucumber, tomatoes, pineapple and mange tout. |
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But the ticket tout had swindled him: he was shoved off at Cardiff. |
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The first card features an obviously drunk employee doing a ridiculous striptease in front of his alarmed and mocking co-workers as he chants Tout le monde tout nu! |
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Other regions of Japan eager to attract high-tech manufacturers boast about their wonderful infrastructure or cheap land, but officials in Kyushu tout their unpolluted water. |
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Il monte malgre tout sur le premier podium de sa carriere en terminant second. |
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A variety of uniforms, worn by the officers at different tables, gave colour and distinction to a tout ensemble with which even Norgate could find no fault. |
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Best sticking to camper vans to tout their jingle jangle pop rock around. |
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If you want to catch the bus, you'd better leave tout de suite! |
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You're insulting me but you can have it for that,' the ticket tout moaned. |
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Skinner told the court he was an experienced ticket tout who travelled the world buying and selling tickets and merchandise to sporting events, concerts and festivals. |
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It is a long time since I have been on a cruise but I know that if a ship's captain tried to fist bump me I would be packing my bags and heading back for shore tout de suite. |
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Two men and two women, aged between 28 and 36, were arrested on suspicion of fraud and ticket tout offences after Scotland Yard raided addresses in London and Her tfordshire. |
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In fact, during periods of muted interparty conflict, such as the 1950s and early 1960s, presidents may tout the inclusiveness of their party identities. |
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Le malade est tout de suite mis sous traitement a base de cortisone. |
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Make their favourite stir-fry, such as chicken with carrots, mange tout, baby corn and water chestnuts, and wilt in some spinach at the last minute. |
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