Now it transpires that in the final days of negotiations Gannett drove a hard bargain, reducing the real value of the deal by tens of millions. |
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Investors already exposed should nevertheless hold on to see what transpires. |
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As it transpires upon careful audition, the individual numbers themselves are far more exquisite than their corresponding visual icons indicate. |
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The story transpires in rural Georgia, and Green pulls the audience into this uninviting setting from the first frame. |
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Proximate preparation is all that transpires generally from, say, late October through December, in terms of anticipations and plans. |
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There is a moment of anxiety as Hills dismounts immediately after the line but it transpires that the filly has just twisted a shoe. |
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Perhaps in that there is a strange lesson for whatever transpires in the culture after the election on 5 May. |
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In the last canto, it transpires that the louse had tumbled down from his own wig. |
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What transpires is a downward spiral of shame and recriminations culminating in Veena being shunned by her family and turned out of the house. |
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Then, when the actual event transpires, things go in a refreshingly unanticipated manner. |
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It transpires that cross-country skiing is an earnest activity for fitness freaks, something joggers can do in the snow. |
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Society, it transpires, hasn't turned him into a derelict, he's managed that all by himself. |
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Just as his good humour can transform the mood of a room, so too, it transpires, can his despondency. |
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So 2004 and 2005 are much better years as global recovery eventually transpires and the impact of lower interest rates feeds through. |
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You know every rat, snitch and scoundrel on this island, and between them they know everything shady that transpires. |
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It transpires that in this region of our galaxy, binary and multiple star systems are more common than singletons like our Sun. |
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A fan of baring all in his movies, it transpires Kevin Bacon also likes to do the same in real life. |
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Only when, and if the collapse of the carry transpires will the curve bears be vindicated. |
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Nearly half the movie transpires before we get to the meat and potatoes of the gunplay. |
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After being downgraded from a planet to a dwarf planet last year, it now transpires it is not even the biggest of those. |
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Of course, on reading the article, it transpires that Blunt is going to be nowhere near the £15,000 delivery room. |
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He, it transpires, was formerly the friend of the composer's copyist, who in turn discovered the journal describing the South Sea islanders while working for the composer. |
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It transpires that the only reason our buyers didn't hand deliver the contracts over the weekend was because one of their names was spelled incorrectly on the forms. |
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It transpires that the health pyramid is a carbon copy of the social inequality pyramid. |
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I think that the general sentiment at the moment is focused on what transpires this week in the Organization of American States, in Washington and then in Canada. |
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We'll need to wait and see what actually transpires now with the data. |
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For example, a video camera continuously monitors everything that transpires, whereas surveillance by wiretap will only be triggered when someone speaks. |
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What enraged and confused the censors was the film's approach to that strange netherworld between dreaming and waking states, in which so much unusual activity transpires. |
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Do you sense any vibrant, you aspens, you transpires, you know where you are. |
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As it transpires, Zelmerlöw is believed to have been merely a bit clumsy with his comments. |
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It transpires that Infiniti had over 130 clients for its non-existent services. |
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If that is the case, I would be more than happy to entertain the request and to deal with it if something else transpires. |
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It now transpires that these proposals are mainly a cost-saving exercise, at the expense of safety. |
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It transpires from the judgement that the judge selectively and incorrectly used these reports. |
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We have already seen, in some countries, what transpires when HIV prevention pressure eases off. |
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In the delivery of our mandate, the importance of bilingualism transpires in all aspects of our day-to-day operations. |
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This means that hers is a formidable task, because whatever transpires between the two clans impacts on her personally and directly. |
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Beside creating shade, vegetation transpires water and thus provokes natural cooling through evaporation. |
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Talk of revelation refers here primarily to what transpires in the lives of believers. |
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It transpires that the proposed price is a market price, as confirmed by independent experts. |
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Ultimately, it transpires that clients have bought Axway solutions in order to connect or better connect their partners with new technologies. |
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Later it transpires little has been lost, but in the meantime Smith says not to worry, if the worst comes to the worst she'll do another interview. |
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This restoration of the poet transpires beyond words, music, and rhyme. |
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Much of the drama that transpires towards the end of the story is due to the pure love itself, not in spite of it. |
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Whether, in fact, the expected actually transpires is not the issue. |
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He's sitting down with Mr. Lavrov in Geneva, and we shall see what transpires. |
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There's even a Junior Senior style that transpires in this track. |
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But when you look closely at exactly what transpires in these workshops, the power they continue to have is astonishing. |
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It transpires that all of these countries need to make further progress. |
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If it transpires that that Member State has forwarded information which is inaccurate or which should not have been forwarded, the recipient Member States shall be informed thereof immediately. |
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The failed prosecution added to the department's shamefacedness in its fight against a criminal conspiracy which, it now transpires, centred on the City of London. |
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If it transpires that a national authority is reluctant to accept the involvement of a CSO, the United Nations can play the useful role of honest broker to clarify the issue and help to remove the obstacle. |
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It transpires that there is an expression even worse than the Smile of the Critic Who Suspects They Might Have Missed This Year's Palme d'Or Winner. |
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If it transpires that the private operators back out owing to profitability problems, the EU should take the consequences and discontinue the project or allow interested Member States to join in, as happened with Boeing. |
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In occurrences involving small vessels similar to the Lo-Da-Kash, capsizing or foundering typically transpires very quickly, leaving little time for the crew to manually deploy a liferaft. |
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It transpires that the Kitson character is a local houseowner who initially staged a tree-squat in protest against the council's policy of pollarding. |
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All of our investigations are carried out to meet the highest evidential standards removing any risk that the incident transpires to be more serious than anticipated. |
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But it often also transpires that those killed were on a Government list of undesirables and that the killings are not exactly lamented by the authorities. |
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Does my hon. friend not know that every member of the Privy Council is sworn to secrecy, that the first oath taken by a privy councillor is to keep secret what transpires in the council. |
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Respondents also generally agreed that the need for representation increases as the consequences of what transpires at proceedings become more definitive. |
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The Member States have thus been consulted, and it transpires that only the United Kingdom has exercised the right to grant exemptions, and this for discount houses. |
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If it transpires that a transport mode cannot develop despite the internalisation of external costs, it may be concluded that the markets are responding to its shortcomings. |
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There is a tendency to ignore the fact that the research on children's cognitive and communicative abilities and in particular their susceptibility to suggestion, applies equally to what transpires in the courtroom. |
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Often an accused may be charged with a number of related, similar or identical counts where, for example, the criminal conduct transpires over a lengthy period of time, or the impugned conduct has many criminal facets. |
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It transpires from the above analysis that, in parallel with the plurality and the complexity of humanitarian programmes and operations, implementing partners have become more diversified and multifunctional. |
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