The farmers were not telling jokes, they were laughing uproariously at the long-haired, dippy hiker bloke. |
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When I admitted the truth, the Collie laughed uproariously for what I thought was an unnecessarily long time, then cast aspersions on my parents. |
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Leave it to them to balance the uproariously bizarre with the mentally disturbed to create a wonderfully schizoid DVD package. |
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Everyone laughed uproariously at this, no doubt making a spectacle of themselves to the other patrons. |
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There are many Liverpool fans who will have spent the last week laughing uproariously at the madness of it all. |
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He laughs uproariously as he finishes off the last of his papdi chaat. |
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Most of this, however, is as foreigners always suspected: more embarrassing than funny. Germans can often be observed laughing, uproariously. |
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When Gavin had told them of his fears and subsequent call to Kids Help Line, they had all laughed uproariously! |
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On stage, employees were singing and performing comedy sketches while their colleagues in the audience wolfed down dim sum and applauded uproariously. |
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It being the early 1950s, everybody was blind drunk and laughed uproariously. |
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She offered no examples of just how her husband makes her laugh so uproariously. |
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The kids all laughed uproariously, and I breathed a sigh of relief. |
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The innocence of his tone makes you smile tenderly at first, to then turn into a caustic irony that makes you laugh uproariously before chilling you to the bone? |
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Whether teaching on the ways of Christ, or relating heartbreak and healing through her personal testimony, she has the ability to have her audience laughing uproariously one moment and tearing up the next. |
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Braced with one leg against the wind screen and the other against the roof, Alain laughing uproariously, we were caught on camera to the delight of all. |
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This understated phrase covers a variety of situations, ranging from members laughing uproariously to the physical invasion of the chamber. |
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I laugh, perhaps a little more uproariously than Moores would like, and press him on the logic of trying to coax Strauss back into form instead of letting Shah make hay. |
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