In that same tradition Walsh provides them with some witty, juicy verbiage. |
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The shirt is charcoal in color with the verbiage and imagery in green, blue and white. |
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Last time stamp for this article is early morning, and the verbiage hints at the future, not present or past. |
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A modern cinematic chronicle of baseball's integration has to be bolder about using authentic verbiage. |
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Smiley says her first letters to the Times were edited heavily, with excess verbiage getting the knife. |
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The wording of the amendment is also alleged to include verbiage which would make domestic partnerships and civil unions null and void as well. |
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Bring any two lawyers together for an opinion and they'll argue until the cash, space or verbiage runs out. |
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We highly recommend a professional copywriter to write the verbiage for your home page at the very least. |
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His reports are clear, granular, and well-documented, both in terms of verbiage and photos. |
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I fear that in all the disgusting verbiage of this bill, that does not appear anywhere. |
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If you're not sure what verbiage to use when personalizing a gift such as toasting flutes, you're not alone. |
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As somebody who gets paid to sit in restaurants, I'm well accustomed to deciphering hackneyed old menu descriptions and cheffy verbiage. |
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I do understand the instinct of journalists to translate turgid legal verbiage into clear language. |
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Dwarfed by the scope of the bill's radical changes, this bit of verbiage flew under the public's radar screen. |
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After all, the Internet has an infinite capacity to tuck excess verbiage away where no one need be bothered by it. |
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Even I can't read all that much excessive verbiage, so I certainly don't expect you to do so. |
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Brawarsky's maximalism finally loses its punch in excesses of painterly verbiage. |
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At the time I considered the article a piece of ill-informed verbiage, posing as journalism. |
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Minus the film interaction, however, the opus suffered from overwrought verbiage and meandering vignettes. |
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I've lost jobs because I'll send the contract back and there are more lines going through all the verbiage than there is verbiage. |
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Rothbard meant to be understood and he did not mean to be trapped in irrelevant verbiage. |
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Despite the ramblings of this essay, I am left more with feeling and beingness than with text and verbiage. |
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Cutting through all of the government verbiage and jargon, if you will, what is the impact over the next five years? |
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It is important that the most important and strongest statements are not buried behind excessive verbiage. |
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We want to hose someone with verbiage until they yell uncle. |
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Mr President, this is a report of verbiage, not substance, just as much of the PEACE funding itself was spent upon froth. |
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She doesn't tuck clues away in boring thickets of dense verbiage. |
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The superfluous verbiage melts in the face of the steam rising between Ford and Fisher, or perhaps Lucas's sheer ignorance of human relationships. |
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But does vinous verbiage serve any purpose other than to bemuse run-of-the-mill wine drinkers? |
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It produced much verbiage about colonialism and neocolonialism, with a heavy emphasis on the Western version. |
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Why couch strong emotions in verbiage that veers from orotund to skittering? |
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And forecasts must be expressed numerically, so there can be no hiding behind vague verbiage. |
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So the opposition has been able to stall the assembly. Behind all the constitutional verbiage the main dispute is over money. |
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This Costa report, despite its plausible verbiage, is part of that process of harmonisation aimed at creating a single criminal justice system. |
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Mr. Speaker, more verbiage and volume from the member opposite add nothing. |
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In this situation, he assumed that he had similarly missed the clearance amid the other verbiage. |
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What is being proposed, outside of the verbiage in the first part of the motion, is the net subsidy concept. |
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I see more and more verbiage that paints this conflict in black and white terms. |
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The tremendous volume of the output makes them doubly hard to spot, since they tend to be buried in masses of figures or verbiage. |
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From the verbiage contained in the mountain of documents on this subject, we can glean some challenges which we now have to face urgently. |
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With few lines, his performance is a lesson in how to express internal anguish with little in the way of verbiage and barely a flicker of movement. |
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Political correctness was not part of her vocabulary, but anti-Semitic verbiage was. |
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But the flood of Joan Rivers-style verbiage about her day-to-day wardrobe has overwhelmed those nuanced conversations. |
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If Congress were paid by the word or the page, this verbiage might be understandable. |
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One is that the language is the language of human discourse, and is subject to the same redundancies and occasional verbiage that we all encounter in desultory conversation. |
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Such verbiage and dithering in the face of market mayhem helped Europe get into its mess in the first place. |
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While there is no question that his verbiage is infuriating at times, I think it's a mistake to see him as nothing but an anarchic, anti-rationalist nihilist. |
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And compared with his recent speeches, it wasn't entirely a humdinger of verbiage. |
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Corruption and tyranny both hide in irrelevant public verbiage. |
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Still, compared to most academic texts, Jones's verbiage is only middling. |
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Occasionally, a memorable phrase floats up from the rivers of verbiage. |
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An idea which must be insulated, enshrouded, qualified, and propped by intertwangled verbiage is not ready for release into the world. |
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Among all that verbiage comes the GST and the blended sales tax. |
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In response to the earlier question about polling, certainly I will acknowledge some particular verbiage, but I would say, as I look at polling, I think of it as directional and I try to triangulate with it. |
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I suspect that he has a verbiage of talking points that has been supplied to him by the Liberal government, but I would like him to drop that and listen to what I am about to say. |
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As I said earlier, I will focus on two specific areas that are buried deep within the verbiage of the budget implementation bill that absolutely must be exposed. |
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We have certainly heard a lot of verbiage here this afternoon. |
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Despite its leftish verbiage, it nudged France further towards an open market and helped France grow faster than all of Europe's biggest economies. |
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In response, as Dr Liberman notes, many offending websites have hired computational linguists to churn out syntactically correct but meaningless verbiage including common search terms. |
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Just like their previous shows, the loquacious verbiage is accompanied by songs that they have composed themselves and sing a capella, including a rap song in this latest show. |
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He or she is presented with a sort of Amazonian jungle of leafage — or verbiage — where green, tenacious lives are underfoot, overhead, and all around. |
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Even in its moderate form, this argument presupposes that factual elements can be plucked out of panegyric as nuggets of truth isolated from the dross of empty verbiage. |
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