Apart from anything else, protectionism would be ruinous to developing countries. |
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At a private meeting, he assured them that the LAPD would be their partner, not their antagonist. |
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Maria Borges, an African model in her second VS show, said everyone back home in Angola would be watching her. |
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To call Wild an emotional film would be an egregious disservice to its astounding journey to screen. |
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However a relocation of the royal family to Anglesey would be a huge break with protocol. |
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Jennie kept his parliamentary vestments for her son, apparently instilling in Winston the sense that he would be a leader. |
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But at night, on the stand, there would be no abiding satisfaction for him in what he had done in the past. |
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If Congress accurately reflected our nation on the basis of race, about 63 percent would be white, not 80 percent. |
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Finally, even if the court did decide to pursue charges, it would be unable to apprehend wanted suspects. |
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But there's a ton of value for me in my background and my history, and losing it would be a shame. |
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That would be pretty impressive, considering that acorn no longer exists as an organization. |
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George would take out his lyric book and acoustic guitar and play us the song we would be working on that day. |
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But acquiescing to talks without a settlement freeze would be a major backtrack for Abbas and probably hurt his public standing. |
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If it was The View, someone off to the side would be motioning for the audience to applaud. |
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A spokesman for Lewisham council said last year that it would be forced to act if the family returned to Britain. |
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They, too, would be acutely nervous about revealing the capabilities of their assets. |
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The ad would then count as a coordinated communication and would be subject to strict spending limits. |
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The autopilot would be used throughout a normal flight because the 777, like all large airliners, is difficult to fly manually. |
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It also harkened back to Ada Lovelace, who asserted that machines would be able to do almost anything, except think on their own. |
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McAndrews agreed that the androgenic hormone pill would be problematic for those with a genetic propensity for Ada. |
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Its adaptability and breeding capabilities ensured that it would be selected for mass production on an unimaginable scale. |
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If I had one wish here, it would be for Aden Young to sneak a surprise nod for Rectify. |
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Imagine if hackers from Saudi Arabia said that any TV station in America broadcasting feminists and gays would be attacked? |
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You'd think that when you get the pick of the litter, the litter would be great. |
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Articulating a strong pro-growth message that is anchored in the bedrock of a strong education would be a nice place to start. |
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I wish that the ardor for information on our jobs initiative would be as strong as it is on this other subject. |
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Instead of rushing the adjudication process, parole would be more appropriate. |
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If it passed muster with an adjudicator, it would be put on at the local playhouse. |
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Brown says his greatest joy would be to find that readers of Inferno were avidly discussing Dante. |
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I thought it would be hidden, out in the woods, or some kind of backroom deal. |
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While they adored both music and each other, they were certain that mixing the two would be a bad idea. |
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If ADP had been right and the number had been 175,000, I and the folks on my side would be crowing. |
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Every day, I drove from my flat in Mayfair to abbey Road in joyous expectation of what magic I would be participating in that day. |
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Sometimes the ADS would get in the way of playing, and a perfectly lined up shot would be ruined. |
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First, it would reduce the kinds of ADS that would be subject to strict limits. |
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It could be rolled out whenever it would be most advantageous to the Romney team. |
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When I was covering the wars in Central America, all of us knew that the archbishop would be killed. |
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When he was appointed few expected that he would be able to guide his committee to a radical conclusion but he did. |
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The universe is anarchic and doesn't care about us and unfortunately, there's no greater rhyme or reason as to why it would be me. |
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Even Patrick Dempsey, who plays Dr. Derek Shepherd, would be A-OK with the series coming to an end. |
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Treasury has estimated that by 2013 it would be more expensive to repeal the amt than to eliminate the income tax. |
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If they did, it would be the first signs of intelligent life from the underachieving aggie. |
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Dutifully obeying the modern principle of agglomeration, it would be called an iPlod. |
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But right now, if we were to put out an aggregated tally for 2014, it would be way off the mark. |
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Going back to square one would be an unjust outcome and a prize to the aggressor. |
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So I started to think about anything in my life that would be worth people giving it any amount of time. |
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If senators vote for that, they would be agreeing to share the blame if and when that strategy fails. |
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Manning would likely be prescribed some form of estrogen that would be taken orally, through injection, or by a skin patch. |
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One role the desert-dwelling Bedouin and Berbers would be perfectly suited to is aiding the army in its frontier patrols. |
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The radar stations would be used to guide interceptors to their targets while the training range would be used to train pilots. |
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It would be impossible to cure all that ailed the GOP in the course of a single calendar year. |
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Without these Muslim-hunters, we would be left unable to identify Muslims amongst us or their magical powers. |
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What kind of abominable killjoy would be against loving presents and cookies? |
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Tait seems to insinuate for all media that it would be better if Amis never came back. |
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That kind of behavior would be in keeping with somebody who had been slipped a date rape drug such as Midazolam, aka Dazzle. |
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It appears that even the president sensed his announcement would be greeted with skepticism. |
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It was a complex task they were asked to do, and every cultural and experiential advantage would be required. |
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Without it in the atmosphere, the Earth would be a barren, frozen wasteland. |
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Doubling down on visits to Gamblers Anonymous and Alcoholics Anonymous would be a good start. |
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As for the paint job, that would be handled by teenagers in the auto shop class at one of the high schools. |
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After all, plenty of folks would be amenable to, or perhaps even charmed by, the idea of an untraditional marriage. |
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A longtime Big Three economist on why the automaker crisis would be funny if it weren't so tragic. |
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I was frankly worried that a lot of people who work in conservation would be upset by the book. |
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And there, the sand castle builder and tag player who loved her aunt more than science would be buried. |
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Many were just eager to forget, absolve, or overlook serious accusations, simply because doing so would be hugely convenient. |
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Rivers continued on her political, authoritarian monologue by describing what kind of tyrant she would be. |
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This is because the only location that debate could take place would be in an asylum. |
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Absent the NCAA, such a student would be able to amass significant cash during a college career. |
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On Dec. 22, 1799, Sands told her cousins that she would be leaving to elope with a fellow boarder named Levi Weeks that night. |
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The almanac also tells us it would be a good time to perform demolitions, if you had any of those planned. |
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At many such occasions, meat and poultry dishes would be eaten, and your recipes as printed would not be servable. |
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Mike Young has been studying the shadow price of water, the amount that would be paid under normal market conditions. |
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There would be card schools, too, and when we overnighted the shaggers among the lads would be sniffing after everything in a skirt. |
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If butchers had but the manners to go to sharps, gentlemen would be contented with a rubber at cuffs. |
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The Comprehensive Plan indicated that material excavated from the canals would be side casted and shaped along side the canal. |
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More than half of consumers think it would be wonderfully romantic if their significant other booked tickets for a surprise international trip. |
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The heavy, dark tungsten powder would be pressed, hammered, sintered at red heat, then drawn into finer and finer wire for the filaments. |
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There would be no need for medial heel skive and the heel cup can be of normal depth. |
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She hoped she had a sleepdriving problem, too, or else it would be a long walk back to her car, which could only be back at the Lotti. |
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For the second year in a row at Wimbledon, Roger Federer went to five sets against a Frenchman but this time there would be no slip-ups. |
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She'd like him jammed into her slot, like him to crank into her and she didn't think ignition would be far off if he did. |
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The odor of cold sweat in a coward's armpit would be the olfactory theme were this a smell-o-vision movie. |
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Extraverts, because of their verbal prowess, would be able to smooth-talk their way through almost any situation. |
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Chrome Dev. on Google's own Android platform received a new update where users would be able to see a snackbar when downloads complete. |
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What would be the first question to ask a space alien newly arrived on planet Earth? |
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Jason dons a screwed-up accent that Madonna would be proud of. While Martine, loved for being a cockney sparra, unfortunately goes posh. |
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I went on the retreat to the monastery, thinking I would be sleeping in a spartan cell, only to discover a simple but comfortable bedroom. |
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The obliviousness of your reply is staggering, or would be, if you weren't such an obvious spergy sociopath to begin with. |
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Perhaps to treat the matter lightly and sportively would be the course most likely to encourage her to explain it. |
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A disposition to preserve, and an ability to improve, taken together, would be my standard of a statesman. |
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Chemists would be rich if they could still do in great quantities what they have sometimes done in little. |
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The supervising teacher's stern expression at the front of the drab study hall left little doubt that no nonsense would be tolerated there. |
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The stumblesome little character at the front of the pack would be none other than good ol' Charlie Brown. |
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When a subcontinental plume hits such a thin spot, the result would be voluminous shallow magmatism. |
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It seems like then, perhaps, the best compromise solution would be for the legislature to create almost a middle step, a sub-patent. |
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If unto this lower Pulley there were added another, then the Power would be unto the Weight in a subquintuple Proportion. |
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Even if he did get charged, he would be suicided long before he could involve one of the city's most important politicians in the scam. |
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I think it would be harsh to deprive them of their superannuations without a knowledge of the circumstances under which they are proposed. |
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By comparison with the present transcribers, I'm sure my performance would be supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. |
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It would be remarkable that the supercoset construction works well, even if the resulting backgrounds are not maximally supersymmetric. |
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It would be unwise, however, to assume that such technofixes will always be available. |
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The question is whether Aiken would be a competitive candidate. |
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Even to raise the possibility of such research would be to invite the testerics in Congress to shut off the UN's funding. |
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An alternative interpretation to the theoxenia, though no doubt related in cult practise, would be that of parasitein. |
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The MP told parliament that legalising cannabis would be the thin end of the wedge. |
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It would be inaccurate though to call SIX a direct antidote to alec. |
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But it also remains that a TimberBiel sighting is something that a wide swath of news organizations would be bound to pick up. |
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An anonymous caller tipped off the police that the suspect would be in the area. |
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He is as Lucifer would be were that proud spirit banished to a society of soulless, Tomlinsonian ghosts. |
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We think that the world would be a better place without advertisements. To that end, we are going to remove all of the banners from our website. |
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We knew this would be a big swing, an all-or-nothing proposition. |
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Thus communist tendencies would be consistent with toughminded radicalism while fascism would be characterised by toughminded conservatism. |
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If this would be the only requirement, large amounts of kaolinite could be harvested simply by adding gibbsite powder to a silica solution. |
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No one aboard a vessel flying a yellow flag would be allowed ashore for an extended period, typically 30 to 40 days. |
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When needed, slices of hay would be cut using a hay knife and fed out to animals each day. |
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The more resources the noble had access to, the better his troops would be. |
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Over time the alternative terms of imprisonment would be somewhat reduced from their terms of transportation. |
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The newest member would be blindfolded and made to swear a secret oath of allegiance. |
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Issues such as production and distribution would be managed by the workers themselves. |
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In 1515, Sultan Selim I issued a decree under which the practice of printing would be punishable by death. |
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The record would be verified by the testimony of at least two of the proprietors on oath. |
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A copy of the document would be kept in the Commonwealth Secretary's office. |
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When we were there 2 years ago I pointed out to Jordin that it would be a great place for a relaxacon. |
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The Worcester Tornado would be the most deadly tornado to ever hit Massachusetts. |
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In 1814, only 1 out of 14 American merchantmen risked leaving port as a high probability that any ship leaving port would be seized. |
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While this could work in city centres, it would be unable to economically supply suburbs with power. |
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There was only a remote possibility that we would be rescued as we were far outside of the regular shipping lanes. |
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In October 2017, GE announced they would be closing research and development centers in Shanghai, Munich and Rio de Janeiro. |
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Conoco and Atlantic elected to use their respective names instead of the Standard name, and their rights would be claimed by other companies. |
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A technology for distributing resources that was less given to abstract hoarding would be more suitable to a biotechnic conception of living. |
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Still, the ideal solution, I think, would be to render unto Caesar an affirmation of flag and country but to keep God in our hearts. |
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Otherwise, there would be an implied disregard of the potential of human society heading into the future. |
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Regarded as being in opposition to Confucians, as early as the Eastern Han its full and original meaning would be forgotten. |
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The tendency toward Legalism is apparent in intellectual circles toward the end of the Han dynasty, and would be reinforced by Cao Wei. |
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The sentry asked the old master to record his wisdom for the good of the country before he would be permitted to pass. |
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It is used to describe the size of suburban dacha or allotment garden plots or small city parks where the hectare would be too large. |
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Notably, Jeremy Hunt stated that if the Conservative party won the next elections then government funding for the arts would be cut. |
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When this worked, capital would rise and there would be a steady income for encyclopedias. |
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The new road would be of single carriageway standard, with a number of roundabout junctions, as well as a new bridge over the River Eden. |
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Such powerful human families would descend upon the reptilians themselves and they would be willing to do just anything to retain their power. |
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This is the case with Seathwaite Fell, for example, which would be the common grazing land used by the farmers of Seathwaite. |
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Installed at the center of mass and set to repulsor-beam, this one would be able to move the entire planetoid from its orbit. |
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Some of the coppice would be allowed to grow into new standards and some regenerated coppice would be there. |
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A Keswick bank manager objected because the dam would be vulnerable to a waterspout, experienced in St John's Vale many times. |
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A few locals joined him, including Sir Thomas Broughton of Broughton Tower, who would be killed at the disastrous Battle of Stoke Field. |
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The result would be a reskin of an old game instead of an interesting new game. |
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To the plant the excreta are more readily assimilable than intact insects would be. |
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But even with her level of celebrity, it would be very hard to win a race without engaging voters in a very retail way. |
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West set out to create a guide that would be of particular use to artists, writing in his introduction that he aimed. |
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In December 2010, Stena Line announced that the service would be withdrawn at the end of 2010, with the loss of 140 jobs. |
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The methods, now seldom seen, would be also used in the United States, Canada, and Australia. |
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From the audience's point of view, local communities would become fans and champion their favourites who would be treated as celebrities. |
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For a short time during his stay at Brantwood, Ruskin held tutorial sessions, what would be called today as teaching seminars. |
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Through the end of the 1950s, Hemingway continued to rework the material that would be published as A Moveable Feast. |
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The walk was originally planned to end at Wooler but eventually it was decided that Kirk Yetholm would be the finishing point. |
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The duo knocked out two tracks in two days, but the notion that the album would be finished in a timely fashion soon evaporated. |
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I think at the moment the sculpture is a nice piece of history, but if the council destroys it, they would be showing their belief in the curse. |
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Although sufficient land had been purchased for two tunnels, only one would be built initially. |
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Transport Minister Stephen Hammond said that building a new tunnel would be a better option should the route ever be used again for trains. |
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In July 2015 it was announced that the stone quarries at Arcow and Dry Rigg would be reconnected to the line via north facing points. |
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When I saw a special version of Quake running on Voodoo hardware, I knew I would be forking out quite a bit of money on my gaming rig. |
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This would be most frequently noticed on Southport's Marine Drive, which was regularly closed due to flooding from high tides. |
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However, following the 2010 general election the new government announced in May 2010 that the reorganisation would be blocked. |
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In medieval Europe, loose fresh rushes would be strewn on earthen floors in dwellings for cleanliness and insulation. |
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The estuary is a ria and so is larger than would be the case given the size of the River Exe, the main river feeding into the estuary. |
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The soul of a dead person would divulge their mission, while a demonic ghost would be banished at the sound of the Holy Name. |
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These would be appurtenant rights, that is the ownership of rights belonged to tenancies of particular plots of land held within a manor. |
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A commoner would be the person who, for the time being, was the occupier of a particular plot of land. |
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The blindfold would then be removed and they would be presented with the skeleton painting. |
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There are roboteers who think it would be an advance to replace our brain tissue with computer circuits. |
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We thought Jim would be late for the wedding, but then we saw him roll up in front of the the church in his Mercedes. |
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In rotation, each member of the group would be responsible for the beacon fire. |
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It was not likely, thought Graham, that the poor wee crooked saftie would be able to take advantage of those circumstances. |
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Surely, then, a scheme that should supersede the necessity of saintship and sageship, would be a most valuable acquisition! |
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If the marrow in one's backbone should melt, it would be sartin to run out at the tip of one's tail. |
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Any escaping villagers would be killed. She had heard of scathefires but fortunately her village had not been targeted. |
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She would be so happy... that she wouldn't notice the spelling or the scraggly writing. |
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I know Corinne would be happy if I started writing scripts again. Since my last screenplay, I haven't written anything in over four months. |
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Public administration would be hamstrung if courts were free to second-guess reasonable administrative decisions. |
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The mass necessary at 150 secpars to produce the actual crosswise solar component would be 1,420,000 Suns. |
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The secretability of R5-6 would be important for future in vivo gene transfer studies. |
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A lot of selling of wolf tickets but never any blood. I wish they would kill one of themselves so there would be some peace around here. |
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Almost everyone argued that it would be inhumane for Americans to engage in a turkey shoot against fleeing Iraqi soldiers. |
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Naisi said that it was a turlough, or a disappearing lake, and that before the year's end, it would be full of water again. |
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Soviet uncertainty in such circumstances would be contrary to the implied escalation-control intent of the ultime avertissement strike. |
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You would be surprised at how uncute people who are not closely related to the baby think it is to watch a wet or soiled diaper being changed. |
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It would be easier to do a big project like that someday when we don't have a bunch of newcomers underfoot. |
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We opened a store in Beijing under the impression that our product would be popular. |
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Yet it would be difficult to name two writers whose works have been more completely, though undesignedly, colored by their personal feelings. |
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There would be no need for any of the animals to come in contact with human beings, which would clearly be most undesirable. |
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He did not know that what he was experiencing then, that unreal, undesirous medley of ecstasy and peace, would be unrecapturable forever. |
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If we could but remember that, there would be no fear of our being ungodly, irreligious, undevout. |
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In such a situation there would be a danger of alienating one linguistic group by a uniglot language policy. |
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The professor claimed that a time machine would be uninventable, since nobody can travel faster than the speed of light. |
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With standardization, a type of car could be built that would be readily unloadable and fitted for a back haul. |
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The unmortared wall of bricks would be easy to dismantle, merely requiring backs strong enough to lift the bricks and enough time to do it. |
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If so, the church would be seen in terms of actualism rather than in terms of essentialism. |
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Without up-front money from subscribers to pay for seed, property taxes and insurance, Huasna's Skinner says he would be overwhelmed with debt. |
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For these wretches would be necessitated then to betake themselves to some honest livelihood, if they were not fed and upholden, by these. |
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The Ladies' was secluded at the end of a hallway where the sounds of feminine physiology would be safe from the ears of the village urolagniac. |
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It would be natural to suppose that it is classical logic that lays rightful claim on the status of this ur-science. |
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If they returned to their church, they would be spared a second attack. |
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On the back-end Ethernet would be another series of VAXen, which would contain a cache of recently accessed frames. |
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I actually hate the taste of meat, so if something tasted like meat it would be disturbing the sausages and nut meat etc.. dont taste like meat. |
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I shot off an e-mail to Hunter, saying I had to cancel tomorrow because I would be vehicularly challenged. |
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When it reached the wall, the mass would appear to rest against it. In actuality, it would be terminally velocitized against its surface. |
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It would be in character if, unable to contain her suffering alone, she had vented her gall on her own husband. |
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A man would be well enough pleased to buy silks of one whom he would not venture to feel his pulse. |
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He would be left in no doubt that they were annoyed. He might even go so far as to deduce that they were quite vexed. |
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He said that soon there would be a drive for awareness on the type of tyres and the air level to be maintained. |
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If the operation caused no physical damage, it would be in bounds. |
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If this were an Ibsen play, we would be thinking of the sins of one generation being visited upon another, he said. |
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Blowin' out here would be more like wailing into the heavenly vonce, rather then huffing and puffing changes in a dark cellar. |
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The worst effect of a Republican takeover would be on the environment. |
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But an ISIS takeover of Balad would be significant nonetheless. |
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The listing for Loop 2.4.3 had promised that a waterphone would be featured. |
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They are about the same quality, so if you can get a discount on the color you like, that would be the way to go. |
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It's good that I wasn't a wereporcupine, or his mouth would be full of quills. |
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Any minister who failed to support it in a whipped vote would be expected to resign. |
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For a whitecollar worker who is paid once or twice a month, the ratio of cash to income would be larger. |
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The first gold transaction, to four-fifths of its amount, would be by direct withdrawings of coin or bullion from the Bank of England. |
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Not knowing of established definitions would be grounds for selecting or devising a working definition. |
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That her Lily should have been won and not worn, had been, and would be, a trouble to her for ever. |
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Nonetheless, it would be wonderful if, in the face of inevitable fate, all people could live youthfully and vitally until the end. |
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I look over and see that the ingredients for this would be turnip, rhubarb and cabbage. Yumtastic, not! |
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I'm trying to point out that his 'help' would be seriously damaging to a person who lacks the ability to fix zirself through a sheer act of will. |
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It would be tasty in case of oral pleasure and have assorted colors. |
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But the same would be true of members of Saddam Hussein's secular Ba'athist party. |
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They assured him that should this happen, many problems would be resolved. |
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In a year with less unrest economically, that would be an asterisk. |
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Officials of the ministry said the number of retired individuals reached to 130,000 while 40,000 of them would be issued with bank cards. |
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Bari are known as a selling club and would be tempted if United made a big-money offer. |
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Even as they were abandoning ship they thought it would be saved and were surprised when they reached land to hear it had been lost. |
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The decision caused public outcry, since the farming villages of Measand and Mardale Green would be flooded, with their inhabitants needing to be relocated. |
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But it would be unusual in an area of Viking settlement, for its old Norse name to have disappeared, when the names of many of its features, such as the Nab, Dolphinsty, etc. |
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You just think that because we're Black womyn, maybe that would be enough to at least start with, but sometimes it isn't. Sometimes, just being a Black wommon isn't enough. |
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If we went in and there was no burglar, and we got into a shooting with the homeowner and ventilated him, that would be a little difficult to explain. |
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On 1 December 2009, it was announced that the Ambleside campus would be 'mothballed' at the end of July 2010, and would no longer take new undergraduate students. |
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The new kingdom would be obliged to remain neutral in foreign affairs. |
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Just as in oral cultures, the challenge of processing that amount of information would be nearly impossible without adding some aggregative weight. |
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The trailer for that movie makes it seem like it would be fun. |
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If prose got people fat, you can bet everybody would be a real tubbo. |
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That would be the easiest solution and thusfore not a real challenge. |
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I've found a bi woman in Pittsburgh who says that she and a girlfriend would be willing to sexfight in front of a couple of guys if the guys cockfight in front of them. |
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Of course, I think we go secondhanded into most of these conferences anyway, but in this case we would have a definite assurance we would be going in secondhanded. |
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The argument turned on the question of whether or not jobs would be lost. |
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Fractions would be a little easier if we counted by twelves. |
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The price at which the average consumer will react adversely is not yet known, and it would be folly to judge by the conduct of the British theics. |
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One might wonder who thought such a shirt would be a big seller, and why, which is exactly what the twitterstorm of complaints against the seller was asking. |
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He saw from the twigs on the ground that a gale had been blowing, and knew it would be the teuchit-storm on which the teuchit, or green plover, is blown home. |
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At any given moment, Pop would be having a yakfest with someone on the other side who would be diagnosing one of his patients or training him in some new form of healing. |
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It would be better to forget RAE exercises and instead have a large number of independent universities with proper tenure-track positions and with high standards enforced. |
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It would be important to evaluate the amplification rate of these four OTUs when oligochaete communities change and when other taxocenoses than oligochaetes are present. |
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Ought a possibly large number, Swithin included, to remain unbenefited because the one individual to whom his release would be an injury chanced to be herself? |
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Now, if they weren't members and tagholders, each of those domains would be costing them around GBP70. I'll leave you to do the maths on that one. |
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MacGregor avoided this trap by refusing to give managers reporting to him the opportunity to second-guess the solution he would be most likely to choose. |
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He's forgotten Sheila, in fact, and if he's thinking about friends, it's only a vague underfeeling that he would be really impressive if allied with Virginia Novello. |
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Confucius believed that if a ruler is to lead correctly, by action, that orders would be unnecessary in that others will follow the proper actions of their ruler. |
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An example of supercolumniation would be the putting of the Doric order in the ground story, Ionic above it, and Corinthian or Composite above that. |
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These would be groups of career soldiers who would be paid a set rate. |
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He stood almost appalled for a moment, as he said to himself that she would take her up and the girl would be ruined, would force her note and become a screamer. |
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I rushed off a letter, warning them that I would be arriving the next day. |
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Exact terms of the sale were not disclosed, but the final price would be based on the value of the assets at closing, plus a premium according to the parties. |
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The Waltham site would be expanded again during the late 19th century. |
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If therefore we were assured that the Earth is illuminated by the Sun, like one of those Clouds, it would be undubitable, but that it would be no less shining than the Moon. |
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It is not enough to say that style is a characteristic mode of expression, for then it would be almost impossible to speak of anything as styleless. |
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The institution was given a monopoly on controlling the money supply in 1884, but it would be another 20 years before the previously issued notes were retired. |
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Without the daft stunts and wackily dressed goofballs, all you'd have left would be a bunch of dull dolts, demanding wealth without graft, fame without talent. |
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Spamtard, you have been outed yet again, and bigger than anyone ever thought even a retarded lying spamming moron like you would be remotely capable of allowing! |
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Typically she would be awakened by a nightmare, very few of which she remembered, except for scraps involving being chased and running for her life. |
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A subset of this category would be atheists who can be classified as people of acedia, those with spiritual apathy, who do not care if God exists. |
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However, wanting to have Snoo Snoo and getting there can be an arduous journey with many pitfalls so I think it would be best for some people to be aware of these obstacles. |
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The fault is that there is little discrimination in wage scales If jobs were more difficult to obtain and the girls were kept occupied, the problem would be solved. |
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The nursingwoman answered him and said that that woman was in throes now full three days and that it would be a hard birth unneth to bear but that now in a little it would be. |
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He argued that one remedy would be to pay work at a fixed rate of wages, because human need is consistent and a given quantity of work justly demands a certain return. |
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Before she had a chance to deal with her hangover, he was on the phone snake-oiling her into the first of what would be many ill-fated fraud cases. |
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The managing director was very depressed at the news, but realized that trying to prove anything untoward had taken place would be very difficult. |
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They frequently learn from unbred or debauched Servants, such Language, untowardly Tricks and Vices, as otherwise they possibly would be ignorant of all their Lives. |
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If he could only get away from the holes in the banks, he thought, there would be no more faces. He swung off the path and plunged into the untrodden places of the wood. |
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The general consensus of opinion in Outwood's during the luncheon interval was that, having got Downing's up a tree, they would be fools not to make the most of the situation. |
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Halfway up Dartmeet Hill, for example, lies the Coffin Stone, close to the road, where the body would be placed to allow the bearers to take a rest. |
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Lord Bates, the shadow local government secretary, had been due to table an amendment in the Lords today seeking to clarify that there would be no backdating. |
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This article would be right up his alley. Why don't you show it to him? |
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Then she said that the paper stained everything it touched, that she had found yellow smooches on all my clothes and John's, and she wished we would be more careful! |
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It was reported on 5 November 2013 that the two Victorian tunnels would be sealed following a decision made by Government not to purchase the two tunnels from National Grid. |
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In particular, he made a point of drawing the Ca' d'Oro and the Doge's Palace, or Palazzo Ducale, because he feared they would be destroyed by the occupying Austrian troops. |
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On 26 September 2008, Wyre Borough Council announced that the pier would be completely demolished, and two weeks later confirmed that the pier would not be rebuilt. |
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It would be smallmindedly chauvinistic to pretend that Scotland was other than a strong participant in the furthering of British Imperial ambitions. |
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In any other circumstances this would be a slapable offence. |
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Sister Huerta was to have been our initial speaker this morning. However, we received word later this morning that Sister Huerta would be unable to attend our convention. |
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On 23 January the Department for Transport 'clarified' this, saying that only the older Victorian tunnels, which were in poor condition, would be available. |
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