And I'm afraid that from now on I shall have to turn my hand at the removal of unwanted comments. |
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The truest are not wafflers, and they are not afraid to stand up for something controversial. |
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This theory carries a wagonload of design decisions with it, and I'm afraid they aren't easy design decisions. |
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I had been about to close the door, but I stopped, afraid that the noise it would make would be disruptive. |
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Many people are now afraid to walk the streets of their own towns at night, which is an enormous shame. |
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His face wore an absent expression, as of deep thought, and I became afraid that if his eyes did light upon me he would nevertheless not see me. |
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Next time you take your car to a Greek or Italian mechanic and he uses the Force to jack your car up instead of the hoist, be very afraid. |
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We have some quality players in our squad who will not be afraid of the big games having played in England and throughout Europe. |
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He tries to put his hand on her knee but, afraid of seeming too forward, pretends he's done it by accident. |
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He asked the lady's daughter to accompany him to his car as he was afraid of the people screaming at him. |
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And I don't know if I'm more afraid that it will be the hugest, grossest waste of my time ever, or that I will actually enjoy it. |
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Rules, I'm afraid he's picked up from that obnoxious queenie friend of his. |
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They guard her phone number jealously, afraid of giving away the methods behind her magic touch. |
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In developing and democratizing countries, the masses are less ignorant, quiescent, or afraid than they once were. |
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Tim recalls being afraid the first time he had his eyebrows waxed seven years ago, and Harry admits to similar fears. |
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If you're afraid of what a neutral redistricting will do, just imagine what a genuinely partisan gerrymander could accomplish. |
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He may even be afraid that his wife will leave him or take him to the cleaners. |
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Race is the most potent weapon in their armoury and some in both the party and the electorate are not afraid to use it. |
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In his acceptance speech, he said he's afraid that America is going down a rabbit hole. |
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He is still afraid of accepting film roles, despite having acted in more than 300 films over the past 29 years. |
|
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As long as they don't have to act manly and pretend not to be afraid of insects. |
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They are half afraid to open the door to the postman should he arrive with another registered letter. |
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She jumped back slightly against the window half afraid of what he was going to say. |
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If your mom's worries are driving a wedge between you, ask her to tell you honestly what she's afraid of. |
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They don't move, they speak like they're afraid to be up there, and the audience is all jocks waiting to see cute chicks. |
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Some women are afraid to walk the streets of their own neighbourhood for fear of being harassed by johns in passing cars. |
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Her grandfather was once a very loyal supporter of the Dark Sorcerers and I am afraid the apple never falls far from the tree. |
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She is one of the most thoughtful judges on the court and is not afraid to upset the apple cart by doing the right thing. |
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I am afraid, however, that it would be quite contrary to the College's policy to create a joint tenancy with him. |
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Many of them, I am afraid, are simply adamant in their views and are not interested in the evidence. |
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I wasn't afraid to stand up and speak in public and I had learned all sorts of lessons about how to put your point across effectively. |
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But they are then afraid to give up for fear of putting the weight back on. |
|
People in the industry will spot holes in this legislation in all sorts of directions, and I am afraid that they have already spotted some. |
|
Is he afraid we will expose the huge holes in these fatally flawed proposals? |
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It's a tempting offer, but I'm afraid I'm going to have to take a rain check on that one. |
|
I'm afraid I'm going to have to ask you to take a rain check on lunch, though. |
|
I'm afraid that whatever the headlines, there is no basis for council tax payers to be jumping for joy. |
|
He says that since starting the job he is less jumpy and no longer afraid of the dark. |
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I almost didn't come because I was afraid you would ask me to tell you what I know before admitting me to your cloister. |
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I refuse to feel afraid to walk wherever I like at whatever time of night wearing whatever I like. |
|
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Indeed, he has become a whipping boy for critics who are afraid to attack a popular Commander-in-Chief. |
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It has certainly exacerbated the extent to which people are afraid of terrorist attacks. |
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Ordinary people are probably afraid to blow the whistle on gangsters who would just as soon shoot them dead as not. |
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But I'm afraid I detected a kind of affected pose in the presentation of the idea. |
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I know if it was me I would be frightened and would be afraid to go out after dark. |
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However, the truth is that in their heart of hearts, quite a few adults are afraid of deep water. |
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They only have power if we believe they have, if we are afraid of them and we let our fear silence us. |
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Some are afraid of retaliation because they have been vocal proponents of peace. |
|
She says she's not afraid of death, she's just frightened of losing the people she loves. |
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He said today he was not afraid of competing with supermarkets but feared the effect on customer choice. |
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These men might be afraid of her now, but that fear would only last as long as she could keep her power flowing. |
|
Anyone who has nothing to be fearful of should not be afraid of the Customs Service. |
|
True leaders are not afraid of telling the truth as they see it for fear of losing favor. |
|
She explained she was afraid of having children because she feared she could not feed them. |
|
It is now the political leaders who drove the politics of fear who look most afraid. |
|
We cannot be afraid of the threat of foreign powers because times are changing. |
|
In all her life she had never been afraid of a single man besides her father. |
|
I spent most of the film afraid that something terrible would happen to a child, explicitly or not. |
|
We hope the future is better than the past, but we're afraid that the past could repeat itself. |
|
I'm afraid that what he alludes to is only a possibility among others, and not in my view the most likely one. |
|
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My arms hugged around me, as if I was suddenly afraid of him, as if I was afraid that he would hurt me. |
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For example, we are afraid that if others knew the truth about us, they wouldn't like us. |
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Everyone is afraid that you'll write something damning about them for all to see. |
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Now I am afraid that my right ear, which is almost normal, may also develop problems. |
|
I'm afraid that I still break out in a cold sweat when Patricia's being masterful. |
|
I'm afraid that sulphur gives some people a headache and puts them off wine altogether. |
|
He said that he was afraid that people would not come and stay around the town if there was a concert. |
|
That cost us a lot of money and we were afraid that we would lose our connection with the public. |
|
He is afraid that if his marking is challenged and an appeal conducted he will be held to have been discriminatory. |
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She was afraid that something might happen to her mum while she wasn't there. |
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We all understand self-indulgence but are afraid that self-denial might be beyond us. |
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I am afraid that the answer is one that people may not want to hear or even think about. |
|
It got a lot of media attention, and local art officials were afraid that too many people would show up to watch. |
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I'm afraid that, when it comes right down to it, this is the one that's likely to be closest to the truth. |
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I am afraid that now that I am a bit better things are not going to change much. |
|
Another part of me is afraid that it's temporary and that I'm not going to be able to hold onto it. |
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We were afraid that the sunrise would not be as glorious as we'd wanted it to be because of the clouds. |
|
They're not afraid to slow their songs down, lose the bass and add a pretty vocal. |
|
Like a doctor afraid to frighten a patient with a truthful diagnosis, it doesn't say half enough. |
|
In consequence we are becoming a tight-lipped silent majority afraid to rise above the parapet. |
|
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They kill and maim people and are too afraid to take the consequences of their actions. |
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I was afraid to look. I opened my eyes and saw my husband on his knees in a pile of glass, holding his face in his hands. |
|
He told police he was too afraid for himself and his family to tell the truth at first. |
|
That mobile phone companies should find themselves weakened just as the sector was about take off makes many afraid for its future stability. |
|
His new album, written after a nasty split with his fiancee, is so forlorn that the music press is afraid for his health. |
|
Their names have not been disclosed because they are afraid for their lives. |
|
After the attack she suffered pains in her stomach and was afraid for the health of her baby. |
|
I doubted my own sanity at times, and was afraid for what it really meant about me and my future. |
|
She appeared to be more concerned for the well-being of the other crewmembers than afraid for her own life. |
|
Many people could not understand what I saw in him and were actually afraid for my safety with him, especially my mother. |
|
I was afraid for my eternal salvation all day every day, in every thought and deed. |
|
If people were desperately afraid for their personal security, there would be exactly such movements. |
|
All of the court ladies that hadn't fainted were clinging to their partners, mortally afraid for their lives. |
|
This might do in the infants, but I'm afraid by the sixth form we expect something a little more sophisticated. |
|
And I'm afraid that the new leader simply doesn't have the charisma to carry it off. |
|
It's back to lining up to see your diabetic specialist on a regular basis, I'm afraid. |
|
This non-stop preoccupation with health matters is terribly boring, I'm afraid. |
|
Unfortunate timing, I'm afraid, in that it happened to be my wedding anniversary. |
|
You always want more, of course, because it's a numbers game, I'm afraid to say. |
|
Unfortunately, it's nothing as sensible and well thought out as that I'm afraid. |
|
|
One or two of the author's accounts are not very interesting at all, I'm afraid. |
|
It'll have to be a new one, I'm afraid, or nearly new, and from a proper dealer with a good reputation to protect. |
|
The other players, I'm afraid to say, are a modest team who have absolutely no chance of winning the World Cup. |
|
There doesn't seem to be much joined up thinking on the matter, I'm afraid. |
|
But all is not what it seems I'm afraid and she now feels she may have made the move in haste. |
|
Those who advocate other methods are again showing their ignorance, I'm afraid. |
|
After having surgery on a knee injury, I'm afraid to say that's my season over with. |
|
I know I should start to share the comings and goings of the trip but I need to take another day off, I'm afraid. |
|
With the amount of money that is being spent on them, this is entirely possible, I'm afraid. |
|
I've never read the book, I'm afraid to say and didn't understand this question at first. |
|
She's kept something from her, on purpose, because she was afraid it would change what she thinks of her. |
|
Most of them did not return to their beds again as they were afraid of powerful aftershocks. |
|
Most young people are afraid of not being accepted if they go against the grain. |
|
I am afraid that a whole country, an entire people, will be destroyed for nothing. |
|
As a leading shareholder, he wields power and influence himself, and has not been afraid to use it. |
|
Other studies even showed that nestlings fed by people were less afraid of new things until age 6 months than were birds reared by their parents. |
|
I think he was more afraid of losing his reason than he was of losing his life. |
|
I'm afraid I don't live in a society where everybody is ready, willing and able to go to University, if only the funding package were right. |
|
I'm afraid I wimped out, along with the rest of the editorial team, and was in bed by three. |
|
There are those in this area who hate him, but are afraid to air their grievances publicly. |
|
|
People need to shop around and not be afraid of kicking up a fuss if they feel dissatisfied. |
|
I'm afraid I return unshaken in the notion that the best way to flirt is to stay in a bar until everyone's lashed. |
|
Nazia was also afraid that if she said no to her parents, they'd kick her out of the house. |
|
I was so afraid of something stupid happening, like an air line blowing off or a fuel line breaking. |
|
I was glad to know that there is really an air marshal there, and they are not afraid to shoot somebody who says they have a bomb. |
|
My mother did know who my father was, but she was too afraid to tell anyone for fear of the reactions she would receive. |
|
No wonder the girls were afraid of sleeping on the level above the hospital wing. |
|
Enter the recessionista, that frugal fashionista who's not afraid to troll the clearance racks. |
|
I am always afraid that one morning the alarm clock will ring and I will wake up and find I am in Kent. |
|
Allies need to do more about training good minds who are expert on Asia and who are not afraid of challenging conventional intelligence wisdoms. |
|
You were angry with the monks for deciding this, but afraid that this would come true. |
|
People are afraid of talking openly about the problems because of possible recriminations. |
|
Some Americans are afraid the next disaster might be handled as badly as the last one and they're stocking up for survival. |
|
When I first started I was afraid of getting hurt, but I learned I can handle myself in physically demanding situations. |
|
If towering long irons and fairway woods are the goal, I'm afraid no ball will restore your ego. |
|
I'm afraid we might have the wood on you as far as reality-deprived legislators go. |
|
Would you be afraid to meet him late at night in a dark alley, just in case he was carrying a crowbar and threatening to kneecap you? |
|
Isn't she afraid of the competition that is suddenly surfacing in her line of work? |
|
His curious logic in explaining his reasons for this is beyond my wit I am afraid. |
|
I am afraid, however, that no amount of law enforcement can prevent such motivated criminals from doing their worst. |
|
|
Wickham also says that he will not run away from Darcy because he has no reason to be afraid since Darcy is the one who has done him wrong. |
|
She meets with one teenage girl who is afraid of labor pains and started smoking to keep the baby as small as possible. |
|
I gulped, immediately regretting my decision but I was afraid to tell Mrs. Beckett that I changed my mind so quickly. |
|
I caught an alligator lizard in a Target store because the employees were afraid of it. |
|
Joan Scanlan was a real lady, a mild gentle person and a woman of principle who was never afraid to articulate her views. |
|
The pain of not going back to school junior year just because I was afraid I wouldn't blend in because mother said I was a reject. |
|
Even my heart was cramping up. I was afraid to say anything beyond yea or nay and even with those single syllables I stuttered. |
|
Banks rely on us being a bit lazy, a bit afraid of change, and a bit ignorant about what is available. |
|
Do not be afraid of disappearing into a fantasy land of castles, maidens and jousting knights for an hour or two. |
|
Missy and I remounted Jenny as I put Doc back in my shirt pocket, but I was afraid to ask Jenny to gallop as she was hurting so much. |
|
You are pouring your heart out and afraid of saying something that sounds a bit naff. |
|
I'm afraid I was never much good at the 20-something spontaneous inter-railing, hitch-hiking, youth-hostelling thing. |
|
She told stories about her dad, which are not repeatable, actually, in front of this audience, I'm afraid. |
|
If you sit in zazen, divorced from the rest of Buddhist practice, I'm afraid it's not Zen Buddhism. |
|
Patients admitted to being more afraid of anesthesia than the actual surgical procedure. |
|
I have had many friends afraid to go and ask questions or query anything simply because they don't know whether the clerk will decide to unleash her day's frustration on them. |
|
She was well known for her contrarian wit and was not afraid to speak her mind. |
|
They are afraid to challenge this fundamental premise of social welfarism. |
|
All of which makes me wonder why Lindsey Graham and his cohort were so afraid the guy would clam up. |
|
Schiff was not afraid to make a wistful gesture in the adagio with a slight bending back of his head, nor to smile during the most tender phrases of the allegretto. |
|
|
The Democrats lost it, by being afraid to have a strong message and motivate their voters. |
|
The greatest trick is to not to show that you are afraid of something. |
|
I'm afraid I dented the wall pretty badly when I was hammering in that nail. |
|
Sure, there's that fringe group of weirdos who are deathly afraid of clowns. |
|
He felt woozy and light headed now and was afraid it would show. |
|
If a critical mass of people is afraid or is convinced to fear, the signal is contagious. |
|
You may disbelieve the promise, but I'm afraid you can't simply instruct the voters to agree with you. |
|
It drives me crazy the way a lot of parents are afraid to say no. |
|
Another quiet month I'm afraid, which means too much time spent on here. |
|
They're afraid for their life and perhaps something needs to be done. |
|
The gameplay can also be, I'm afraid to say, boring and repetitive. |
|
And I am afraid I also must laugh up my sleeve at this poor reader. |
|
She was afraid for him, and grateful for his presence in the world. |
|
They are not afraid to lay down their lives for what they believed. |
|
She was afraid to walk alone for fear some sicko might be lurking in the shadows. |
|
I very rarely bought anything new and never wore make-up I wouldn't know how to apply it and would be afraid of looking too made up, so I never bought any. |
|
I know you need a fair few accounts for the various wonga pages already, but I'm afraid my programming skills aren't quite up to integrating them all. |
|
In Russia he also has a reputation as a coach who knows his own mind and is not afraid to speak it, something which has not always pleased his club presidents. |
|
People are afraid of the thieves and afraid for their future. |
|
I don't know if it was just normal nerves or if he was afraid a stripper would chase him down the sidewalk and give him a lap dance right then and there. |
|
|
I was even afraid to step off a curb because in my mind I kept seeing the image of the X-ray of my fractured fibula as I had seen it in the emergency room. |
|
My 16-year-old daughter was in the shop and I was afraid for her safety. |
|
Expats do not want to bring their kids home, because they are afraid that they will end up with qualifications that are not recognised around the world. |
|
Jenny was afraid that Adam's raised voice would wake the children. |
|
Try to avoid putting flame bright colours next to wishy-washy pink, or vice versa, but don't be afraid to mix bright colours in zingy combinations. |
|
He is also said to claim he is afraid of fireworks, no longer enjoys ju-jitsu and kick-boxing and is depressed about television shows containing gunfire, said the paper. |
|
They said regular day-time taxi users, who include elderly people and parents with young children, have said they are afraid to queue at the rank because of the situation. |
|
I was expecting to feel him bite, bracing myself for the burning sensation, afraid of it, but yearning for it more than anything I have yearned for in my life. |
|
It could also be true that she really was an insufferable lunatic afraid of catching Ebola from the plebeians. |
|
The reason he had not offered information concerning where he had obtained the drugs was because he was genuinely afraid for his safety if he did so. |
|
Blacks, males especially, do have reason to be more afraid of cops than whites do. |
|
Afterward, the company became timid and slow, almost afraid to compete for fear of arousing more scrutiny. |
|
Moving closer she put her arms around his tense body, afraid for him. |
|
Aisha remains too afraid to drive herself, so her 13-year-old drives her to work. |
|
Are you excited, nervous, afraid, all of the above for the new Star Wars films? |
|
The emigrants, who are in the US illegally, are afraid to come home for the holiday, because they are likely to be refused re-entry to the States by the US authorities. |
|
The opposition is afraid of the past because its revered members are culpable for some of the most agonizing memories it evokes. |
|
He was always very afraid of death and would have hoped for a miracle. |
|
A partridge, indeed, with a brood of ten behind her, ran forward threateningly, but soon repented of her fierceness, and clucked to her young ones not to be afraid. |
|
Once I play the first note of the first song, I'm fine, but before that, I can get paralytically afraid. |
|
|
The police investigated the Krays on several occasions, but the brothers' reputation for violence made witnesses afraid to testify. |
|
A nurserymaid is not afraid of what you people call work, So I made up my mind to go as a kind of piratical maid-of-all-work. |
|
Plutonians who are negatively inclined are often very guarded and rigid, afraid to let others get close. |
|
Nearly all cultures who believed in the demon also believed that it was afraid of the color red. |
|
Enemy ships were often afraid to get too close to the Byzantine fleet, since the liquid fire gave the Byzantines a considerable advantage. |
|
Some traders are too afraid to pull the trigger and just watch the market without ever getting involved. |
|
Since he was afraid that he might die before completing the final revision of the Institutes, he forced himself to work. |
|
When I ventured the other day to criticise the system I was, I am afraid, misunderstood. |
|
The Luddites were not afraid of technology and did not attempt to eliminate technology out of fear. |
|
Gray was a brilliant bookworm, a quiet, abstracted, dreaming scholar, often afraid of the shadows of his own fame. |
|
Prescott's sister calls him a scaredy kitten because he's afraid of the dark. |
|
I was afraid of a quarrel between Dr. Johnson and Mr. M'Aulay, who talked slightingly of the lower English clergy. |
|
Hertfordshire woman Amanda Latigo was too afraid to go to the dentist and died of multiple organ failure caused by the molar turning septic. |
|
Lynch was surely not afraid of showing disrespect to the mayor. |
|
But we are afraid and we wonder to ourselves who will be next. |
|
I think I was a little afraid because, you know, you need a certain amount of ballsiness to make a documentary. |
|
They're afraid that we might aggravate an already bad situation. |
|
He is afraid that his confession will bring dishonor on the family. |
|
They showed no outward signs of fear, but they must have been afraid. |
|
Well, I'm afraid it's an academic question anyway because there won't be any five thousand dollars the way things look. |
|
|
Phoebe lay down by me, and ask'd me archly if, now that I had seen the enemy, and fully considered him, I was still afraid of him? |
|
Louisa sat in the car crying, until her foot fell asleep. She shook her foot violently, afraid the numbness would turn to frostbite. |
|
However I hope we shall do better as we go on and as long as there's no dodging or begging the question on our side, I'm not afraid. |
|
These are now the fashion, and so berattle the common stages that many wearing rapiers are afraid of goose-quills and dare scarce come thither. |
|
For I was sore afraid of my Brothers, because they had all conspired together to kill him with the Sword that should bewray that Secret. |
|
They were probably afraid that we would bury them in another carpet bomb of expletives. |
|
At first Maud, so afraid for her husband and baby, was unable to eat, but within a few days she tore into burnt cowflesh like any soldadera. |
|
I'm afraid he wouldn't mind telling crammers about it if he was questioned. |
|
You have given me an idea, Earthgirl, and it is one that I am afraid you will live to regret. |
|
Private Johnson was afraid the Lieutenant considered him an expendable, since he was always picked as point man. |
|
Jumping out of an airplane does not faze him, yet he is afraid to ride a roller coaster. |
|
Perhaps I was afraid of being laughed at if the mysterious item turned out to be a hambone, a distinct possibility. |
|
I just learned how to take my sword out of my hammerspace, and I'm not afraid to use it. |
|
When he was lying still on the field, he really had me going. I was afraid he was dead. |
|
Many were afraid that Caesar would soon resurrect the monarchy and declare himself king. |
|
A former underwear model, he was always afraid of being seen as just another pretty face. |
|
If I wasn't afraid of you thinking I was a kyoodle, I'd quit the business tonight. |
|
Parliament was afraid that the former James II or his supporters, known as Jacobites, might attempt to reclaim the throne. |
|
I was so eager to make their bedclothes agreeable and nice, I am afraid I was a bit loose-handed with the starch bottle. |
|
According to William Kamkwamba, witches and wizards are afraid of money, which they consider a rival evil. |
|
|
Ispolini were afraid of blackberries which posed a danger of tripping and dying, so they offered sacrifices to that plant. |
|
He paid her a weekly fee to sit for him exclusively, afraid that other artists might employ her. |
|
Then I am afraid to encounter the proing and conning of any thing interesting to me in England. |
|
He reportedly could sing tolerably well and was not afraid to do so before an audience. |
|
Some have suggested that his stammer made him reluctant to take the step, because he was afraid of having to preach. |
|
In an extra verse in one version of ABBA's On and On and On, Humpty Dumpty is mentioned as being afraid of falling off the wall. |
|
In adversity I wish for prosperity, and in prosperity I am afraid of adversity. What mediocrity may be found? |
|
He said when he pulled the pin out of the Mills bomb, he was always afraid it would go off before he got it out of his hand. |
|
That was our mistake, but I'm afraid it was a mistake made by just about everybody who was in the regulatory business. |
|
As a result, sponsors may restrict workers' movements and workers may be afraid to report abuses or claim their rights. |
|
She was always shy in such circumstances and was always afraid of new people, and was even more so now. |
|
But notice that the characters haven't reached the bottom of that poverty, they are struggling against it, afraid of it. |
|
Joan at first was afraid of Wittgenstein, but they soon became good friends. |
|
Jonathan kept staring at him, till I was afraid he would notice. I feared he might take it ill, he looked so fierce and nasty. |
|
He is not afraid of responsibility, and has no respect for tradition or convention. |
|
Dutch fishers lifted the boulders on 16 June 2015, because they were afraid the boulders would damage their fishing gear. |
|
But still, if he finds himself in bad health, or is afraid lest he should die here, his will be done. |
|
He would socialise with junior officers so that they were not afraid to approach him with ideas, or disagree with him when the occasion demanded. |
|
I have to go shopping with the wife, I'm afraid. She's given me a three-line whip. |
|
A fire is the only thing that unstrings me entirely, I feel so helpless to combat it. I'm afraid of snakes, but I can kill them. |
|
|
The thing is he's not windy, he's a perfectly good soldier, no more than reasonably afraid of rifle and machine-gun bullets, shells, grenades. |
|
Aqualung are known for their moody indie sound, but this track really doesn't do them any justice at all, I'm afraid to say. |
|
You are right, Fanny, to protest against such an office, but you need not be afraid. |
|
In another, the bureaucrat Maligin is afraid of standing out. |
|
Courteney is very funny and ballsy and not afraid to look silly. |
|
Insurers who aren't afraid of change can benefit customers, agents, reinsurers and themselves by automating the underwriting process. |
|
The antihero of the title is actually a nonhero, for he does absolutely nothing and is an Everyman who, like all of us, is afraid to take risks. |
|
I know you slaaags are probably abit scared of Danny Dyer but I'm afraid Mick Carter's cockney rhyming slang is getting proper out of H and. |
|
Radiotherapist Kari Mawerere stated that many Ugandans are afraid of taking x-rays because of myths that x-rays cut one s life short. |
|
Cooper identifies appearances of leitmotivs, and when no music examples are present, is not afraid to spell out chords and melodic ideas. |
|
I'm afraid if the local offices are forced to close the new rationalised system will not be able handle the emergency with the same efficiency. |
|
Now therefore go to, proclaim in the ears of the people, saying, Whosoever is fearful and afraid, let him return and depart early from mount Gilead. |
|
I think we live in this era where men in particular are afraid of babymaking age and until you've established yourself, you're not forgiven for it. |
|
Today I am afraid that fish in most of those rivers are virtually extinct. |
|
I am afraid that some of the nobles who are campaigning for it simply want to use the Estates to cut down the King's power and increase their own. |
|
While their masters, the mates, seemed afraid of the sound of the hinges of their own jaws, the harpooneers chewed their food with such a relish that there was a report to it. |
|
I'm afraid you two will have to go on a bit of a recce sometime soon. |
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What quizzism could he have been afraid of, adopting the language of the hero victors? Lord Burleigh had not this fear when he made his reply to Walsingham. |
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Something about his bearing was uncommitted, as though he were checking not for some bad quality he knew Feldman had, but for some good quality he was afraid he might have. |
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At first his body lay in state, but since so many people came to see it, the reformers were afraid that they would be accused of fostering a new saint's cult. |
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Um, some sort of power overload. I'm afraid it decimated your breakfast. |
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If you overlead this question with too binding absoluteness requirements I am afraid that a satisfactory and not dogmatic answer will be rather difficult to find. |
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Their made-up faces were garish in the night-light and as they walked they stared fixedly ahead, afraid to make a sideways glance in case it should be called soliciting. |
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When they were come up to the place where the lions were, the boys that went before were glad to cringe behind, for they were afraid of the lions. |
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He was ill with a fever and others on the ship were afraid for his life. |
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Detectives are afraid the 45-year-old fugitive, who made threats from his jail cell that he would kill his rape victims, will try to find the woman. |
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You can't help but love the way Amos plays chess with the elephant, and hides with the tortoise, and the way the owl understands the zookeeper is afraid of the dark. |
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She was evidently afraid to give up this outfit even temporarily because it was likely to be confiscated by the judge and she would thereby be left without protection. |
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I'm afraid I'm going to have to revise all my books and opinions. |
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Then there came a mellow noise, very low and mournsome, not a sound to be afraid of, but to long to know the meaning, with a soft rise of the hair. |
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He had hoped for a lasting peace with France, and he was afraid that if he took too much, the whole of Europe would unite in envious hostility against Great Britain. |
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This new crest drew criticism from large sections of the St Helens faithful, who were afraid of the club losing its connection to the town to attract a wider fan base. |
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He has a hard time getting started because he's afraid he'll mess up. |
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We were about to follow this advice, when another man, more rash than his comrades, said, 'I'm not afraid of caymans,' and spurred his horse into the stream. |
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There was nothing to be afraid of that Ronny could see. And yet he was himself thrilled to an irrational memory-ridden fear of some cowardice somewhere afoot. |
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He was rather a womaniser, yet he was afraid he wasn't attractive. |
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Sebastian Sobecki's discovery of the early provenance of the trilingual Trentham manuscript reveals Gower as a poet who was not afraid to give Henry IV stern political advice. |
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Most of these cases of abuse go unreported since the members of the society that witness such abuse are too afraid of being accused of being accomplices. |
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I am afraid I cannot convey the peculiar sensations of time travelling. |
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With a kazillion guns already in circulation, Brady Bill or no Brady Bill, I'm afraid we'll never see the day that criminals have to make do with rocks and sharp sticks. |
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