Mr. Schiavo was a penny pincher who kept track of the mileage on his wife's car and yelled at her for spending money on haircuts, they said. |
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Regularly, in the Capitol, in a room named after the late Strom Thurmond, an infamous pincher of ladies' bottoms. |
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A child of the Great Depression, she was a proud penny pincher, brown-bagging her lunch nearly every day of her professional life. |
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Former reporters describe him as a penny pincher, prone to calling journalists to demand justification for expenses. |
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He held out a large blue crab, with a single pincher waving in the air. |
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Over the years, he developed a reputation as a penny pincher who wouldn't spend money for anything. |
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Something's lost, though, in a room so loud that a waitress has to confirm an order of whole steamed lobster by holding up her hands and making little pincher motions. |
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Who was Nathan Marx to be such a penny pincher with kindness? |
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Ian Murray reckons St Mirren's relegation has turned him into a Paisley penny pincher as he bids to rebuild the team. |
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Thirdly, a man should not be a penny pincher instead he should pay on his first date if they want to see the lady again. |
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All that changes when he is visited by the ghost of his former deputy headteacher, Miss Penny Pincher. |
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In 1976, Gurindji elder Pincher Nyurrmiyarri, proposed a 'both-ways' schooling model. |
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