There is talk of making the stability pact more adaptable to the business cycle. |
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On this part of the Yorkshire coast in among the amusement arcades and the history, there's still talk of witchcraft and magic. |
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There's talk of the police working to rule and having protest marches against overtime cuts and stuff. |
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Politicians need to re-engage with the electorate if talk of new politics is to be for real. |
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If the referendum delivers a no vote on regional assemblies, then all talk of scrapping councils and mergers would be halted. |
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She fascinated me with talk of rolfing, reiki, hollotropic breathing and other exotic phenomena. |
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It is true there are some senses in which we may allowably talk of the Visible and Invisible Church. |
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For example, one should not talk of death, dying or misfortune and not reminisce about the past year, as this is a new year and a new beginning. |
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All talk of the war being over was nonsense, and here were the trucks to take them on the first lap of their journey to death. |
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Several talk of how they used to zap to another channel whenever politics came on television. |
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Is it not a bit late in the day to talk of probe considering that the contracts were signed several years ago? |
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The 30-second ad has become so popular that there is serious talk of creating just such a ride at an amusement park in Florida. |
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When people talk of the declining respect for elders, they're probably right. |
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There is now serious talk of a rethink of all core products, even removing the salt from the company's trademark skinny fries. |
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Over at Peter's there has been talk of flying ants and mozzies that seem to be attacking us in their thousands this year. |
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If we are to talk of unity, let us talk of uniting people and not just territory. |
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It says it is nonsense to talk of revitalizing the construction industry, because that would fuel real estate speculation. |
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Bucking the national trend, 82 per cent of voters turned out, giving the lie to all the talk of voter apathy. |
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Garnished with fresh vegetables and a side of mashed potatoes, this loaf of pure C grade meat is the talk of the town. |
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For all the talk of musicals and artiness, Lee knows there are considerable risks involved with his latest endeavour. |
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We talk of the value of the fishery, purchasing freezer trawlers, chartering longliners, and landing fish in various locations. |
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Carlyle rubbished talk of retirement immediately after suffering the injury, and he has reiterated his eagerness to return to action. |
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We've got a vibrant club and the city is buzzing again with talk of rugby league. |
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People who run her down should be ashamed of themselves, and talk of her servants and privileged life is nonsense. |
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He was happy to meet the old men of the village and talk of the days gone by. |
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Perhaps, if his presence is counter-productive in the squad, talk of him being forced out shouldn't be so readily dismissed as outright lunacy. |
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The air in political circles here is heavy with talk of machinations and manoeuvrings, all executed with an eye to the future. |
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That is why marketers yearn for word of mouth publicity and powerful media machines long for becoming the talk of the town. |
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There are many wounded and witnesses have described seeing bodies, although there has been no talk of fatalities yet. |
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There was talk of the weather, the crops, some gossip and scandal, some hunting and fishing news. |
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It could have become a little new-age preachy, with talk of enzymes and vitamins enhancing your well-being. |
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Now, with the annual teachers' union conferences finishing on a shrill note, there is talk of an uprising within the profession. |
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The talk of moving the championship started last year and the rumours made the rounds this year as well. |
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Voters will be reassured by Labour's record, and not frightened by talk of a house-price crash or third-term tax rises. |
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He dismissed talk of a feud with Brown, who is reported to covet the premiership. |
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Brushing off talk of a whispering campaign against him in his own party, he claimed that Liberal Democrats were the party of tomorrow. |
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They are disappointed enough and down enough without talk of retirement of resignations or anything like that. |
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The new editor has instead upped news content and there is talk of launching a News Review section. |
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However, in response to the public outcry at the proposals, the council has now backtracked claiming talk of closure was a rumour. |
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But the Government says talk of collisions and delays is simply scaremongering. |
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These rumours were further fuelled with talk of the them having mined the seas and submarines being seen. |
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So some say the future of the church is in Africa and there is a lot of talk of the next pope coming from there. |
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By the time I heard, the rumour had been the talk of the school for close to 20 minutes. |
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Magniloquence is monotonous, but the talk of the host of the Golden Lion and his neighbours rises and falls with a natural variety. |
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Just talk of telephone numbers like two million is a different world to where he is now. |
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And we can talk of the reasonable, or scientific, approach to understanding the world. |
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Toddlers get much bad press, with talk of tantrums, whining and the terrible twos. |
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And all this talk of it being a man's world is pure balderdash, poppycock and gibberish. |
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Now, even though no one was hurt, there was talk of busting him down to private. |
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After all this talk of salt, Jane produces a packet of Maldon sea salt to sprinkle over them. |
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When the leaders of the most powerful countries meet, they often talk of the poverty of the Third World. |
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It was Gillingham's seventh league defeat in a row, but coach John Gorman would not talk of relegation. |
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I was born and brought up in the country, where people would talk of hunt meets and hunt balls. |
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Why now is there talk of forcing us to pay for the use of what is ours by right, thus increasing the cost of living? |
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For the moment at least, there is no talk of incentives on the Irish market, so here it will have to sell on its merits alone. |
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Indeed, psychiatrists do not talk of insanity but prefer to use terms such as mental illness or mental disorder. |
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The mercury was rising in the city during the past one week and this had become the talk of the town. |
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The tinsel celebrity, now the talk of the town, was flying to Coimbatore for a shoot and she stopped off to pick up her boarding pass. |
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Either way, such failures of easy translatability are far too localized to encourage talk of different conceptual schemes. |
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Perhaps indeterminacy is easier to talk of in the abstract than to analyze concretely. |
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But if someone said something big enough to satisfy my thirst for trash talk of any kind, I'd have heard about it. |
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Elsewhere there's excitable talk of hydrogen, bioethanol, fuel cells, hybrids. |
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Note that when we talk of the functioning of the triunities, these meanings imply the realization of purpose and hence of value. |
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And yet, amid this bleak landscape, there is talk of a new St. Bernard, rising from the mud. |
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There is talk of landowners denying the armed forces access to their firing ranges and a blockade of London is mooted. |
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His melancholy voice and poetic talk of God and anarchists is compelling, especially with the retro-sounding organ, harmonica and horns. |
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While presidents often talk of reducing the size of their White House staff, none actually do. |
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In my view they are what can properly be meant, by the way, by evocative talk of the subconscious or the unconscious mind. |
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So I slunk back to National where there is less talk of skites and bludgers. |
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All its talk of expansion will inevitably be bogged down in bureaucratic delay, and the building will itself cause disruption. |
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Yet there is a danger that the use of cluster bombs and depleted uranium munitions will puncture all his talk of humanitarian action. |
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The next day, everyone could talk of nothing but the mysterious woman at the ball. |
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If the Government's gamble fails, their talk of insurance and premiums will boomerang back at them. |
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I missed the excited talk of last year where our eagerness and innocent naivety overruled our sense of logic and sensibility. |
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Teachers talk of the growing proportion of pupils who don't want to be taught, and whose parents are not greatly bothered about it. |
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And there was all that talk of war, war against an invisible enemy, an unseen speck on a parched landscape. |
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Blackwell said he felt all the talk of a takeover was unsettling his squad. |
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And yet our leaders who talk of freedom and human rights seem to be so silent on this nauseating conduct. |
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We are hoping that this will be a very busy year and the talk of tornados and snowstorms won't put people off. |
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It's all too easy to settle into one of the vaulted snugs and get happily drunk to talk of political intrigue. |
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How often had I heard talk of superstitious idiots, often relatives, who worshipped a God they didn't have the brains to doubt? |
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He remained deeply religious, though, and when he came for appointments would talk of the happenings at his charismatic church. |
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They will talk of prisons in Greece, of frightful justice systems, and of a nerve-racking ordeal which the enthusiast is never likely to forget. |
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The problem is that talk of the interests of justice is very vague and very general. |
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If he wins, as I believe he will, you will be able to hear talk of it across the vales and hills of rural Britain and Ireland for days. |
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Sometimes Western rulers and apologists dress up intervention in the Middle East with talk of more noble causes. |
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Vendors often talk of putting specifications and standards in their middleware products. |
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This new technique was the talk of the circuit for days in the build-up to the race. |
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Microsoft executives bristle at talk of Trojan Horses and the suggestion that bundling its Net services into Windows is unfair. |
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Kickstarting the burlesque scene in London, Maria Saugar reckons the Whoopee Club will be the talk of the town at The Edinburgh Festival. |
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There was talk of marriage and of pooling their money to buy an even grander house. |
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Michael is preparing to marry Delia, and the family is consumed with talk of dowries and other calculable advantages. |
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There will be less talk of her dark mystery from directors who egg her into shower scenes and then allow her nudity to sell their films. |
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In the one there was much talk of the unconscious, of metaphor and metonymy, contradictions, resolutions, transformations and obviations. |
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There is no talk of Pearl Harbor, or of fascist, military dictators, or occupied nations, or a fight for democracy. |
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I know this current crop of stories are the talk of the steamie, but I don't think I can cope with any more celebrity dirty laundry. |
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All very well in the rarefied air of Marylebone in London, though it is some way from being the talk of the steamie in Edinburgh. |
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Nowadays, there is a new spring in the step of Clare folk, new talk of a new team, a new manager, a new era. |
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Now people talk of using carbon credits to protect similar areas around the world. |
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Yet for all the talk of military hardware and holy war, little time is devoted to what happens if it goes wrong. |
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As part of the 50th celebrations there is talk of a reunion, which is already causing a stir among old girls. |
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The area is buzzing with talk of American security men casing local streets, pubs and hotels. |
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Coming into this game, Charlestown's open style of football was the talk of the county. |
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Indeed, we talk of heavy water as water, and there seems no non-stipulative reason not to do so. |
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Personally, I was surprised that this film even received a G rating with all the talk of hellfire and damnation going around. |
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When there was talk of a change of leadership at the helm after the poll debacle, he emerged as Antony's unlikely supporter. |
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There was talk of caving but it soon gave way to a warm fire and pints and cold beans. |
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She came in closer and closer, so close that Wilbur could hear the talk of the fishermen sitting on the stringpieces. |
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After so much talk of football widows, here comes a story of how the World Cup brings a family together. |
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Mayo says talk of selling the film to production studios has been positive, although there's no contract yet. |
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There was talk of deporting her but somehow I suspect she'll outlive us all. |
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To talk of subtilization thus is to highlight its secondary meaning in its original French, i.e. signifying theft or a spiriting away. |
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There was talk of king tides and supermoons, enough to bring the curious to the shores of New York City on Saturday night. |
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The talk of the town was almost as important as the smoke of the factory chimneys in creating a prosperous industrial economy. |
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There has been some talk of strategies, but one of the horrors of terrorism is that there are no tactics. |
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When people talk of the freedom of writing, speaking, or thinking, I cannot choose but laugh. |
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There was talk of his daughter who was a friend of the abused girl I referred to just now, but she was only mentioned in passing. |
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He tugged now from his pants pocket a hankie, so clatty it would've been the talk of the house. |
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I think that is the typical talk of the habitually, perhaps pathologically, closeted. |
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Today's talk of autism is not a new pathologizing of human behavior, just a new perspective on the origin of pathology. |
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The England players called off their strike last night, but a statement of angry intensity should halt talk of a climbdown. |
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We're expecting him back some time next week and all this talk of pay-offs and what have you is incorrect. |
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And to this day we are still seen and treated with contempt as a lesser people by these hypocrites who so boldly talk of democracy. |
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Despite all its talk of diversity, big media in American tends to be something of a closed shop. |
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The rest of the breakfast was spent on idle talk of travel, and of the old woman telling me about Irish life. |
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For all that talk of intellectual mastery, there is another dimension that we're not in control of, and we neglect it at our peril. |
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Negotiations over a new constitution have brought factional wrangling and there is widespread talk of the country sliding into civil war. |
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Her dread is so great that at the end of her progress she does not even allow his name to pass her lips and uses periphrases to talk of him. |
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Some of us associate astrology with star signs that talk of things which merely are coincidental with issues happening in our lives. |
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There was talk of empaneling a grand jury to go over some of that evidence. |
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They seem to fancy that the trendy outfits that adorn their children will become the talk of the town. |
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They talk of going to future fancy-dress parties and of the costumes worn there. |
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But lest anyone think I give succour to the nationalists by talk of national futures, let there be no such fatuous interpretation. |
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There is talk of how Bilbao, a small industrial town on the North coast of Spain, through its Guggenheim Museum. |
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But they talk of transformers, coils and condensers like other women would talk of cooking and sewing. |
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Yet the attack has made such an impact on the anxious and insecure Western elites that there is serious talk of it causing an economic recession. |
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We expect that all congregants, whether minority or majority, will talk of costs and benefits. |
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There was talk of converting the building into the Pakistan consulate but that did not materialise. |
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With the immediate talk of retaliation yesterday, I hope and pray that those in command consider their actions carefully. |
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There is wild talk of inquiries and commissions of investigations in the air. |
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There has been talk of evaporative heat and irradiation, but I I doubt New Zealand would accept irradiated fruit. |
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This talk of funk, punk and devil-worship is starting to fuel a few wild suggestions and flights of fancy. |
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There was some brief talk of adjourning to the bar, but we were too tired, and so flopped under the tightly-tucked blankets and sheets instead. |
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To a narrow-minded military man like Darling, talk of rights was poppycock. |
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When they talk of fish there they mean salmon and when they talk of fishing they mean fly-fishing. |
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The talk of recounts, re-votes, postal votes and even badly-designed ballot papers suggests that we are in for a considerable wait. |
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There has been talk of interest from Manchester United, but Moyes dismissed it as waffle. |
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It was a decade when copious talk of universal human rights mingled abhorrently with the most brazen crimes against humanity. |
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Yet the media and the blogosphere have been ablaze with Tory talk of the unacceptable politicisation of the police under Labour. |
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The firm continued to publish books, and there was talk of opening a bookshop. |
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You can't uproot your family and buy a new house when there's talk of closure all the time. |
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But despite the predicted weekend let-up, forecasters have dismissed talk of a long-term thaw. |
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My trusty builder snapped me out of it with talk of sewers, waste pipes and gravity, so I settled for a semi-sunken one instead. |
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Investors don't generally like talk of acquisitions so soon after a big deal. |
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We hear endlessly this talk of a power struggle, different factions jockeying for position. |
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Cease any talk of font analysis, kerning, superscripts or anything else of a typographical nature. |
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Michael Ancram, shadow foreign secretary, played down talk of a rift. |
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Finally he remembers his purpose, as if emerging from a trance, and urges them to rekindle the signal fire, after all of their talk of pig rituals and dancing. |
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Better to revel in the simple smells of the Seder meal than all that subtle talk of liberation. |
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Boustany echoed an idea that many came to believe, that talk of doomsday was overblown. |
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At lower division level you can talk of managerial merry-go-rounds. |
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Last month, there was little talk of unity and togetherness. |
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On a drizzly morning in Cape Cod, all talk of birthers and beer summits was silenced as hundreds said goodbye to a fallen soldier. |
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In the one there was much talk of the unconscious, of the underlying grammar of myths, of metaphor and metonymy, contradictions, resolutions, transformations and obviations. |
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I suspect I shall be the talk of the office by lunch time at the latest. |
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When we got engaged three years ago, talk of caterers and florists and letterpress invitations occupied us at these gatherings. |
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Husserl insists that the talk of intuition here is no mere analogy. |
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There was even talk of them floating their company on the sharemarket. |
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Nevertheless, Smith would have us disregard all this talk of representation and exercising other people's prerogatives as nostalgia, or perhaps poetic licence. |
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They say all that talk of immaturity on and off the field should cease. |
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There is talk of really striking out and walking down to Taurito Centro to check out the beach and the lido, but I'm not sure how much will come of it. |
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All the talk of a big wheel coming to York this summer reminds me of the time a young mum took her five-year-old son on the big wheel at the fairground. |
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There was understandable talk of riots and retribution, and finger-pointing at any white face they saw. |
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As recently as a decade ago, there was serious talk of folding at least three and possibly as many as six franchises. |
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This could be a serious curtailment to our subterranean activities, there is talk of duck boards, bilge pumps, aqualungs and horizontal drainage tunnels. |
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In his tulle acceptance speech, Hollande quickly looked to dampen enthusiasm with talk of duty and heavy lifting. |
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In the academic confines of museums, such talk of marketing and the bottom line qualifies as gauche. |
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Scared talk of witches and sorcerers was not the attention Avalon needed. |
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In his experience the airwaves are bristling with talk of drug use. |
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In California, there is talk of exploring a 2012 ballot initiative to require the labeling of GMO foods. |
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There's talk of a lost generation as children drop out of school. |
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In recent years there has been much talk of a rush on Scottish novels by hungry producers bearing chequebooks, though little has materialised as yet. |
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Religious expressions, talk of harlots and people blessing themselves also feature widely in what is the kind of cutesy vision of Ireland that might be presented to a tourist. |
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However, to Sinhala extremists, including many in the Buddhist hierarchy, any talk of even limited autonomy for the country's Tamil minority is tantamount to treason. |
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Once unthinkable, Washington's chatterers now talk of it incessantly. |
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With just five weeks to go before the midterm elections, the talk of war appears to be overshadowing other issues, such as the economy and Social Security. |
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Then Old Trafford manager Mike Watkinson took him in hand, working on his technique, and last summer he was the talk of every county dressing-room. |
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I would speak to Panamanians, El Salvadoreans, and Guatemalans to find out why, despite all the talk of how terrible free trade is, they still wanted to sign a deal. |
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Indeed, there was talk of creating a sperm bank for geniuses. |
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When one starts looking at the implications of a diversified portfolio of services, as is the case for most transport operators, we talk of economies of scope. |
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Those morbid posers with their talk of death and blood do not understand the night-time, they just treat it as if it were the same world as the daylight hours. |
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And Paul dismissed talk of the Rhinos being doomed to choke. |
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All this talk of the 70's has obviously woken a sleeping giant within. |
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A little-known Wall Streeter challenging a New York House incumbent is the talk of women's groups. |
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In recent days, there's been much talk of division within the leadership. |
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Police were turning us all back and there was talk of maybe a booby trap bomb at which point I decided to try and get a taxi the 5km back to my hotel. |
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Music industry insiders tend to litter their conversation with talk of turnover, market share and the impenetrable jargon of contract negotiations. |
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But talk of large, illegal squats by visiting protesters is already beginning, with parks, streets, riverbanks and even an abandoned hospital as potential targets. |
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There is talk of cooperation in nanotechnology and solar energy as well. |
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In the contemporary talk of Pakeha the idea of Maori as a national group is unpolitic and raises difficult questions about Maori sovereignty and the status of Pakeha. |
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He says that talk of a breakthrough has been around for some time. |
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She also had come across photos of real women her husband knew, along with talk of torturing and raping them. |
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Of course those old Bill Maher appearances and the talk of witchcraft helped a bit, too. |
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How can anyone talk of misery on a made-to-order day like this? |
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When we talk of the faster growth in the U.S. economy in the late 1990s and ascribe it to broadband Internet, how can we be sure it was not due to the narrowband cell phones? |
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What Samantha Kelly went through has been the talk of Huron Township, Michigan, for weeks. |
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Thus he seems to have been more like a Kantian believer in unknowable noumena than like a Vienna Circle proponent of the view that talk of God is not even meaningful. |
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He is dropped for the trip west amidst talk of a corked leg. |
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As soon as Jeff and I discovered that, the conversation quickly left talk of ivory-bills and on to the exciting flights of peregrines and Cooper's hawks. |
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Forty years after Richard Nixon resigned from office, talk of impeachment is once again in the air. |
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There would be indignant House Judiciary Committee hearings and angry talk of impeachment among some Republicans. |
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The anti-gay-marriage protests have subsided, and so has the talk of a new French revolution. |
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Newspaper reports talk of mine cave-ins and shaft collapses. |
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It was the easy talk of two people who know each other inside out. |
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There has also been talk of him leaving the club, but the Frenchman's worth was exemplified after 15 minutes with an extraordinary goal line clearance. |
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Surely all this graphic talk of gastrointestinal distress is making you queasy. |
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He was in publicity heaven, a place he adored, and he was full of talk of the future. |
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In the twilight afterglow, talk of a new march on Wall Street swept the crowd. |
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The church was not happy with his views, and there was talk of excommunication. |
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Elsie Clark knows there was been talk of naming a Brooklyn street after the rapper biggie Smalls. |
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And yet for all his bullish talk of collective leadership, his 14 years in power have been anything but a joint effort. |
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Just as Janet Yellen looks like she has the Fed chairmanship in the bag comes talk of Roger Ferguson. |
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There was talk of a Judd Apatow-produced Pee-wee film getting made a few years back. |
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For the first time in its history, a Channel 4 programme became the talk of the steamie and the bingo hall crowd as well as the city wine bar and the gay night club. |
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But I think they will be met halfway, because although there is often talk of revolution, things tend to turn out less radically, and we have evolution instead. |
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However there were no presidential announcements, no talk of bombing campaigns or of sending carrier battlegroups or even a major diplomatic offensive. |
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Protest leaders talk of boycotting and marching through Clayton again to shut down area businesses. |
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Already there is talk of him standing down after his next term, with close associates saying that he never really regarded politics as the be-all and end-all. |
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Thee is also talk of me getting a tiny weeny percentage of any sales. |
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However politically accommodating the radicals are prepared to be, any talk of defending workers interests is enough to send the union leaders into a frenzy. |
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Only at this black college did the students talk of Bird and Ornette Coleman, and especially of Coltrane. |
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The pint-size prez gave the pep talk of the year, encouraging people everywhere to take risks and make the world a better place. |
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Tiny flats, some as small as 18 square metres, are selling like hot cakes to Beijing's young urban professionals and are the talk of its youth-oriented media. |
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But talk of millions and billions is deflating to voters who gave small amounts to their favorite candidates. |
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There is talk of the dancers being redeployed as waitresses serving beer. |
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But in April, a few months after she turned 40, she seemingly put the kibosh on any talk of plastic surgery. |
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That about a kilo is at issue in Moldova makes talk of a warhead far off, but it is hardly harmless. |
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Some will undoubtedly start blaming the people and repeat the worn out excuse that the talk of freedom and democracy is futile for such a people as ours. |
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Talk to me about, was it the uncertainty as to what the EU would do that led to the big sell-off last Thursday and all this talk of fat-fingered trading? |
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Sitting amid her younger compatriots' billowing cigarette haze and talk of raging beach parties, she appears relatively tame and vaguely all-American. |
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There was no talk of divorce or of the McGreevy family breaking up. |
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It met with a fierce response from software libre developers, with talk of creating a breakaway organization that could set royalty-free standards. |
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He separated himself from previous mythological explanations, leaving out talk of an anthropomorphized Creator or agent of changes in nature. |
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Despite talk of a merger with the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank did not possess the wherewithal to complete the deal. |
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It is therefore quite correct to talk of the MacDonald family or the Stirling clan. |
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There is much talk of their objectional features and dangers for the established order of things. |
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For reasons known only to printbound publishers, books about words are suddenly the talk of the town. |
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The January 1910 general election was dominated by talk of removing the Lords' veto. |
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People talk of Talibanisation of Pakistan, look what is happening in India. |
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Turning up drunk at the debutante ball will certainly make you the talk of the town. |
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Talk of a demographic dividend may turn back into talk of a time bomb. |
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The talk of nano-town right now are the naturally occurring clays halloysite and imogolite. |
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Fame and fortune may be his to enjoy now, but the online biogs talk of an early childhood spent in a Glasgow tenement flat. |
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If the Prime Minister can talk of a stakeholder society, can you doubt that the bookies will be far behind? |
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The talk of the day was based on different topics like orthogenetic surgery, which is related to moving the jaws. |
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All the talk of a public-private partnership to run the railway is not worth a platform ticket at Victoria Station. |
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Concerned by increasing talk of strict measures to counter climate change, he began investigating carbon offsets three years ago. |
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There was a nervousness under that quick Canadianly-accented talk of his, as if he were working himself up to something. |
|
The McLean faction listened to Flynn's talk of a return match. |
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James also accused anti-racist groups of stirring up talk of racism to keep their jobs. |
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Dutch auction initial public offerings are all the talk of Wall Street, thanks to Google Inc. |
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Cabinet ministers seemingly jockeying for position risk turning talk of election defeat into a self-fulfilling prophecy. |
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There's now talk of a project to link UK and French energy grids through the Channel Tunnel and construction is planned to start later this year. |
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Such a contrast, Aune argues, contributes to a more robust and, hence, more definite christological and particular content for our talk of grace. |
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Critics of the UAR scored propaganda points and dominated the airwaves to talk of a separation between Egypt and Syria. |
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Nor was the president's talk of abundant and inexhaustible resources mere gasconade. |
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It was also new to be listening to talk of bribery and corruption in high places, and Michael Murray saw it as his duty to gen me up on this. |
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His eyes flicked in amusement to the young highlander, who was still enthralled in his guildmates' talk of diving. |
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The prospect of a union of the kingdoms was deeply unpopular among the Scottish population at large, and talk of an uprising was widespread. |
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Both Henry of Huntingdon and Matthew of Westminster talk of a golden dragon being raised at the Battle of Burford in AD 752 by the West Saxons. |
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By the late 1990s, there was talk of the necessity of uniting the right in Canada, to deter further Liberal majorities. |
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A number of novel ideas about religion developed with the Enlightenment, including Deism and talk of atheism. |
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There has long been talk of a new station at Rotherwas, in the south of Hereford. |
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Most accounts of Windsor in the 16th and 17th centuries talk of its poverty, badly made streets and poor housing. |
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Prior to 1980, there had long been talk of Hitchcock being knighted for his contribution to film. |
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The supply situation in Britain was such there was talk of being unable to continue the war, with supplies of fuel being particularly low. |
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While stressing the need for coordination, governments have rejected talk of fiscal union or harmonisation in this regard. |
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He resented some socialists' talk of freedom and world brotherhood while keeping silent about his own partitioned and oppressed Poland. |
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Although there was talk of a memorial concert featuring both surviving brothers and invited guests, nothing materialised. |
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He was soon the talk of the town, the enfant terrible of our little world. |
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Over the next few weeks, the Spanish offer turned into the talk of Europe. |
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We talk of genius still, but with thought how changed! The genius of Augustus was a tutelary demon, to be sworn by and to receive offerings on an altar as a deity. |
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There was talk of a marriage to Edward IV of England or to one of his brothers, probably Richard, Duke of Gloucester, but this alliance was never seriously considered. |
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There is, in fact, talk of an imminent departure, if only he will be able to get his spaceship back from the hotel owners who, they say, had it distrained. |
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A more concerted but equally fruitless effort was applied to celebrate her half-birthday at the beginning of April with talk of half-cakes and half the number of party guests. |
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They neatly sidestepped all talk of offering a cash prize, so the know-it-alls among you will have to be happy with bragging rights among your family and friends. |
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Most people can barely stay awake through talk of Mr Gordon's five economic tests, but Abdul has the perspicacity to see them as a chance to flog more chicken tikka bhunas. |
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When I was a death-defying lunatic armed with a grip tape board on a steep hill, any talk of safety gear would have meant a lifetime branded in the playground as a Jessie. |
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There were many hideous histories the colonel could have told you of, unmeet to be set down, and he was familiar with this talk of pelvic anomalies which were congenital. |
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The Romans used to talk of bread and circuses for the people. |
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Nu metal gained mainstream success through heavy MTV rotation and Ozzy Osbourne's 1996 introduction of Ozzfest, which led the media to talk of a resurgence of heavy metal. |
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But enough of this talk of vagitarianism. Let's get right to the music. |
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Our attorney and Elder Noyse and many others talk of venefic and malignant particles, which shoot from the eyes of witches and enter the bodies of the afflicted. |
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It is not a digression to talk of bawds in a discourse upon wenches. |
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The outbreak of the Sepoy Mutiny in 1857 shifted attention to the heroic defence of British interest by the army, and further talk of reform went nowhere. |
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I'm not significantly more accomplished now although I can knock out a mean spag bol and my friends still talk of the night I made an Italian lamb stew. |
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Yet when the spectacularly successful Wolf Hall author Hilary Mantel murders Thatcher in a new story there is talk of reporting her to the rozzers. |
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She would much rather talk of her time with a more muck-and-brass racing personality, who seems mystifyingly to have escaped The Tatler's attentions. |
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It's easy to scare Americans with talk of ballooning trade deficits. |
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If all this talk of ginger has left you in need of a quick ginger fix then no one can deny that there is little more satisfying than a crunchy gingernut biscuit. |
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