Known for his loud ties and stripy jackets, he quickly became an afternoon television icon. |
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Second-generation Pakistani Americans tend to travel to Pakistan less frequently as ties become attenuated. |
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In 1992 the company severed its family ties and was sold to the London jeweller Asprey. |
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Each morning elderly men in crewcuts and bolo ties emerge from behind the redundant locks of ranchstyles to run up the flag. |
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In this context ties of kindred were tightened by lordship rather than loosened. |
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It ties the whole ball of wax together, from studio to director to actors to grips. |
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He’s wearing a beaded, multicolored short skirt, dusty slippers, while the rest of the attendance flashes ties or broided shirts. |
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I hope to explore ways and means of strengthening the economic, defence and cultural ties between our two countries. |
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Filmmakers from these countries reflect on those old ties with a combination of curiosity, rue and rage. |
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Hank lifted his head as two men in black and white cowboy shirts, Stetsons, bolo ties and blue jeans stepped out of a sleek silver pickup. |
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Suffice it to say that our existing ties have set the scene for future collaborations. |
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Were the kipper ties and stacked heels out in force at the Kremlin for New Year's Eve? |
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But for more exciting ties and the chance of an occasional victory forget parochial best and go for a British eleven. |
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Included as well are Tecumseh's ties to the Creeks and an equal number of entries that describe the Shawnees ' wartime experiences. |
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Mr. Bruno is enmeshed in a widening criminal investigation into his business ties to people seeking state money or actions. |
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The invitation to become members of a surrogate family not based on blood ties yet expressive of the inter-personal values of sibling kinship. |
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Pakistanis with foreign ties often retain strong bonds to their homeland and can offer resources and expertise the country needs. |
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Continued use of their native language and dialect sustains homeland ties and delays acculturation. |
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It has, in the intervening period, abandoned its residual ties to liberal reformism and any genuine defense of democratic rights. |
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Soak hair-care items like combs, barrettes, hair ties or bands, headbands, and brushes in rubbing alcohol or medicated shampoo for 1 hour. |
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The paper alleged 10 of the 32 committee members have financial ties to the pharmaceutical manufacturers involved. |
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Such strong family ties breed a communal spirit in which the needs of the group are more determinant than those of the individual. |
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The people walk hand in hand, the men in suits, ties and fedoras, long-legged women in wide-brimmed hats, wearing dresses down to their ankles. |
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It works best with wide ties made from heavy fabrics and should be worn with a tab, button-down or regular spread collar. |
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Water control ties in with fish and wild-life preservation, with purification of streams polluted by city sewers and industrial wastes. |
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The typology hermeneutic ties us into the concept of an ongoing reformation within the church. |
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Villagers believe the shaman uses black magic to help tame the elephant and sever ties to the mother. |
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A less messy option is cotton balls in metal caps with twist ties to hold them to the tape. |
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He called on Winchester to cut its ties and develop twinning arrangements with towns in the Third World. |
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Our mutual respect is born of the natural ties between mariners and a long and illustrious shared history. |
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In typical rodeo fashion, white-jacketed waiters served longnecks on silver trays while gents in tuxes, bolo ties and Western hats circulated. |
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He signed a diplomatic communique with the former Vanuatuan prime minister to establish official ties last November. |
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For Stuart Carroll it is noble violence, especially in its vindicatory aspect, that ties together and explains these contrasts. |
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We've had a marvellous few days and the family ties have been firmly established now. |
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If you think you may not have time to check ties regularly, use a stretchy material such as rubber rather than a rigid tie. |
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Detective Warren was wearing a black suit, with one of those tasteless blue paisley ties that cops seemed to favor. |
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They revealed their veteran status by accessorising tuxedos and bow ties with sturdy cargo pants, wellies and baseball caps. |
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Arthur also studied the commercial ties between clockmakers, watchmakers, and cabinet-makers, since tall-case clocks were a collaborative effort. |
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Diplomats dressed in their black ties or their national costumes dined, wined and danced in the beautifully decorated ballroom. |
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Also, they revolutionized the whole concept of politics, relaxing its ties with society and religion. |
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With that he turned and walked back into his house, the ties on his robe trailing behind him. |
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This text uniquely ties together the Ascension and our need to be witnesses of this glorious event and of all the life and teachings of Christ. |
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Nor does public protection and support for associational and affective ties need to be limited to marriage partners and parents and children. |
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As contemporary commercial manuals never tired of complaining, they were free from all guild ties and all state regulation. |
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Perhaps this is due to the strong production ties that northeast Louisiana has and the students that it draws. |
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Now he ties development to market research, much of which is done far from the Midwest. |
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As skirts were hitched up and ties loosened, out came the blue Rimmel eyeliners and the Body Shop blushers. |
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However, some cabbies are up in arms over plans for them to wear clip-on ties instead, which they say still represent a danger. |
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You can buy decorative cording for the ties or make them from the cover fabric. |
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Several of the arrows still retained sinew ties in association with fletching or hafting of the antler arrow points, or both. |
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Beyond the ties islanders have to each other, they also have unbreakable ties to the island itself. |
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The linguistic and cultural ties are there, as is a surprising degree of goodwill on the part of previously colonized populations. |
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Their lives were often founded on strong family ties and childhood friendships. |
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It's easy to see where those jokes about Taswegians with close family ties come from. |
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He also is a precinct committeeman with close ties to the community's Democratic Party leaders. |
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Paintings of past and present champions in action, horseshoe-shaped ear-rings and ties and scarves with jockeys' silks on them are all on sale. |
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Live Cup commentaries from every round of the Cup on Radio Scotland and a significant number of ties streamed live on the Internet. |
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Instead, it has stoked the anger of those who see Charles's refusal to cut ties with his aide as a form of weakness. |
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I mean, the attorney general of the United States still has ties to the home area. |
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Their ascension to power would leave Nepal open to closer ties with China and Pakistan, both rivals of India. |
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In town a man ties several dozen eggs on the back of his bike, while a small farmer wheels around the corner with a can of milk on his carrier. |
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What ties together these sundry ingredients is the vision of delivering information through any medium, anywhere in the world, at any time. |
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And without the ties of kinship, we would be nothing more than a disconnected horde. |
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Close ties with immediate and extended families are an important aspect of Colombian life, providing support in many aspects of life. |
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The vagueness of the crimes and ties between the characters only adds to the baffling nature of the plot. |
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Seismic interpretation began with the generation of synthetic seismograms and subsequent ties to seismic data. |
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Officials say he was on the no-fly list because of his alleged ties to possible terrorists. |
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Will somebody who puts the doo in a plastic bag, then ties it to a tree or leaves it on the side of a path, explain the logic behind that to me? |
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Austria, with strong political and dynastic ties with Italy, was particularly italophile. |
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The many suits and ties and other conservative dress worn by the crowd yesterday reflected the upscale membership of much of the organisation. |
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The 30 year old lead singer was born in Reading, Berkshire but has strong family ties with Mayo. |
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And did he maintain family ties with the family members in the old country? |
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Joan ties some of the very tall pieces together in a teepee style for pole beans. |
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Like Nero, his family had ties to the Legion, but he was not of noble blood, unlike Nero, and could not become a centurion. |
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Business ties between directors and companies whose boards they sit on are being terminated. |
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Men at their sides may have been attired in black frock coats, over waistcoats, white wing-collar shirts, black ties and top hats. |
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It makes me cringe to think how much money I threw away on ties and dress shirts and sport coats and wool slacks that I never wear any more. |
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This music was full of accidentals, thirty-second notes, dotted whole, half, quarter, eighth and sixteenth notes, slurs, ties and key changes. |
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They have strong ties to Malaysia, speak a dialect of Malay and identify themselves as Pattanis rather than Thais. |
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Her strong ties to her black culture and oral tradition create a rich foundation for her novels. |
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Ones of longer lengths win, with high cards breaking ties and loose high cards breaking further ties. |
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While every one else was letting it all hang out, they sported suits, ties and short haircuts. |
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Horizontal adjustment is provided through the slotted end with wire ties into the wythe of brick. |
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At no time did he ever see ladder ties extending from the block to the brick wythe. |
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He and Carolyn are also local preachers at Kingston Methodist Church and have close ties with many voluntary organisations. |
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She deftly ties a knot at the end of a long piece of thread before poking the other quickly through the needle's eye. |
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These guests seriously enjoy dressing up in very posh frocks and stylish black ties for dinner. |
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His anti-corruption crusading, run-ins with management and police during strikes, and political ties made him a ripe target. |
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Now, everything about higher education is about pulling students back into these ties and constraints. |
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That mantle fell instead upon the large middle-class house, in its own ample grounds but free from the ties of an estate. |
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Tightly jointed stonework complements the house's crisp lines and ties it to the site, part of a former farm. |
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In a country which has strong ties with India, these Tamils constitute the strongest link. |
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All I'm saying is that we're 7 years overdue for skinny ties and narrow lapels. |
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Government has reaffirmed its commitment to forge strong ties with the private sector in order to create employment and reduce poverty. |
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Michael, 35, has opted for top hat and tails coupled with a salmon pink shirt and ties to match. |
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Konig spent much of the 1970s in North America, where he established close ties with the leading artists of the avant-garde. |
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The author addresses environmentalism's ties with religiously motivated ideas about stewardship. |
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After the war, a few prominent churchmen, some with close ties to the Vatican, helped major war criminals to escape justice. |
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The Hives also get big points for those stylish white ties that they never seem to take off. |
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Officials asked the university senate to enforce a historic dress code barring all forms of dress apart from traditional white ties and suits. |
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You spray-paint pasta bows red, then hot-glue string or twist ties onto the back and attach to the tree. |
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As troubles mounted, Sun cultivated ties to a circle of academics who study rural issues. |
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An Arsenal defeat could lead to a desperate tailspin damaging the two crucial cup ties that come along in February. |
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Check ties on climbers and wall plants, replacing any that have come loose in high winds. |
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The religious and cultural bonds further cemented those ties with village people, which they remember with nostalgia. |
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Although there are no official diplomatic ties between the two nations, humanitarianism transcends national boundaries. |
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And those clean-cut boys in their ties sure are perky without even a sip of cola to boost them. |
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For the first time in centuries, residents without family ties to the area have become the chatelains of some of the great river estates. |
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Blue Nun is about as fashionable as bubble perms, kipper ties and progressive rock. |
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In 1972, detente allowed diplomatic relations and closer economic ties between East and West Germany. |
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In India and other parts of Asia, some people are outright slaves, others in debt bondage that ties them to a particular landlord. |
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This Father's Day, just say no to ties and thick books about dead presidents. |
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He is Canadian, but like most of us, he has ties elsewhere, with a different culture and social mores. |
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However, don't worry, because a Scott talk is not an Open University seminar, there are no kipper ties and brown corduroy jackets. |
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He believes that he has been involved in perhaps a couple of situations where remedial ties had to be implemented. |
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However, the ties which bind the United States and Turkey together as important allies remain. |
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The trio has close ties to the National Security Agency, the overseer of U.S. naval communications files. |
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Some sources say that the ties linking the two families were deep and ramified. |
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An important indicator of the shallowness of these ties has been their failure to adopt a mutual defense agreement. |
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The twist ties were made of thin metal wire with a paper covering, and they rusted through after a few weeks. |
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Among other findings was that the Homeland Security Committee has very strong ties to the Rules Committee. |
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In the multifamily category, the jury looks not only at the buildings but also at their ties to neighborhood recreation and transportation. |
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You will then be asked to remove all your clothes and put on a loose gown that ties at the back of your body. |
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Still, it seems that all BBC presenters and reporters will be wearing black ties for the funeral on Tuesday. |
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The garish jackets and flamboyant ties were out in force as more than 2,000 people packed York Minster to celebrate his life. |
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Three men in white shirts, black pants and starched ties do wobbly arabesques as if struggling against the wind. |
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Artifacts found at Chaco suggest that the community had trade ties with people as far away as Mexico, such as the Toltecs. |
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Here in England as in other developed countries family ties are not strong enough. |
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One Democrat with close ties to labor, the former House minority leader, Congressman Richard Gephardt, will be here to joins us. |
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In today's ultramodern world of multigenre hybrids and high-intensity actioners, titles with strong ties to the past are a rarity. |
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This game allows the user to get the feel for being a corporate manager with ties to the Mob. |
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In a reciprocal gesture, Pakistan agreed to restore full diplomatic ties with nuclear neighbor India. |
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Yes, it will take some pleading, but this ties into something else I really can't talk about at the moment. |
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He bought some funky kipper ties in 1983 and he's determined to get his money's worth! |
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The bond between man and horse is one with deep historic ties dating back at least 15,000 years to the cave paintings in Lascaux, France. |
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To keep plants from being choked, you often have to adjust ties as they grow. |
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Alliances are being struck to broaden content and advertiser ties in many cases. |
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Roof sheeting rests on the purlins, and the whole is stabilized by diagonal ties under the deck. |
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Scots may lose their regional ties in becoming New Zealanders, and the accent softens or disappears apart from the Southland burr. |
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He has always sought to form permanent ties with the men whom he has adored so excessively. |
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The rising unemployment rate has apparently caused the government to think twice about more active trade ties with China. |
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Doctors abroad are giving up their traditional white coats and ties as they could harbour infections. |
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Most ties are slip-stitched with a Liba machine, a semi-automated machine that closely duplicates the look and resiliency of hand stitching. |
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The radical leaders distrusted the private sector altogether because of its close ties to the West. |
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Painted potsherds originating with the Puebloan people indicate strong trade ties between these Plains Caddoans and their neighbors farther west. |
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Then sew ties or tabs to the right sides of the back pieces at the center back, sew the facings on top, and turn to the inside. |
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Another favourite for Win was a ceremony in the theme of Chicago gangsters, the men in black shirts and white ties and carrying violin cases. |
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He unhooks the bike frame and ties it tightly to his backpack, then doubles its rope round the wires and knots it tight. |
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And yet, both men were born in Quebec and have strong emotional ties to Montreal. |
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As we re-engage in the peace process and rebuild frayed ties with our allies, what should a democratic president ask of our allies in return? |
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With a throng of guests adding lush orchestration to most of the tracks, it is Campbell's understated wispy vocal that ties the tunes together. |
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Board insulation is usually 1 to 2 inches thick and is cut or kerfed to fit between metal ties in cavity walls. |
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In southeast Angola, the practice of calling a parent after his or her firstborn child further create ties between the generations. |
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He ties the man's hand in front of his chest with a length of gauze, and wraps the body in a sheet. |
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So he got me the plush summer job at the men's haberdashery selling ties and socks and underwear. |
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She's so excited that she takes a blue ribbon out of her hair and just ties a bow around it. |
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Men in white-collar jobs sometimes even wear shorts, knee socks, white shirts, and ties to work. |
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Tie the top of the mesh sleeve with cable ties and then clip it to the nylon string using clothes pins. |
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Either pieces of pipe cleaner or paper-covered wire plant ties can be used to tie the stems to the stake. |
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Some of the most damaging ties are fastened around trees for secondary purposes, for washing lines, swings or bird box fixings. |
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It is basically a crossover sweater, but the ties are in the back where little hands won't be able to get at them. |
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Use rubber bands or inexpensive cable ties to temporarily tie up appliance cords and window blinds. |
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But these little bits of blind chance or Fate take out individuals rather than eroding the ties of the hermetic village. |
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So utilitarianism, despite its traditional ties to welfare hedonism, is compatible with any of the four accounts of utility. |
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The speed limit on this section of heavier rail on concrete ties is 110 mph for conventional Amtrak trains. |
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I remember the good old days on the Pullman sleepers when you could see the ties speeding by underneath you when you flushed the toilet. |
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The contamination in the soil in this project is mostly creosote, a product used on railway ties and telephone poles. |
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Widely used in Europe and Japan, slab track connects track to a concrete slab instead of with traditional ties and ballast. |
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Rail workers drove the nails into ties to keep the historical record of construction. |
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The Katy was decommissioned in 1986 and its iron rails and wooden ties sold for scrap. |
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However, stacks of concrete ties and welded rail by the right of way indicated extensive upgrading. |
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The allotment includes 12 fillies and eight colts, many with ties to American racing. |
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He and his wife are also local preachers at Kingston Methodist Church and have close ties with many voluntary organisations. |
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Readers of Animal Times will gain new insight into the complex nature and strong family ties of these fascinating animals. |
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Aborigines sustained a strong attachment to ties of family and kin, however, and continued to acknowledge a wide range of relationships. |
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Ball gowns and black ties were the dress code as the town council hosted its yearly civic dinner and dance in glamorous style. |
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Tying up an opponent is usually good, but it also ties up one of yours which can lose a valuable scoring opportunity. |
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He vacillates between serving a rump nationalist constituency and seeking closer ties with the international community. |
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Noel, who hails from Wingfield, Knock, will reflect on his years growing up in Knock and his family's strong ties with the parish of Bekan. |
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It remains a close one, however, due to the strong ties linking members in the U.S., England, and India. |
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The table straddling the checkerboard floor and spiral carpet ties the differing patterns together. |
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All the men still have their shirts buttoned up tight to the collar, their ties knotted, their hair slicked back. |
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How they must have perspired underneath the fine suits, tight collars, silk ties and heavily starched shirts! |
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Honestly, every man in western society needs to have at least one good suit and a couple of dress shirts and ties to go with it. |
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During the summer months we have lots of shirt collars undone and ties at half mast. |
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Football is about playing in every situation, not just glamour football ties but bread-and-butter games. |
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Derby and Sunderland, both with healthy average home gates and attractive third round ties could manage scarcely more than 30,000 between them. |
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It has followed a policy of maintaining friendly relations with the North while strengthening economic ties with the South. |
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But to get you started, we've selected four suits to show the range, with shirts and ties to pull the outfits together. |
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Men generally wear Western-style trousers and shirts with jackets and ties for formal occasions. |
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He has an interesting piece on the affair at History News Network, and ties it in to broader issues having to do with politics and the academy. |
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Her ties with Scotland have remained strong with yearly visits to see family and friends up North. |
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As everybody ties into the Internet, it is every citizen's responsibility to be aware of security issues. |
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The ending, when everyone finally goes to Canterbury, ties things up in a satisfactory, almost mystical fashion. |
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Most of the ties were sadly one-sided, England winning four matches by an average margin of 34 points. |
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While it is unlikely that a free trade area will be set up between the two nations, the deal is likely to see formal ties of bipartite trade. |
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I know that when you are framing a gable roof, you can use collar ties in lieu of attaching ceiling joists to the bottom of the rafters. |
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New England settlers practiced mixed farming and had greater ties to the market, and tended to play a very important role in local towns. |
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I've known birders who have cut ties with friends and family over this issue and I don't think that's worth it. |
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If he has evidence that ties Novak into it after he shot his mouth off then that's a real cover-up. |
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It's good to have such tight ties to your home base, but don't miss out on the tail end of the summer season. |
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In the world of bolo ties and bow ties, faux flaps and mudflap skirts, that's, well, annoying. |
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That the administration had to handle it so carefully is a testament to how much the issue ties them in knots. |
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The colorful tin can container provides zip ties and variable thickness rubber shims to go around the handlebars and computer mount. |
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Fasten small brown paper bags carefully to the stems with twist ties and staple the bottoms closed if necessary. |
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Based on his life as an American and his ties to his community, Mike is not a danger to anyone and does not pose a flight risk. |
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She took into account the different ties and shirts, and realized that the pair must be identical twins. |
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There is a story about a daughter's ambiguous ties with her father's mistress. |
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The high school parking lot has a cinder surface instead of asphalt, wooden ties instead of concrete for the curbs. |
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Now, it has strengthened the ties not only between computer animation and traditional claymation, but also with real-time puppetry. |
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With tailored suits and ties as bright as a skyrocket, he's the Dapper Don. |
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As it decays, it ties up dissolved oxygen, eventually causing creatures like shrimp, fish, crabs, and octopuses to suffocate. |
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All four ties played last weekend in the fourth round of the York FA Sunday Morning Junior Cup were decided by the odd goal. |
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He leaves the body on a strong branch and ties the body to the tree trunk and heads back. |
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Despite his name, his European blood ties were not recognized and he was raised a Khoikhoi by his mother. |
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The row over ties and over which news organisation had been the more sepulchral rumbled all week and became a story in its own right. |
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This story, like every other story, ties the tellers to one another and to this place. |
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My mother has always been crazy but she finally went off the deep end and severed ties with me and her mother who I stay with. |
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He ties rope, old shoestring, clothes hangers around his waist to keep his pants up. |
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We sent three patrols to escort the fire brigade which ties up our resources if a more serious incident takes place at the other end of town. |
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What is undebatable is that as the country's economy has grown, so has its trade ties with Africa. |
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Remove the outer brick leaf to damp proof course level and rebuild the walling, ensuring the wall ties are inserted in the correct positions. |
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The vote was nearly unanimous, only Simon and a few officers who's planets had close ties to Beta Crucis. |
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One analyst said the decision will not lead to an immediate severance of diplomatic ties between them. |
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As an aesthetic criterion of evaluation, this requirement ties the success or failure of the object to a form of hypostasis. |
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Red caps, badges, distinct ties and other emblems confer authority on to officially endorsed senior pupils. |
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The visit heralds the restoration of diplomatic ties after decades of political animosity. |
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Their Italian shoes are unscuffed and their ties are always straight and they never go bald or get paunchy around the middle. |
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Last weekend, the Crown was packed with dinner jackets, black ties and pretty girls in scanty numbers. |
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She finished braiding my hair, retied the ties at the bottom, tied the sash on the back of my dress, handed me my shoes and then went to leave. |
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It could ease tensions and improve ties between the bitter political rivals. |
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Mr. Roney acknowledges that some retrofit related to supplying additional ties is necessary. |
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The critical venom is almost enough to stir misplaced feelings of cultural loyalty and ties of kinship in even the hardest black heart. |
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Another thing that makes Seven Stars Farm unique is its strong ties to the local anthroposophical community. |
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The hood is a separate panel that adds depth to the front section, and ties the fenders, greenhouse and nose together. |
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Yet, the experts believe that family ties still play a major role in ameliorating the potential social distress caused by unemployment. |
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Establishing friendly ties lowers stress, increases immunity and boosts the amount of support you receive. |
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The devices of rhetoric, however, did not lose their links with poetry or their practical ties with the law. |
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Star is half French and half Spanish but he was raised as an American with no ties to Europe, he said. |
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It is a thin, light blanket with ties to attach to a poncho, to give the wearer extra warmth in the rain. |
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A jabot, splashy or bold prints, round and low necklines, or long ties on a scarf make busts look larger. |
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From striped to solid ties, we've got the neckwear that'll make the ladies want to form new ties with you. |
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He rides her home and ties her up in the stable before removing the bridle. |
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The men were wearing shirts and ties and were about 5ft 10 in and carried two bags, a holdall and a laptop bag, which were used to steal the equipment. |
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If you are a very classic dresser, I wouldn't recommend ties with motifs of animals or cartoons because they would probably come off as tacky and unattractive. |
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Not expecting visitors, she simply ties a sarong around her waist. |
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A cell phone is practically sewn to your waist, a BlackBerry is virtually glued to your hand and instant messaging ties you to your boss like a ball and chain. |
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While thematically they rail against these trappings, the whole album sounds like a slow process of ultimate defeat, the band seemingly unable to shake the ties they deride. |
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He has close ties with the city political establishment and serves more than 200 needy families a week through his food bank. |
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Japan-Korea ties will hinge on what Tokyo expects and can ultimately get out of Pyongyang, especially in security assurances versus war reparations. |
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A fragile center-right parliamentary majority emerged, composed of free-market liberals, conservative nationalists, and parties with ties to oligarchic clans and big business. |
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The couple will also have the opportunity to meet with Chinese leaders who played a role in restoring bilateral ties and view flowering cherry trees in bloom in Beijing. |
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Since its inception, Hamas has had close ties with Iran, but relations soured when civil war broke out in Syria. |
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They're here to strengthen ties with the U.S., talk a little politics, wine and dine with dignitaries, and test out Camilla's popularity in a nation some call Diana country. |
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In other words, markets were impersonal, but that was good, because sometimes personal ties were cruel and oppressive. |
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If the wall ties are adequate, the brickwork should be rebuilt plumb. |
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A group of related lineages that maintain social ties is known as a clan. |
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He binds the little flyer with black plastic ties and seals her mouth with duct tape. |
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The loyalty that this relationship entails, and to which husband and wife were obliged, is of greater importance than blood ties and patriarchal lineage. |
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You'll find plenty of ties in juicy shades such as berry and plum. |
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Hank lifted his head as two men in black and white filigreed cowboy shirts, Stetsons, bolo ties and blue jeans stepped out of a sleek silver pickup. |
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She sees prospects for growth in the ties between the two countries, but at the same acknowledges that for many Dutch business people, Bulgaria is still terra incognita. |
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Not playing overtime and having games end in ties would be more fair than the rules as they stand today, and nobody wants to see ties, so the league needs to make a change. |
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Uber severed ties with him, and on Monday he was charged with misdemeanor vehicular homicide. |
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At these coastal restaurants, the waiters might be wearing ties and the tables could be draped with linen, but customers are still welcome in shorts and flip-flops. |
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I love to write and free my mind off all the ties life binds me to. |
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The runners-up from the eight groups will play the first leg of their second round ties at home, which may offer a small advantage to their opponents. |
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Strong extended family ties tend to exercise a restraint on deviant behavior, and family meetings are often called to settle problems before they become public. |
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These fundamental commercial and cultural ties are unimpaired. |
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After extensive touring to support their third LP, the band cut ties with Thrill Jockey. |
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The ties between the United States and Japan are friendly and close because we share common values, mutual interests and joint faith in democracy. |
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I see the blue and I see the beige and I see two peoples with complex, overlapping ties to the same land. |
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Mitchell has close ties with Sen. Jerry Tillman, the lawmaker who sponsored the bill. |
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The result is a genealogist's dream, for not only does he sketch the families, he also records their ancestry and their ties to others in the county. |
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Their ties were taken off, shoelaces removed, like common criminals. |
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We vs. death, a melancholic septet from Utrecht, Holland, located a mere hour from the Belgian border, have stronger ties to a discernible community of musicians. |
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Another is the attention he pays to clientship and how this differs from citizenship in placing people in vertical rather than horizontal ties of trust and obligation. |
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The mother unties the palm staves from the mattress, then takes the nylon ropes and ties the mattress to the boat. |
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They wore white socks and polyester shirts and ties and thick glasses and coded in machine language and assembler and FORTRAN and half a dozen ancient languages now forgotten. |
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Why a 26-year-old with no ties to the 2012 GOP nominee and no campaign experience has them worried. |
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Moreover, Kodak's bets are paying off in health-imaging, where it's leveraging longstanding ties with doctors eager to replace X-rays with digital images. |
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In a brand new foreword to her novel that is being re-released with branding ties to the movie, Lowry discusses this. |
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At what point did the idea come up to make the Cary arrest and his ties to LeMond Bishop such a big part of this season? |
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Check any staked trees to see if their ties are getting tight. |
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That tweet came from shay Horse, whose bio lists him as an independent photojournalist with ties to Occupy Wall Street. |
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Investigators also found some ties that had been knotted together and believe Yu had intended to use them as a rope before deciding to use electrical cord instead. |
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She masterfully ties insights on love and loss to the harrowing fear as she is flipped out of a raft in one of the Grand Canyon's deadliest rapids. |
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Afghanistan's ancient roots and strong ties of kinship provide an anchor against progress, but also the means to cope when central authority has collapsed. |
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At their cramped concrete home, Idris' family described her as a cheerful but sometimes hot-tempered woman who had no overt ties to any militant groups. |
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Streamer tags are plastic tags about the size of twist ties with unique numbers that are attached to the meat of the lobster between the carapace of the body and the tail. |
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The drop-in module, which adds to the stiffness and torsional rigidity of the whole vehicle, ties the car together from the seats rearward and from b-pillar to b-pillar. |
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Longstanding ties often led us to overlook the faults of local elites. |
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After we send the packs and skis over, Ken ties into the cord. |
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Debbie ties one on with Jennifer, all in the name of life coaching. |
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Waddilove Cup second round ties are set to be played on Sunday. |
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Moussa, a liberal and a secularist, is the current frontrunner, but he is struggling to shed his ties to the former regime. |
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Fans of Northampton Town and Scarborough must be wringing their hands in anticipation of their clubs' fourth round ties against Manchester United and Chelsea respectively. |
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The police are now cracking down on autorickshaws in the city, in a bid to regulate ownership and sever the ties between anti-social elements and autos. |
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From the dissolution of feudal ties emerge squabbling subjects nursing secret grievances, haughtily guarding caste privileges, or jealously policing petty distinctions. |
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The Fox News scoundrel is at it again, this time going after the Girl Scouts for ties to a gay punk band. |
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