We have been living in sufferation and frustration for too long, Jamaica is back on track and I am proud to say I'm a Jamaican. |
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It wasn't too long ago that the idea of common currency was seriously being batted about. |
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I do think the Government and its agencies have meddled far too long in the affairs of rugby. |
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The U.S. government has meddled in the affairs of the Middle East far too long, always with horrendous results. |
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If he stayed there too long, somebody would most definitely find him, then his cover would be blown and that would be that. |
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The tissues at the back of the throat may be bulky or the uvula be too long. |
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The final piece on the program was a medley of folk songs from Canada's various provinces, and went on a bit too long. |
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For too long, the moral and self-interested case against arms exports has been trumped by the apparently invincible economic case. |
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Where access is not too long and difficult, battery packs like those used for video lights can provide excellent illumination. |
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Originally this was one chapter but it got way too long so I'm going to have to break it up into two separate chapters. |
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On a day like this though, the complete list is too long and it doesn't capture how much the situation has changed. |
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The album's major flaw is that 15 tracks of repetitive bloops and beeps is simply too long. |
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It didn't take too long to find my bag on the carousel, and I moseyed on out of the terminal in Sydney to ring for my lift. |
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Make up small quantities of your blends so they don't have to stand for too long before being used. |
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These twits have had an unchallenged run in the media for far too long already. |
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If the toe is up in the air, either the club is too long or the lie angle too upright. |
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If your prussic loop is too long, you can shorten it with an overhand knot. |
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Avoid this film unless you want to know the befuddled feeling that comes of toking on a bong for a few seconds too long. |
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The flats currently used appear to be about 0.04 inch too narrow at the waist and 0.04 inch too long. |
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We often worked at night and knew that if you stared too long at the fire, like a moon-blind horse, your vision could not adjust to the dark. |
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Just over half of those asked said waiting on hold for too long was their pet hate. |
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If one waits too long, then the patient can be so frail and unfit that surgery is no longer an option. |
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A small number in the queue do have an NHS dentist, but the wait is too long to see them. |
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Work on the master plan needs to begin because the area has waited for too long already. |
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The court also said the cell phone companies waited too long to object to the rule. |
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We didn't have to wait too long before we got in and I must say that Santa was very good. |
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She had some very important news to tell Jake, and she didn't want to have to wait too long! |
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But for Fred Storr, on the waiting list since November, the wait was too long. |
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You're the most local, the clients live in West Kirby, and it's only a Mickey Mouse job so shouldn't tie you up for too long. |
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The housing waiting list was still far too long and he hoped to see more schools completed on the new housing estates. |
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The keeper comes out, arms flailing, but the corner is too long and drifts into touch. |
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Of course I'm wondering about the sudden turnabout, but I'm not going to ponder too long or too deep. |
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Before too long one of the doors sprung open and a page asked them to enter. |
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After too long a period of time, we as human beings will begin to seek ways to meet our needs, wants and desires much closer to home. |
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And let's say, not too long ago, you called up my bespoke Savile Row tailor friend and booked an appointment because you wanted a new suit. |
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It started life in a terracotta pot but grew too long and trailed on the ground. |
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While at first it looked like another milk run, it wasn't too long until something unusual happened. |
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It is true that for too long I denied the sentiments that lingered in my heart in my reluctance to betray my memory of William. |
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For too long we have regarded the extinction of Neanderthals as a chance historical accident. |
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If so, it may not be too long before students start getting detention for talking subvocally in class. |
|
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If Hannibal had listened too long to his accountants, he might not have set off in the first place. |
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Of course, increasing the money supply too fast for too long would eventually create inflation. |
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The brine of capers lingers too long after a taste of stewed octopus in sherry vinegar. |
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Kat leaned over and watched the water for him to surface, but it was taking too long. |
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This will prevent the quick from growing too long and prevent the nail from bleeding. |
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I think the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats have shilly-shallied around this for far too long. |
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If you leave them too long in shallow trays they grow extremely long tap roots which wind around and get tangled up. |
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For far too long they've plundered the pockets of the citizens of this country and treated us with utter disrespect. |
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Let us also hope for a long silence to descend upon the thuggish bigmouth who has strutted and fretted his hour upon the stage for far too long. |
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For too long, Germany has faced the ignominy of being the sick man of Europe. |
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You worry your system might not survive the shock if you experience too long of a lapse between nervous breakdowns. |
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For too long people in Scotland have tried to see Scottish misfortune as the consequence of being governed from London. |
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It wasn't too long before they started up again, with a different kind of balance. |
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Stay too long and you inevitably drown in a quicksand of disappointment, seedy nostalgia and self-deception. |
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The reality is that they have misspent the profits from our boom and are too long in power to even see the extent of their extravagant waste. |
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Not too long after the horsemen depart, the cook has reluctantly left the fire, and has washed up, and is tidying the tucker box. |
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A church minister, the Reverend John Snape, was banned from boarding a train because his mobility scooter was 1.6 inches too long. |
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For far too long now, the youths have had the feeling of having been shunted into the position of secondary citizens. |
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The book is too long and as a narrator, he can be a bit of a blabbermouth, but it is an exceptionally good crime novel. |
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For example, since the porcupine quillwork was taking much too long, they decided to use a combination of quills and beads. |
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Those rabbis, priests, imams, gurus and other religious leaders have had it good too long. |
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The charade was kept up for a long time, far too long, but all that has changed now. |
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As much of an asset to the movies as he is to the stage, there are many cinema-goers who hope he doesn't stay away from the screen for too long. |
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We hope to return to Durham before too long, and when we do we'll definitely try out this treat. |
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For those who like to measure their speed in knots, the waterways north of Angers have been a well-kept secret for far too long. |
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Some of the songs are also too long and would benefit from shorter instrumental breaks. |
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I've come to the realization lately that I've been holing up in my apartment way too much for far too long. |
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If the top level politician remains too long in the saddle, the junior ranks may stagnate. |
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And so when this channel is activated it prevents the nerve cell from being active for too long. |
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Other cases are shots of birds wheeling overhead, or dog teams riding, or kayak trips, or cleaning blubber that are all too long. |
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Would people reject me just because I'm too pale, my nose is too long, and my hair too light? |
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They may steal prey from other raptors, and have been known to eat carrion as long as it has not been dead too long. |
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You've been doing this far too long to suddenly be overcome by guilty feelings. |
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Bodies start to smell like dead rats if you leave them in one place too long. |
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My preferred rationalisation for this is that the films are too long for me to concentrate all the way through. |
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He broke from the halfway line but held onto the ball too long with support on hand. |
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If the head tube is badly ovalized, the reamer will widen the sides, but the head tube will still be too long front-to-back. |
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I can't bump any more but I can manage a sedate wiggle providing it doesn't go on too long. |
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There is a will to succeed that took too long to hone to be put into retirement so soon. |
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The programme has taken too long and been done on the cheap, often cheating by rebadging existing inadequate services. |
|
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I sat down stunned, recollecting the days that I had spent in the East not too long ago. |
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But the down-to-earth chanteuse can't go too long without visiting family and regularly returns to her home town. |
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Anyway, I don't want to tarry for too long as I don't want the hospital to page me. |
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He points out that it becomes very difficult for players to focus on high pressure tournament like the World Cup for too long. |
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If they say something too early then they can be accused of crying wolf and if they wait too long then people ask if they have been asleep. |
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I enjoy red wine but as the only drinker in the house, I find that one bottle lasts too long. |
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He believes one of the reasons the move ended up dead in the water was that negotiations dragged on too long. |
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If your hair was too long, your uniform was wrong or if your boots were dirty you were for the high jump. |
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The problem is a cyst in his knee which may require surgery but should not keep Mark out of action for too long. |
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For far too long in this country we've had institutions that have been bound by class, by hierarchy. |
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The next was cluttered with metal studs and necklaces that had spikes too long for my personal sanity. |
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Leaving irons on too long will kill the hair follicles, creating a brand similar to a hot brand. |
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An old man, whose face looked as if he'd been soaking in water too long, snuck glances at me while puffing on a cigarette. |
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Yet it is true to say that most anglers leave their line on a reel for far too long. |
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I figured she wouldn't be able to stay in the pool for too long anyway, but I was wrong. |
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He has been at the club too long and had to shut out too many protests and boardroom wrangles to let it throw him now. |
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If a line of text is too long to fit between the page margins, the text should be wrapped onto additional lines as needed. |
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Their songs were too long, and were made up of loops created on the laptop utilising the most unmusical discordant sounds imaginable. |
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He had spent too long on the Moscow beat bullying refuseniks and political undesirables. |
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It was simply that the play rather laboured the point at times and was, in truth, simply too long. |
|
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Those monks have had their own way for far too long and this is all about equal opportunities. |
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Don't leave it cellared for too long though, as it should be supped within two years of vintage. |
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One of the first signs your hair is too long is that your bangs get out of control, and hang down stringily over your forehead. |
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And secondly, they've strung us along too long without providing enough interesting plot points to hold anyone's interest. |
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The other is Ifans, who for too long has been typecast as a loveable rogue. |
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For too long, we've allowed our nation to be defined by a marketing slogan targeted at cashed-up foreign tourists. |
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I was stuck behind a removal van for far too long the other day, adding literally seconds to my journey. |
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Also, if you work out for too long or too frequently, you can also become injured or lapse into a drained and depleted condition. |
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The warm water sluicing over my body chased the rest of the cotton of too long a sleep from my mind. |
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Not too long ago we did a simple test and shot the same ammo in five different guns. |
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The full response is too long to repost, but you'll get the gist of it here. |
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He had a run in with some Russians at a laundromat in Brooklyn not too long ago, and he's been two bricks shy of a load ever since. |
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Staying in a hot tub or hot spring too long may be very hazardous to your health. |
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He even threatened armed resistance against the coalition, if it evolved into a force of occupation and stayed too long. |
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If adoption continues as an option of last resort, children will remain in the limbo of foster care for too long. |
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It would take too long to even take the time to pull back the receiver and slot a single bullet in to shoot his brains out with. |
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He said his drive was far too long and he needed to rest up before the next morning. |
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Additionally, if you leave an empty non-stick pan on a hot burner too long, you can roast the surface. |
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We consider that the science is clear but, regrettably, the whole process has dragged on too long. |
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I guess I was taking too long, because the old bag came right into the room! |
|
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I know she's wondering if it's very far because she gets totally carsick and throws up if she's on the road for too long. |
|
Before too long the air in the jeep was stifling, because of the cigarette smoke and alcohol. |
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As well as being badly written, it is too long, too vague, too pompous, too rhetorical, too unrealistic and too boring. |
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But it doesn't take too long to realise that this tiny exhibition is in fact one of the most richly rewarding currently on show. |
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He prefers to keep going, not dwelling too long on the achievements he already has to his name. |
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If the saddle or the blanket is too long at the skirt it too may be rubbing her at the hip bone area. |
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His hair is brown, a mass of curls that are almost too long for SAP's dress code, and he has a dark, kind of olive complexion. |
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Almost overnight, our society stopped rising with the sun and turning in not too long after sunset. |
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Bradford has for too long languished at the end of two dead-end railway lines and one dead-end motorway. |
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For too long Glasgow has been out of step with the rest of Scotland which complies far more readily with copyright law. |
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He shook his head, feeling stirrings of emotions he hadn't felt for too long. |
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The lateral imprints of the thoracic legs appear too long to have been made by an apterygote, particularly a monuran. |
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He said he hoped the government's measure to cap fuel prices should not last too long because it could have repercussions in the long run. |
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Also, the bag is mildly odiferous, so it's doubtful you'd forget about it for too long in a household environment. |
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He said that the credit union had seen an end of the loan shark and the pawnbroker, who for far too long, had gripped people in poverty. |
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It wasn't too long ago that it was more of a case of loathe him or hate him and I certainly was no different. |
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I can remember not too long ago it was in occupation and kept in good repair. |
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These tiny parasites have been burrowing under your spiritual armour for way too long now. |
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He stalked towards her, his strides suddenly a bit too fast and too long to be considered sober. |
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For too long the problems of our rural communities have been put on the back burner, and thought insoluble. |
|
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The impression nevertheless vividly remains of someone going around the bend as a result of his staring too long at the face of evil. |
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Like most comics today, his stage act is far too long but it does include some of the best observational comedy you'll ever see. |
|
Before too long the mass denial and the conspiracy theories will flourish again. |
|
At barbecues, food must not be left lying around too long outside and must be cooked thoroughly. |
|
He assures me he is far too long in the tooth to compete against the current world title holders, who nowadays are in their teens. |
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I'm a bit too long in the tooth to get too worked up about these things any more. |
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I think I am too long in the tooth to start adopting the dress down policy of many of today's businesses. |
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It was pretty funny, but we didn't expect her to continue for too long, so we kept on going, walking along the road. |
|
He kept them there just a second too long before dropping them to his sides with a lopsided grin. |
|
My team assembled outside the testing room at about a quarter to, so I hurried over to keep them from waiting too long. |
|
Finally felt better on Sunday night and now I'm up late writing emails like a demon after too long an absence. |
|
It was probably a bit too long a run-out for him in his first match back, a whole two hours of football, but it proved something to him. |
|
Before too long the empty streets filled with the bustling and chatting of early morning hagglers. |
|
We did some other shopping while we were there, finishing up with the slow cooker so as not to have to carry it around for too long. |
|
Not too long ago, these inexpensive loads were assembled using soft, low-grade shot and cheap wads. |
|
Recent studies at the University of California at Davis have shown that most people stake their young trees needlessly and for too long. |
|
She let out such a yelp and it was no wonder, as Tom had nothing on but a shirt and it wasn't too long at that! |
|
There are probably three great albums in here, but in itself it is too long for someone with my short attention span. |
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But, like most stews, tagines generally need to simmer too long to be put together after work. |
|
I haven't been writing too long, so details do slip my mind, whether you choose to believe it or not. |
|
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Gough, had secured the staging with a strap because it was too long to fit inside the truck's tailgate. |
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Mr Roche said the situation had been tolerated for too long, and laid the blame squarely on local authorities. |
|
I hate to be too vulturish, but if you've been stalling about ordering your Casita you may have a really long wait if you delay too long. |
|
Those biofilms are the slippery slime that you sometimes find on your carrots if you leave them too long in your refrigerator drawer. |
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Sara was not sanguine about the prospects, for all of Midgarde had been held too long in thrall. |
|
Recall the exaggerated influence vouchsafed, not too long ago, to psychoanalytic theory. |
|
We are not experienced bushwalkers, but found the walks to be pleasant, interesting and not too long for little legs. |
|
In addition, the production proves a good 55 minutes too long, which spoils an otherwise excellent evening. |
|
When plaque is allowed to remain on the teeth for too long, it collects close to the gums and turns into a hard substance called tartar. |
|
Sherrie continued to babble on and it didn't take too long before Al realised too that he had been had. |
|
Even cash deposited in high-interest savings accounts for too long will soon have its value eroded by inflation. |
|
Well if you've ever tried it, you know that you go and have a tea break before too long and try not to rue the waste of materials. |
|
They had been muzzled by the State for too long and wanted their own representation, one survivor insisted. |
|
He realised that without a space suit, his head would burst under the pressure if he stayed out there too long. |
|
The sleeping pill flurazepam produces sedation that lasts too long increasing the risk of falls. |
|
It had been much too long since she'd experienced such unperturbed tranquility. |
|
Adrian was relieved and elated at the time the police vindicated him and David but that didn't last too long. |
|
I'll probably have to start sending my unexposed stock overseas before too long. |
|
Forensic investigations by the police take too long because they are under-resourced. |
|
She was cut down in her prime. Justice has been delayed in her case for far too long. |
|
|
His teeth were too long, his hooves in a bad way and he had septicaemia, a disease caused by toxic micro-organisms in the blood. |
|
Enter too soon before, or too long after slack tide, and we will get blown off the reef and possibly end up in a very dangerous position. |
|
Also, victims of violent crime are having to wait far too long to receive their compensation. |
|
Generally the marabou is too long for using in competitions so, once it is secure, pinch off the excess with your fingers. |
|
Scotland still had their chances and on 59 minutes De Marigny was scragged by Ally Hogg and the Italian No.10 held on too long. |
|
Petty buck-passing and blame shifting have for too long characterised Australia's antiquated system of federal-state relations. |
|
My aim is to provoke a debate on a sacrosanct subject that has remained undebatable for far too long. |
|
First, drink two mugs full of Earl Gray tea that you've let steep for far too long. |
|
If this mucous blockage lasts too long, bacteria sometimes multiply to excess because they seem to thrive on any blocked body system. |
|
But even when I'm not tired, I don't want to sit myself down to meditate, thinking that it takes too long. |
|
For too long the subject area has had a predominantly, if not exclusively, masculine appearance. |
|
Most hashes start small and dynamically resize over time as the lists of the buckets get too long. |
|
Wearing hats for too long makes hair oily and produces scurf while the air conditioning makes the hair lose moisture. |
|
I can't believe not too long ago I was on the other side of the boat, I was once the girl who called you unauthentically black. |
|
My sentence was way too long for him and his attention had drifted to a potential fight that was about to ensue near the entrance. |
|
Sunday after Sunday, Dermot and his friends hit the road and no journey was too long. |
|
We didn't have to wait too long though and got seated in a matter of ten minutes or so. |
|
It's a signal that this region has been supplied with second-hand experiences for too long and that now it should be the first. |
|
If you wait too long and the coals have cooled, fuel the fire by adding more briquets. |
|
He is the sort of womanizer who never allows himself to stay in a relationship for too long, while she hasn't counted on being won over by his roguish charms. |
|
|
For far too long, we have been coasting on a moral authority to which we long ago lost any clear title. |
|
Or perhaps next September is too long to wait for a demonstration of appreciation that is already overdue. |
|
By contrast, not too long ago, a gentleman checked into an exclusive bora bora resort with his mistress. |
|
Not too long ago, you simply had to have cable television in order to be part of the national popular culture conversation. |
|
It's not a perfect movie as it runs a little too long and the cinematography is jarring at times, but this is a movie with strong believable characters in the lead. |
|
Of course, the reason you are carrying four wedges is because today's modern pitching wedge has the loft of a 9-iron or even a strong 8-iron from not too long ago. |
|
The 36 inch Bore Tech rod is really too long and is a bit whippy. |
|
When Krohn raised concerns over this lack of accountability, he was told that it would take too long to count the collection and distribution of all the money. |
|
Not having written for pleasure since university, I felt as if I was reconnecting with an important part of myself, which had lain dormant for far too long. |
|
I find that if the rear of the cuff is too long, the front bunches up. |
|
I had been poor too long, I was drinking a lot, I was beginning to doubt, in the deepest of ways, the wisdom of my choice of job. |
|
This is the sort of delusion that sets in when a despot confuses himself with the state after too long in power. |
|
But their supply lines were too long, and their army too small, exhausted, and demoralized to achieve its objectives. |
|
For far too long, the approach to solving the problems of moving goods and people between our two islands has been a rehash of what's been done for the last 50 years. |
|
Amid our grief we now see that New York had been distracted by flash and wit and cash for too long. |
|
Alas, the filming of Roman Holiday went on too long and scuppered the wedding plans entirely. |
|
One time, not too long ago, I saw a line of lame dancers unable to participate in class, sitting on the sidelines, questioning when they would return to dance. |
|
This is too long a gap for collective expertise to be retained because staff have moved on, so the learning has to begin anew with every turn at the presidency. |
|
They both laugh hard, forced laughs that go on for five seconds too long, and Sarah drags on her cigarette and surveys the foggy chateau grounds that will never be hers. |
|
Our prison has for too long been a warehouse for criminals, another revolving door which sees the same people coming in and going out, often worse than when they entered. |
|
|
Finally, excessive appealing, looking at the umpire too long for appealing, or not looking at the umpire for appealing will be punishable by burning at the stake. |
|
I get upset because I have to wait in line too long at the supermarket. |
|
Far smaller clubs in Europe have made more progress because they have reared and nurtured their own players, something the Old Firm have for too long paid lip service to. |
|
The film is billed as a romance, but the two travellers spend too long exchanging pleasantries and being nice to each other to get any sparks going. |
|
It was nearing naptime and so the three hurried to grab groceries, worrying that the baby would get fussy after too long. |
|
The tired and weary doormen can only hope it is not too long a night. |
|
Looky looky, another update, and not too long after the other one. |
|
Goldberg probably hates the idea of staying there, solitary at the controls, for too long. |
|
While some critics say it took too long for the president to come to this bottom line, others say that he seemed to rush the proposal out with a sinister motive. |
|
A high-resolution video of a speaker takes too long to download, but a low-resolution video makes fine details such as the speaker's face and hands appear fuzzy. |
|
Eventually, too, India's batsmen, or so one presumes, are too gifted to hibernate for too long and their spinners must be salivating at the sight of dusty pitches. |
|
Under Harmon, Pavin has worked to lose his distinctive habit of lifting and fanning the club open on the takeaway, producing a backswing that was too narrow and too long. |
|
I found it to be predictable and sappy and, worse, too long. |
|
I was in for a rude awakening to this fact not too long ago. |
|
Or what of the porridge left on the boil too long or the cat's fur balls? |
|
A hiss sounds in my ears, like a teakettle left on the stove too long. |
|
For now the family is hunkering down in privacy, but royal blood never stays settled for too long. |
|
Note the backslashes for lines that were too long to fit in this example. |
|
It had that tell-tale floppy texture from having been microwaved, and the meat had that dry, gravelly texture from sitting in a bain-marie for too long. |
|
His post-election press conference was too long, too provocative, and too stingy in his phoned-in praise for the winners. |
|
|
It's an indication, though, of the pressure to produce on such bankable authors as Smith, who dare not let their name fade from the limelight for too long. |
|
She had had her sea legs for too long now to be getting seasick. |
|
For too long, progressives have been squeamish about citing those moral imperatives, as though compassion were the third rail in American politics. |
|
Not too long ago in Detroit I attended a job fair specifically for veterans. |
|
Don't stay in the bath or shower too long, and use lukewarm water. |
|
We did try and glimpse it through the launderette windows, but unfortunately we'd spent too long walking along the pebbly beach, and it was closed. |
|
This is too long to preserve small bodies of melt in the crust, and suggests that the scenario is appropriate to neither the Waipiata nor the western Hungarian field. |
|
One other thing is that once you get back to Bert's after golf, the atmosphere is so good you tend to stay too long, so take plenty of beer money. |
|
Caldecott says that if you swish oil for too long, you could accidentally breathe some into your lungs. |
|
The road drains here were flushed out not too long ago, and the drainage system out on the fens seems more than able to cope with the rain we've had and a lot more. |
|
However, it is doubtful whether the bank could practice this expansion for too long since it runs the risk of not being able to clear its checks and thus go belly up. |
|
So we didn't stay there too long, as you might have guessed. |
|
He quickly shed his clothes and climbed gratefully into a bed that hadn't been used in too long, turning on his side so his back was to the darkened glass. |
|
The Project Runway star on the financial consequences of letting your kids believe in the tooth fairy for too long. |
|
The charred shell of this once-fine building has for too long been a blot on the landscape, holding back the regeneration of the streets around it. |
|
It wasn't too long ago that Dean was the Rodney Dangerfield of the Democratic race, the long-shot candidate from a minuscule state who didn't get much respect. |
|
The cables on this one are probably too long for a minitower case like this, so expect a bit of a tangle unless you cable-tie them out of the way. |
|
Consequently, my hair has gone too long without at least a trim. |
|
Too many problems have gone unattended and unfixed for too long, and one just gets the sense of things preparing to pop. |
|
The private sector has been making hay on the railways for far too long. |
|
|
This city of sinners has been a blight upon the land for too long. |
|
Three derelict houses bordering Waterford's historic city walls have blighted the area for too long, according to a frustrated resident and city alderman. |
|
And like all prophets, he was under-appreciated by his country, his community, and his party for far too long. |
|
The task of creating a coherent, statewide system for indigent defense out of the current hodgepodge of underfinanced defenders has been put off for too long. |
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He said that the council had been underspending for too long and that was why services were now cut to the bone or had been scrapped over the past four years. |
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For example, I believe you have the right to smack the person in front of you with a grocery divider if they're taking too long going through their change purse at the cash. |
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If you take too long to respond, people will just keep talking and your chance to speak is lost. |
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For too long your family's presence in Scotland has been coloured by Balmoral and the late summer season with its fishing, robust outdoor activities and Highland games. |
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If you're nearsighted, your eye is probably too long from front to back, causing light rays to be focused in front of rather than on the back of your eyes. |
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I am knitting it on 12 mm needles so I think it won't take me too long. |
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It may mean that the person waits too long to urinate, or urinates too frequently, or even tries to urinate when the muscles keeping the urine in the bladder are clamped down. |
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Besides, holding your pee too long stresses out your bladder. |
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When you talk to many developers today about Web services, you'll get the glassy eyed stare of someone who has dealt with vaporware for far too long. |
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Failing to achieve this task in rhythm to the music releases a chorus of boos and jeers, and if it continues for too long, ends your game immediately. |
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Little more than fleshy tubes of wrinkly, pink, hairless skin, with enormous buck teeth at one end, naked mole-rats look like gophers left out far too long in the sun. |
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When the pedestrian phase is too long, drivers may be unnecessarily delayed at an empty crosswalk after all pedestrians have completed their crossing. |
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The agunah crisis has been going on for too long for them not to have a proactive platform for its resolution. |
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We had to wait a little too long to be seated, and even longer to be served, but once our overworked waitress finally arrived everything started buzzing along nicely. |
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They were a little too long to belong in a human mouth and far too sharp. |
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The cherry aromas and flavours are spoiled by tired oaky notes that make the nose curl, cling to the palate and sit on the finish too long after the swallow. |
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Most up-to-date machines brew coffee directly into thermal pots, helping rid restaurants of burnt coffee, the products of sitting too long in a glass carafe on a hot plate. |
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They think me and Rory have gotten cabin fever and been on set too long, just talking in this random language. |
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For too long, he was caricatured as the playboy with the pun-friendly surname, an image to which he pandered happily until he realised its downside. |
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He has oppressed our people and caused great hardship for too long. |
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Acquisitions and joint ventures open up huge opportunities for companies that would either take too long or be impossible to develop through organic growth. |
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The grass was too long and ground striking was almost out of the question. |
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But be prepared, because this apocalyptic farce, which boasts some sensational performances, goes on too long, hitting you over the head with outrageousness. |
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There are dozens of different lines, with passengers changing from one train to another at many stations along the way who do not want to wait too long for their connections. |
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Former Westlife star Brian wasn't too long on the single scene either and was soon cosying up to Dublin model Vogue Williams. |
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A litany of cynically broken promises too long to particularise but what about jailing knife carriers and cracking down on violent offenders? |
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For too long, agency status has been used to undercut wages and casualise workplaces. |
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The problem with criminals is that we have been playing patty-cake with them for too long, being too friendly and making too nicety-nice. |
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But has the huckster waited too long to get in the game this time? |
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For too long motorists have had to put up with patched-up carriageways and we are determined that is not going to go on. |
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Before too long he's heading across the Western Ghats to the state of Kerala to prepare a regional dessert, payasam. |
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However, the collapsing Ottoman economy could not sustain the fleet's strength for too long. |
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He was supercute, with emo bangs over one eye and a hint of guyliner that would've sent my heart aflutter not too long ago. |
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Angelo has high HP, but middlesome defences, so it won't be too long before he gets his just desserts. |
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But rest assured, if we wait too long, that opportunity will pass. |
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A lot of women are drawn to him chiefly because he embodies a certain kind of danger and never sticks around for too long. |
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