I keep thinking how lucky we are to have clean drinkable water come out of the tap. |
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Molina remains the last great ring star to come out of that one-time great fight town of San Jose, California. |
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Are there any equations that come out of linguistics that should be included in my hypothetical course? |
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I heard a gobbler come out of its roost to join the birds welcoming in the dawn. |
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Regardless of good or bad actions, the males come out of the story rottenly, whereas the females end happily. |
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It appears that his brand of logicality assumes that if creme eggs come out of vending machines, then vending machines come out of creme eggs. |
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I do not hear my mother come out of the sitting room until long after I have gone to bed. |
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I've found a foolproof way to make long-lost friends come out of the woodwork. |
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In early summer, the new lotuses bud and come out of the water, so the green water is dotted with white and pink flowers. |
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But when people come out of hospital, the people who look after them if they need care are home care assistants. |
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I come out of the dressing room with a pair of denim low-rise jeans and a bright yellow tube top. |
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Today I come out of my own will to choose freely the candidate of my choice for the first and last time in my life. |
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Health chiefs are hopeful that a ban could come out of talks at a high level conference on improving public health to be held in March. |
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Diana would occasionally come out of her room, and eat something before retreating back to her sanctuary. |
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The monstrous behemoth of white had come out of nowhere as well, throwing Josh off track. |
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Let your morality come out of your own awareness rather than out of conditioning. |
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Despite the combination of baby pink shirt and baby blue tie, he didn't come out of it the cuddliest of people. |
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And even while they were at it, all the guests were waiting for the bridegroom to come out of hiding and put an end to his bachelorhood. |
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In another solo he has a couple of suddenly huge, easy backbends that come out of nowhere and vanish into nothing. |
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The idea is not to scout for talented cricketers for the Indian women's team but to make women come out of their homes and play the game. |
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Then, ages after they'd arrived, the crew got water to come out of the hose. |
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Freddy let out a sharp bark of laughter, causing Carter to come out of his stupor. |
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Considered one of the last performers to come out of the string band tradition, Armstrong is a bluesman through and through. |
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And much of that is going to come out of your own pocket unless you qualify for Medicare or Medicaid. |
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Maggie's clothes had come out of the dryer, so she quickly dressed, returning Charlie's bathrobe to the bedroom. |
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Also tighten your shoes well and wear tight socks so that they will not come out of the shoes. |
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This sort of a mental block, in fact, makes them hesitant to come out of their shell in classroom situations. |
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It also asked for a more sensitive approach in handling such cases, but nothing seems to have come out of it. |
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The only good that may come out of it is the realization that in the war against Islamo-fascism, there isn't a neutral ground. |
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Ten points behind Celtic and Hearts at the start of the day, they had no reason to come out of the traps with reluctance. |
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If you do not shake thoroughly, the pigment and the medium come out of the bottle in one miasmic clump. |
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A two-headed tortoise has come out of its shell in Dorset to find itself in the media spotlight. |
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His coachman's way of keeping warm was to have a tot of whisky while he was waiting for the Archbishop to come out of the theatre. |
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So when it all works and you come out of it with the Ashes it is pretty much compulsory to go big on the champagne afterwards. |
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Michael shouted with some enthusiastic joy that seemed to come out of nowhere. |
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A week went by and I began to wonder if anything at all would come out of my attempt at getting into show business. |
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Surprising that something so bitter-sweet would come out of a giant-ape movie. |
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I will be up at New York a lot too, because a lot of the shows we have come out of New York, so I will be shuttling back and forth. |
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He's probably the best player to come out of the city or the best guard, certainly. |
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Even if Wayne's friend's wife had been able to come out of the room guns blazing, her husband would still in all likelihood have been shot. |
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Rarely does a profit warning come out of the blue like the subsequent share price reaction suggests. |
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In order to satisfy Kip's debt to society's dark underbelly, Raines must come out of retirement and steal 50 cars in three days. |
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They're going to come out of this with a coherent set of guidelines and understandings. |
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The slender girders, electrical cables and insulators look as if they had just come out of a package. |
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A plump woman in a black dress with a white bonnet and apron had come out of the parlor, a feather duster in her hand. |
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Add to that the fact that he can make the most astonishing sounds come out of a drum and the combination is unlike anything you've ever heard. |
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It takes more than a day for a vehicle to reach a particular shop to unload the goods and another day to come out of the yard. |
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Good thing he hadn't just taken a slug at his drink or I'm sure it would have come out of his nose. |
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The recent Women's Issue has to be one of the most unprogressive pieces of literature to have ever come out of Briarpatch's offices. |
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Trevor Line, defending, said his client had only recently come out of prison for an unrelated offence. |
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In no other city but Athens could we have come out of the adventure unscathed. |
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They would light a fire in the base of the smudge pot, and smoke would come out of the chimney vents. |
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He had come out of his York race incredibly well, he hadn't lost any weight, he was very fresh. |
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This is a frame with wires that come out of your mouth, attaching your brace to a headband. |
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In September of 1943 my marriage was solemnised with V.S., who had come out of jail just then. |
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Somehow, he managed to come out of the spin and slow his speed to from hypersonic to subsonic. |
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Nerves come out of the brain and spinal cord and take messages to and from muscles, the skin, body organs, and tissues. |
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And these different genres, like folk music and dance music, come out of that. |
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When it's stable, I will fire a drogue parachute, which will also come out of the nose cone, to make the craft stable. |
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St. Peter's were happy to come out of the match with a win as they looked dead and buried for the first twenty minutes of the second half. |
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Usually, teams that come out of nowhere go back to nowhere the next season, but the Chargers are solid. |
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It's a good question, and as it happens, one of their number has come out of the closet today. |
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One good thing to come out of this incident is that an obviously unreformed nutbar will now not be released. |
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Most of the current stand-ups have come out of university or college or whatever, which wasn't the case years ago. |
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Well, let's start from the beginning and that is that both of them are oilmen, they come out of the oil industry. |
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For him to just come out of nowhere and carry this award off is breathtaking really. |
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It's been a year of predictable stoushes and controversies that seem to have come out of nowhere. |
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To accept the reality and truth helps us to plan our strategy to come out of such predicaments. |
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Last week there were no signs of celebration, with the families refusing to come out of their houses. |
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We were told that it is customary to high-five the drivers as they come out of the pits. |
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Sunday evening we managed to come out of our homes, not knowing if it was over or not. |
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Did the money actually come out of the hole in the wall and somebody has taken it? |
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Naturally, the hot sauce made his hat fly off and steam come out of his ears. |
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There were children who were amazed to learn that peas come from pods and sweetcorn doesn't come out of cans. |
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As soon as I come out of the show ring I have to immediately cinch up the saddle. |
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I was going to alert them to prepare for battle a half an hour before we come out of hyperspace. |
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I am proud that I was able to come out of the closet with dignity and on my own terms. |
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You could come out of the closet to someone you've just met, for example, even if you haven't come out to family and friends. |
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At last, those of us who are pernickety about our food can come out of the closet. |
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My wife is leaving it up to me to come out of the closet and tell everyone, and she is very supportive. |
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But now, their storm-trooper tactics have come out of the closet, for all the world to see. |
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Well the blond bombshell is one celebrity who's come out of the closet about her illness. |
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Stories of athletes who've dared to come out of the closet will also be featured. |
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An obvious, but often overlooked, fact about assimilation is that it can only occur once gay people have actually come out of the closet. |
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The main reason for this public calm is that gays have come out of the closet in huge numbers over the last three decades. |
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It is a symbol of the strength it takes for gay Americans to come out of the closet, and the strength of all who support them. |
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New forms of national identification can only come out of the process of British people living, working and debating together. |
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As the tension mounts, Paul must come out of his own creative cocoon to get involved in the real world of decision-making and responsibility. |
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A pensioner has come out of retirement to start a second career as a community coiffeur. |
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Not only did fantasizers go into a trance instantly, but they could come out of it instantly. |
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Somehow, I don't think that's the only result that will come out of this before it's all over, though. |
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We have seen some fantastic results come out of this and now that we have funding for two more years no doubt we will see a lot more. |
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For the next hundred years, scholars, theologians, and students will be pouring over the papal encyclicals that have come out of the Vatican. |
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So there's a definite commercial value that has come out of developing the technology behind the torch. |
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They come forward fearlessly with the research that they have undertaken and the results that have come out of it. |
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On the contrary, the autonomy of phonology is one of the firmest results to have come out of the past couple of decades of phonological research. |
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There is, however, one valuable result that might come out of the leadership campaign. |
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It does not, however, seem to have come out of the Indian sub-continent, where so many Greek, Latin, European and Slavonic words are sourced. |
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It was the first fully indigenous feature to come out of Winnipeg and was inspirational to the local film community. |
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The resignation did not come out of the blue, but it still sent shockwaves through the international community. |
|
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I didn't know what was going on, but apparently they had felt the vibrations from the quake and come out of the sand. |
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Like a Pied Piper for pests, Su devised a simple method to get the termites to come out of hiding. |
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The point I am trying to make to you is that notions of allegiance come out of English medieval feudalism. |
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It seems time to finally try and come out of the dark pit of sorrow I have dug for myself. |
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If you get a pleasant assistant, you can come out of the store feeling all is well with the world. |
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Even today, more than 40 years since it was first cut, it's still one of the most iconic tracks to come out of jazz's cool school. |
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Jemery Fisher, the frog, was replaced with a small plastic frog that had come out of a cracker once. |
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They saw a man come out of the garden of an unoccupied council house and walk towards his red hatchback car, which had the engine running. |
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Very few of the components come out of the fractional distillation column ready for market. |
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How is it that so full a sound can come out of one tiny girl and her guitar. |
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Our Prime Minister has come out of his funk, and has some real serious plans for this country. |
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People, who managed to come out of the area, have reported that there is an acute shortage of potable water and eatables. |
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It sounded like a tone that would come out of a prepubescent teenager whose mother wouldn't let him skateboard on the lawn. |
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All the religions which come out of a pre-scientific world need to be reinterpreted and modernised. |
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On the other hand, there is a rich anecdotal history of brands that have come out of nowhere and marched across the globe to world domination. |
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During the past forty years very little of value has come out of economic studies using age demographics. |
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Take the plunge, go for it, and if worse comes to worse, you'll come out of it with a life experience worth telling your grandkids about. |
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I think I will be able to dine out on the stories that come out of this for some time. |
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If that is so, the imposition of the prohibition order is the most cynical and dishonest edict to come out of local government in my lifetime. |
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We saw the Lada come out of an exit further up the road and join the new one. |
|
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What Fat Freddy's Drop make is some of the most soulful, jazzy, and deliciously groovy music to come out of Wellington. |
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It is a remarkable achievement for the club and establishes them as one of the best ladies club sides ever to come out of the province. |
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She's hoping that political activism will come out of the living rooms and into the streets. |
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The injury has progressed to the point that the heads can dislocate or come out of joint. |
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But one recommendation to come out of it was that masts should not be located within a radius of 500 metres of schools and homes. |
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The four of us really come out of different alternative journalistic efforts you might say. |
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She was a meek and mild kind of lady and she'd just come out of hospital a few weeks back. |
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Sarah insisted for Alli to come out of the pool and follow her inside as she fixed dinner, and after some more whining the girl obeyed. |
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We are quite worried about this development as it has come out of the blue. |
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Since the ratepayer is also a taxpayer, much of that grant will have come out of his own income tax. |
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Pinot Gris seems to have come out of nowhere to be the trendy white wine in New Zealand and overseas. |
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It has come out of the real situation that I see around me, where marriages are failing. |
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They've come out of a tough division and all the players knew they were going to get a hard game today. |
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He knew what he was talking about for he was no stranger to violence, having just come out of the killing fields of the first world war. |
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People who come out of jail and can't get jobs do become recidivists and can't get married. |
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This racing seat is fully reclinable and arguably one of the best seats to come out of Japan. |
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In Scotland, the cash comes out of the general kitty, but in England it must come out of the new NHS trusts. |
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Adams said foxes that did not come out of the cover of woodlands or were injured could still be legitimately killed by the hound pack. |
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Processed American cheese can come out of refrigeration for short periods of time. |
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Unable to have any hot food or drink and as we are on the wrong side of 60, we were lucky to come out of it without becoming ill. |
|
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Set up in the summer of 1998 in Paris, Active Suspension has become one of the most forward thinking record labels to come out of France. |
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The three introductory readings come out of the rich anthropological literature on culture and cultural relativism. |
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Witchcraft has come out of the shadows and is entering British society as a viable alternative lifestyle. |
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How long should you leave it before using the lav after somebody has come out of there? |
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Soap bubbles come out of the tap in her apartment and drift lazily towards her. |
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The wood has severely splintered and several chunks of wood have come out of the boards. |
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If a left platform had come out of the election with anything like that it would have been a sensation. |
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We have dragged our heels on this subject for long enough and now it's time to come out of investigation mode and in to destination mode. |
|
There are so many times where the actions of the various characters simply come out of left field. |
|
When we get to the famous section on the birds, it seems to come out of left field. |
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The snappy dialogue is there, but the story is full of huge gaps and campy scenes that come out of left field to up the comedic ante. |
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I can state for a fact that my neighbour will come out of hibernation to plant his annual crop of potatoes on Good Friday. |
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At stake will be nothing less than the future of the finest natural boxing talent to come out of the east of Scotland since Ken Buchanan. |
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We thought it was ridiculous that someone so young who had just come out of basic training was sent there. |
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My bees were living in the very best apian luxury and they refused to come out of the hive to pollinate the flowers in my garden and make honey. |
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In any case, the movie was interesting for me specifically because of the reason that I've just come out of a live-in relationship that lasted for roughly a year. |
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But the Brandsby trainer withdrew him from that contest after inspecting the Chepstow course and expressing concerns that all the frost had not come out of the ground. |
|
A chance for the toons to come out of the channel and meet their fans, it might not be possible to go to Greece, but Toon Games are coming to your city. |
|
They had just come out of darkness into a glaringly bright environment. |
|
Perhaps the more exciting announcement to come out of Crewe is the revelation of the company's re-entry into motorsport, specifically the 24-hour Le Mans race. |
|
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Diana Showman, 19, had come out of her house, ignored demands to put down the weapon, and was shot once. |
|
One day I saw a striped snake run into the water and he lay on the bottom more than a quarter of an hour, perhaps because he had not yet fairly come out of the torpid state. |
|
One of the main developments to have come out of the past two decades was the realisation of the need to diversify the economy to other equally promising alternatives. |
|
She said proposals to change policy or procedure in response to survey results will come out of the standing committees of the council in the next year or two. |
|
Michaud did not come out of the closet in order to avoid some scandalous revelation. |
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It was a tough match and we're just glad to have come out of it okay. |
|
While it is painful to watch the daily lurching downward of the stock market, the air must come out of the balloon. |
|
Over time, he lost a split-second, just enough to make him less capable of pulling away from blows or landing one of his tremendous counterpunches that come out of nowhere. |
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I had to come out of a very important meeting for you, young lady. |
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Still less is it a conclusion to which they can properly come out of a desire to obstruct a challenge to their decision or out of misplaced amour propre. |
|
Russell, a fifth generation sheep farmer, has trapped wild dogs most of his life and has come out of retirement to help control the explosion in the wild dog population. |
|
The bullets come out of the elastomer sleeve for further cleaning and battery replacement. |
|
The morning was gray and overcast, but now the sun has come out of hiding and is scattering its golden light like so many glittering coins through the woods around us. |
|
Go back to Adam and Eve, or wait for that thing to come out of the ocean, or do the microbiology thing. |
|
In fact, with my most recent birthday, I passed the milestone of having come out of the closet over half my lifetime ago. |
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Suddenly a bunch of dune buggies and jeeps come out of nowhere. |
|
Ribbing by a friend triggered kick boxer Pierre Rhodes to come out of retirement and he has shot to being ranked number two in the country at his weight. |
|
As all taxes eventually come out of rent, the economic rental value is what is left after the existent taxes have been extracted from the economy. |
|
As well, filing the dead skin off your feet with a pumice stone after you come out of the shower will make the skin softer if you do it consistently. |
|
Loud snores started to come out of him as occasional hiccups followed. |
|
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It was an exhilarating moment as the chopper seemed to come out of nowhere with its low engine roar reverberating across the valleys, echoing back and forth. |
|
She is delighted that Liz has come out of retirement for a final fling at an arena close enough to ensure a sizeable contingent of home fans will cheer her to the echo. |
|
The average life expectancy is five years and there is a risk he might not come out of the operation but he told us and the doctors that he was up for it. |
|
When you go to singles bars you really do have to scrub up, don that expensive suit, and make an impression before any words come out of your mouth. |
|
It's kind of hard to tell though, and the funny thing about exams is, the moment you come out of the room you just don't care about them any more. |
|
The government's interest in sexual health has not come out of the blue. |
|
The Left needs to come out of the closet about its spiritual dimensions. |
|
On the other hand, the greenfield approach allows you to build a network that should be pretty future-proof in terms of capabilities when we come out of the gate. |
|
The weekend was an orgy of drinking and dancing and loving and living and I've come out of the other side with a number of war wounds to prove it. |
|
In my tests I found that not only do ear candles not produce a vacuum, smoke will actually come out of the small unlit end of the candle in some cases. |
|
You never see a boxer come out of a well-to-do family because they have nothing to fight for. |
|
He gushes that millionaires come out of the ranks of undereducated free agents, but I've met a number of them, and sorry, they are, to a person, boors. |
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I have to come out of the hidey-hole I live in and have a social life. |
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Davies watched the second man come out of the room, spray his breath with an atomizer from his jacket pocket, then walk towards them, smiling at Diana as he passed. |
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It was a bright white light that appeared to come out of total darkness. |
|
Well, the sherry allows more flavor to come out of the wood than could otherwise be extracted. |
|
If there's a positive thing to come out of the saga, it's the forebearance and forgiveness our political leaders have shown towards the shortcomings of the spy chappies. |
|
But all the Martha Stewart wannabe's can't wait to come out of their gingerbread houses to sell us their fancy little wares of felt and pipe cleaners. |
|
If you want to be a human being, and a popular human being, then you have to stop being an oyster and come out of your shell. |
|
In fact, it almost seems that Zero 7 have come out of nowhere to give us an album that's going to stand the test of time as a classic of down-tempo chill-out grooves. |
|
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These are the scruffy, barefoot, rag-tag, tatty little street urchins of the night that come out of their hiding spots once downtown Rangoon is deserted. |
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You will come out of this honourably if you know that your cause is just. |
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The answer is nothing, but even if there was something to say, it would not have been able to come out of my mouth because I was choking back tears. |
|
In the anti-capitalist movement there is a tendency to argue that capitalism is simply a system of exploitation and oppression, and that nothing good has ever come out of it. |
|
Scientists have observed a dolphin trying to get a reluctant moray eel to come out of its crevice by poking it with the spiny body of a dead scorpionfish. |
|
Some of the stuffed animals that have come out of the taxidermy classes are on display in the new institution. |
|
I know we will come out of this phase because we have also set up a production line in audiocassettes of Bangla songs, which belong to different genres of music. |
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But I do not see the future in terms of the couture that will come out of it. |
|
To have something like that come out of a small Appalachian town and go somewhere so different is just fantastic. |
|
Little whimpers and snuffles started to come out of the girl's mouth. |
|
Business units hate charge-backs because they want computing to come out of IT's budget, no matter how big a project the business unit is gunning for. |
|
Letting the dashers spin for a minute or two without the freezing option will help the ice cream come out of the machine more easily, if the machine has the ability. |
|
For whatever reason, summertime in New York is when all the ghosts of hip-hop past come out of the woodwork. |
|
But perhaps the most telling tale to come out of the conclave is from the post-election dinner on Wednesday night. |
|
They all convene at the Weston family home, and over the next several days, a series of ghosts come out of the closet. |
|
The last things on the trays that had come out of the wall were two incredible double-edged swords that had very intricate detailing on their handles. |
|
They were both sopping wet and they looked like they had come out of someone's apartment or something, but I couldn't think of who they knew well enough, down that way. |
|
You will come out of this, emerge from it, rise above it, and it may sound soupy to say so, but it just happens, or rather, we make such things happen. |
|
Drivers can be assured that the build quality is going to be second to none and the badge is just as prestigious as anything to come out of Germany. |
|
He says around 80 per cent of the West MacDonnells park is spinifex, and the big fires that come out of it damage the sensitive non-spinifex areas. |
|
|
And then we can compare and contrast those different case study examples and look for any sorts of similarities or commonalities that come out of that. |
|
You name one classic song that's come out of this new breed of bands. |
|
It insists on efficiency standards for household appliances so that your towels come out of the dryer refreshingly cool and damp. |
|
S nexus and has to come out of the Punjabi Chauvinism and marshes of dollarisation. |
|
I've often come out of a restaurant's loos thinking 'I'm not sure about this place. |
|
But in recent times the most prominent cultural icons to come out of the city have been Harry Enfield's The Scousers. |
|
With the murders of five prostitutes in Ipswich, proponents of legalising prostitution have come out of the woodwork including some politicians. |
|
I'm no Pollyanna, but I do think some good will come out of this. |
|
He says that after rods come out of a reactor, they must be cooled in a pool of borated water for at least several years. |
|
Elektro Kif is the first new dance to come out of France since the can-can and the Coventry boys will be showing their moves on stage. |
|
The Somali writer Nuruddin Farah has also garnered acclaim as perhaps the most celebrated writer ever to come out of the Horn of Africa. |
|
The Stabilization Fund helped Russia to come out of the global financial crisis in a much better state than many experts had expected. |
|
So why would he just let this verbal diarrhea come out of his mouth? |
|
While posing as limousine liberals, most of today's movie stars have shirked their responsibility to come out of the closet. |
|
If you lose to Luton in the FA Cup and you have just come out of the Premie League, I've been a player and know how it feels. |
|
By contrast, Luther did not expect anything to come out of the meeting and had to be urged by Philip to attend. |
|
We'd come out of the woods behind the house, and while Joe was foragin', I took a reconnoissance. |
|
The rise of the Internet poured gasoline on the fire, creating spaces for feminerds to come out of the woodwork and share their passions. |
|
After being arrested and humiliated for being straight, Owen organizes a Straight Pride Parade for himself and others to come out of the closet. |
|
It was good of him to take the fall for you like that, I just wonder if he will come out of this one unscathed. |
|
|
All of you cross-posting, cross-dressing trans-testicles come out of the woodwork late at night. Why is that? Slow night at the bath house? |
|
Aunt Em had just come out of the house to water the cabbages when she looked up and saw Dorothy running toward her. |
|
Bernard Hopkins, one of the great middleweights in boxing history, recently announced that he wanted to come out of a short retirement. |
|
As meat cooks, the structure and especially the collagen breaks down, allowing juice to come out of the meat. |
|
Or whenwe come out of the tunnel, the first thing we see is 1,000 away supporters in the corner of the ground. |
|
Well, I'd just, come out of the Last Chance something that looks like a cross between an Injun wickiup and a motherless circus tent. |
|
The focus here was on how fast oil would come out of the Canadian fields. |
|
When I got to the baggage claim at O'Hare, I realized that the question had not come out of thin turbulent air after all. |
|
Laing, and though Waters personally drove Barrett to the appointment, Barrett refused to come out of the car. |
|
I'm interested in the forms of migrations, of exchange, of racialization and exploitation that come out of a modern colonial regime. |
|
Hanley was forced to come out of the closet and resign all at once. |
|
Loan accounts of around INR10m were under corporate debt restructuring, which will come out of the NPA category in the third quarter, said Bhat. |
|
The Rolling Stones would become the biggest band other than the Beatles to come out of the British Invasion, topping the Hot 100 eight times. |
|
Somebody up there finally had an epiphany and hockey might now come out of the choke hold it has been suffering and breathe again. |
|
However, on 21 February, Haye confirmed that he would only come out of retirement to fight Klitschko. |
|
Before the leaks and girlfriends come out of the woodwork, spill it. |
|
From head to foot I was powdered almost as white with chalk and dust, as if I had come out of a lime-kiln. |
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Maybe a glue sniffer, a kleptomaniac or a compulsive train spotter is just waiting to come out of the closet. |
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The children expect to be able to come out of school on a par with those from wealthier, leafier suburbs. |
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One interesting development has come out of Germany in this regard, which uses lasers in place of furnaces in drying the slurries that are part of producing batteries. |
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The stigma is the problem for those who don't want to come out of the closet, because they'll be labelled as the floppy wristed pansies that everybody thinks they should be. |
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Sorry, have to come out of my state of lurkership to respond, completely off-topic, and say as far as I know it's actually only America that has a silent 'h' in herbs. |
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I come out of a sketch background, where you write and discard constantly, so when we agreed to do something sketchier with this, 1 was within my comfort zone. |
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For the mass of new workers who had not come out of a syndicalist or craft tradition, incentive pay and the speedup idea carried relatively little negative meaning. |
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As long as the mortgage payment is well-covered by the monthly rent collected for the property, this extra expense does not come out of the investors' pocket. |
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Frank Berry, racing manager to JP McManus, owner of Speckled Wood She ran quite well at Punchestown on her last start and has come out of the race well. |
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Everyone has been a lot chirpier, people are starting to come out of their shell and we're all thinking positively about playing our exciting brand of footy again. |
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After the recent shooting in Tucson, gun-grabbers have come out of the woodwork clamoring for stricter gun control in open defiance of the Constitution. |
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Lynndie England, the US soldier seen holding a prostrate Iraqi with a dog lead around his neck, isn't the only trailer trash to have come out of this war. |
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For a gangly, greedy teenager, it was bliss to be served the first Fish Roll to come out of the boiling cauldron of oil, washed down by a bottle of the club soda. |
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Undrowned, unducked, as safe from the perils of the broad lake as we had come out of the defiles of the rapids, we landed at the carry below the dam at the lake's outlet. |
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The roomate, who had just come out of his own room as the victim went through the living room, said he did not see anyone else and he got out of the victim's way. |
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Although it has not generated enough search activity to make The Lycos 50, the Camel Spider may actually be the first urban legend to come out of the war in Iraq. |
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And suddenly they came out of the woodwork. I don't actually know what that expression means. What come out of the woodwork? Cockroaches maybe. Mice? |
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