The 76-year-old comedian grabbed a torch, pointed it at his feet, and started an impromptu tap-dance. |
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Her dark eyes were maddened, her hair a fiery torch around her ghostly white face. |
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In its center is disc within a smaller wreath of laurel which contains a torch between two swords saltirewise and flanked by two mullets. |
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She is far from immune to the lovable Raymond, but she really carries a torch for his big lug of a brother. |
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In the restaurant, we sometimes brown a sabayon sauce with a blow torch to just caramelise it. |
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Her torch song treatment of such plaintive fare set an ideal early pace, albeit one that was ignored by a good portion of the crowd. |
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Guards on the ground shone a torch in the man's face and eventually persuaded him to come down. |
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I thought it was one of the calves but when I shone my torch on it I saw that it was the double wheels of a tractor. |
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I overdosed so wantonly on celluloid, in fact, that the Olympic torch came to town and I missed it. |
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Her younger sister, Stephanie, was totally enthralled by my torch and doing her best to run down its batteries. |
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The torch is simply charged by removing a knurled threaded plug and inserting the phono style charging jack plug. |
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They also are being advised to carry warm clothes, food, water, boots, a torch and a spade. |
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If you have ever shone a torch onto the back of your hand, you will know that your palm glows red. |
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I went to the carport and shone the torch between the carport bars aiming the beam under the car. |
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I carried a torch for that guy for years and should he read this he would know who he is! |
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We use the heat produced by the burning of acetylene in the flame of the oxyacetylene torch to make welds. |
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The hall is lit by numerous great torch torches, towering over the tables on tripods. |
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Always travel with stout boots, rainproof clothing, spare clothes, a first aid kid, torch, map, compass, food and drink. |
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It is also recommended to carry a jack, jump leads, spare fuses and a torch. |
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As the torch was applied to the base of the pyre, men in the surrounding crowd cast their adornments into the flames. |
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My favorite Olympic torch lighting ceremony was in Barcelona, 1992, when an archer shot a flaming arrow over the altar to set it afire. |
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The names usually refer to the tall flowering spike which in medieval times was dipped in tallow and set aflame as a torch in the evening. |
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Five wicks create a tall flame like a blow torch which makes a soft roaring noise. |
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Bulloch's time may be up with Scotland, but he plans to continue carrying a torch for the national game. |
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The rechargeable torch won't recharge, and the adding machine in my office is behaving strangely. |
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Take a torch with you, because within the crevices you'll find loads of prawns, shrimps and the odd lobster. |
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We lost the car keys before and I used the mini torch to help me find them again. |
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I like the grassy foliage and orange-yellow torchlike blooms of kniphofia, aka red-hot poker and torch lily. |
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Instead it seems to act more as the fiery torch that keeps the impressionable, who only cheer for the good guys, ready for the call to arms. |
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With the aid of a torch I crawled under the floors and fixed a cable from the kitchen to the living room. |
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If you heard a noise in the dark of night, would you know where to find your torch or a candle? |
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At night, take a torch and you can get within yards of marsupials, including the faintly horrid Tasmanian devil. |
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An alternative method is to use a blow torch which will soften the varnish or paint, allowing easy removal with a scraper. |
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The torch and the man's wild hair and dynamic pose imply a revolutionary or an incendiary, rather than someone who extinguishes fires. |
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Soon enough, Cate took charge and led the others up the tunnel, the torch held ahead of her. |
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The torch was lowered but this time instead of the wood slowly catching fire, the wood enflamed rapidly and shot up sky high. |
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All about there menace the plots of the revolutionary, the stones of the mob, the dagger of the assassin, the torch of the incendiary. |
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The thief was then chased down the main street by neighbours, but managed to escape, leaving behind a tyre lever, torch and some of his clothing. |
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The effect is quite lovely, our passenger tossing and turning in sleep and dimly overhearing the torch song from his neighbour's headphones. |
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For years it seemed this talented tunesmith would continue to carry the torch for genuinely genius grunge guitar pop. |
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Because you're literally and figuratively always carrying a torch for me, silly. |
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This glittering cabaret-style musical shakes up Shakespeare with tap dances, torch songs, tuxedos, sequins and side-splitting sketches. |
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A few months later I fell in love with this friend and carried a torch for him for years, but he would never have me. |
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She can write an incredibly personal torch song ballad, but at the same time, with a little wink in it. |
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A silhouette shadowed the light for a moment, and then a torch bracket in the wall was lit. |
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John continued to carry a torch for my mom, though, even three years into her marriage, and after I was born. |
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Local heating by blowpipe or torch is not recommended, but when this is necessary precautions must be taken to avoid local overheating. |
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If it weren't for my incomplete metaphors, this entry would be dangerously close to a torch song. |
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As it turns out, Aaron wasn't the only person to have been carrying a torch for Laura. |
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Scottish police hope eventually to nail the criminal as a direct result of traces of sweat he left behind on torch batteries. |
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Larl, familiar with the scenario, took the unlit torch and lit it on the other, so they could carry light with them. |
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Maybe the mother still carries a torch for her child's father and is jealous of his new woman. |
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And the inflammatory I vamps a reporter shamelessly in a surprisingly dirty torch song, Open for Love. |
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Just as he still carries a torch for the gladioli-strewing hero of his adolescence, Maxwell doesn't quite seem ready to grow up. |
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He then took his place, and the others each lighted a torch in one of the other outer fires and used it to light one of the braziers. |
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When I went out to shine the torch on them, I caught one young lad walking solitarily up the road and we exchanged a few words. |
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After weeks of speculation, it has been decided that he will be the final Olympic torch-bearer in the Sydney leg of the Athens torch relay. |
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You wanted to take a break in 2019 to save your damnable American Constitution from being put to the torch by Ali's legions. |
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Camulodunum, which had yet to receive defences, was overwhelmed, and put to the torch. |
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This small village, like so much of the Duchy, has been put to the torch as recently as a couple years ago, perhaps sooner. |
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A probing torch beam reveals distant rock faces, giving the impression of great spaciousness, of room to swim and explore. |
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The guests examined the narcotics and tested the heroin with chemical-testing kits before the drugs were put to the torch. |
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An unidentified farm labourer cuts through a piece of steel with a gas torch without the use of mandatory safety goggles. |
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Some believe that a new ship will spontaneously spring to life when the old one is put to the torch. |
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We bumbled around each other like Laurel and Hardy in the gloom, fumbling for a torch we couldn't find. |
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All of Kirribilli might, in passing, be put to the torch as enraged tree-worshippers marched on the council chambers. |
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We heated the metal with a propane torch to slightly discolor it and rubbed the top with fine steel wool to give the surface a duller sheen. |
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Their dwellings, all their possessions, their families, their gods, everything was put to the torch. |
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She thrust the torch into the funeral bier and watched as the fire caught and spread on the dry wood. |
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The next thing I knew stentorian voices were to be heard outside, accompanied by high-powered torch beams piercing the shrubbery. |
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As Barbara Kendall jogged 300m down a leafy London road carrying the Olympic torch yesterday, she also took a stroll down memory lane. |
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Knight sang the opening ceremony song, which she wrote herself, heralding the arrival of the Olympic torch at the Olympic stadium. |
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Last summer, for example, he was chosen to be part of the team that carried the Olympic torch through London. |
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The Sydney 2000 Olympic torch was on display in the Brunel shopping centre at a talent-spotting roadshow for children with special needs. |
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Local children have also been asked to make replicas of the Olympic torch and to bring them along on the day to wave. |
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A 1948 Olympic torch carried by the father of Yorkshire athletics world champion, Gordon Pirie, is to be sold at auction next month. |
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A care worker will make the run of his life tomorrow as he carries the Olympic torch through part of London. |
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Athletes are running to a Colchester school to deliver the Olympic torch to fellow competitors. |
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The organisers handed over the Olympic torch to her on her arrival which she carried till she reached the dais. |
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Their departure will coincide with the arrival of the Olympic torch in Newbridge. |
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The whole place had a damp and evil smell, and as I moved my torch a rat scuttled across the floor. |
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He walked towards it on soft feet shading the torch with his hand to reduce its light to a narrow thread. |
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Set in a forest thick with giant sugar pines and black oak, the burn was part of Nichols's goal to torch 5,000 to 8,000 acres a year. |
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In one fluid motion Carlotta swung the torch and clubbed Don Antonio as hard as she could over the head. |
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The torch will be carried on stage by Ireland's Chef de Mission for the London Olympic Games, Sonia O'Sullivan. |
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A woman with a torch shone the light onto the water, following along the guardrail on-board, trying to spot a body. |
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Witnesses later commented that hot-metal sparks, similar to a welder's cutting torch came from the tailpipe in a long, blue flame. |
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Red-eyed swimming crabs glared at us and shrimps, or the vivid orange and blue markings of a squat lobster, were picked out by our torch beams. |
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They then proceeded to torch the humble dwellings of the farm workers, presumably to ensure that they would not try to return to the village. |
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The presentations represented a symbolic passing of the torch from one generation to the next. |
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We clung close together, but far apart enough to steer clear of the torch and so we could easily draw our weapons. |
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There was no trace of the person responsible, except for a black pencil torch below one of the nests. |
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This was somewhat unexpected so I improvised a torch from my shirt and a tree branch. |
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You may have to belt a torch song up to that balcony bar to drown out the praises being hosannaed onto chef-owner. |
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Seconds later, a Garda shone his torch and we found them lying on the green area. |
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When she was posing for a picture in Hawaii, a half-naked streaker holding a torch photobombed her picture. |
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It looks like you've just seen a horror movie and your mates shone a torch in your face and took the photo. |
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He carries a pickaxe in his left hand and holds a lighted torch aloft in his right. |
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Coral shrimps with long, red and white-banded pincers lurk in holes, their compound eyes reflecting the torch with an orange-gold glow. |
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Suddenly she hands me her torch and wonders off into the thick inky blackness of night. |
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A torch has a great effect on your field of vision and how you perceive your surroundings. |
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Suddenly a bright light, fire in fact, flared in front of her face, and a torch was lit. |
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They had clung to each other for warmth through the night, with Michael flashing his torch into the darkness at intervals. |
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One of my guests had heard a noise in the living room and shone her torch and scared off the thieves right into the arms of the police. |
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The new badge comprises of a crown, harp, shamrock, laurel leaf and torch and scales with the cross of St Patrick as a centrepiece. |
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Sparks arose from the flint and firestone, and soon the torch became ablaze. |
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The torch picked out a tiny red hermit crab as it climbed laboriously across the top of a sponge. |
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Try using a torch to investigate how much more detailed contrast you can get by using cross light. |
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Posh chefs would crust the top with a blow torch but I don't trust myself with a blow torch when I've lost count of the wine I've drunk. |
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He threw a torch on the tent and Red tried to scream in fear but the gag prevented her. |
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She has warmly wrapped her heart around 11 honky-tonk torch songs with more authentic wails than a lonesome prairie wolf. |
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Local Garda members will carry the torch and they will also be accompanied by local special athletes. |
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It was a special moment for the Garda, who managed to switch routes so that he could bring the torch through Naas. |
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But certainly a very important torch has been passed generationally in terms of leadership in this nation. |
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Drivers unable to cancel their trip were told to load their vehicles with warm clothes, food, water, boots, de-icer, a torch and spade. |
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He would whisper his questions and his glasses would glint in the torch light. |
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His greatest wish would be that they would carry the torch in the years ahead and lead his club to further honour and glory. |
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However when the officer shone his torch over the side of the bridge he saw Claire further along the ledge. |
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At once, the torch end erupted into flame, and he began to move forward, pushing roughly through the crowd. |
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We captured brood-guarding females at night using a submersible torch and hand-held dip net. |
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Phew again delivers a well-worn vocal here, but instead of being a vulnerable ballad, the song reaches near-epic heights of post-rock torch song. |
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A stage hand shone another torch at his microphone stand, and the show continued by torchlight. |
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He was completely entombed in the concrete, but we made a hole in the concrete and shone a torch in and he grabbed the torch. |
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The novice wreck diver will not be spooked, as no torch is required inside much of this wreckage. |
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We were kitted out with helmets and miners' torch and taken 40 metres down to the pit bottom in a cage. |
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It's down to guys like me to pass on the flaming torch of knowledge to the next generation. |
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She rushed forward almost dropping the torch as she fell to her knees on the ground in front of him. |
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Old flames often have a way of reappearing just when you're carrying a torch for someone new. |
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I can really relate to the title character, as I know what it's like to carry a torch for someone and have those affections go unrequited. |
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Stonefist had armed himself with throwing axes, his battleaxe, a torch, and a tower shield. |
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She not only carried the torch of educating young women, but she passed it on. |
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Others view Poland as the suffering Christ among nations raising the torch of liberty and independence for themselves and others. |
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With only a little more than a year in the Army Reserve, Baker has now become the bearer of the military service torch in his family. |
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He is married with four children, one of whom, Zoe, has picked up the educational torch and is now a teacher in Chiseldon. |
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Caroline and Sara went down into the vault with Talmegar leading the way, carrying a torch with which he lit the other torches along the wall. |
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When one diver climbed up to the top of the 25-metre tower, he was ignited by a torch and was covered instantly in flames. |
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Without another word or look, Michael grabbed one of the pieces of wood and made a torch out of it. |
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They were led downward by a high position royal guard carrying a torch to light the way. |
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He also choreographed the dance piece for the ceremony of lighting the torch at the courthouse steps and later in Dublin at the Point Depot. |
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The colourful cloth and the cardboard piece that symbolised the torch of the statue made the model look appealing. |
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Presentation College lit an electrical torch across the border last week when they started a project with a school in Ballymena. |
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The small, plastic yellow gun is powered by a battery, includes a torch to light up the target and almost looks like a child's toy. |
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The public should stock up on tinned food, bottled water and have a battery-powered torch and radio, the Home Office advised last night. |
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They advise households to have on hand a torch, battery-powered radio, ready-to-eat food, bottled water and blankets. |
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The surprise and honest hurt on her face became clearly visible in the tiki torch lamp light. |
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In the near distance, torch light flickered through the blackness, slowly moving away from her. |
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He picked an unlighted torch off the wall and with a simple flick of his finger, ignited it. |
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Acolytes are asked to serve one Sunday a month as torch bearers, crucifers, book holders, thurifers and servers. |
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Its not a reflection from the torch, its not an insect scuttering by and its not a particle of dust. |
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Holding a gas torch in his gloved hand, he burns some excess solder off the machine's scrubber. |
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Last night, for example, the audience spanned all ages, and all were familiar with the ballads, torch songs and comic ensemble pieces. |
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By torch light we scour the walls, scribbling down our answers, working silently. |
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However, at 10 am, a man with a blow torch is burning the lines off and at 3pm, the lines have all gone. |
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But why not get moody first in the lounge where a slinky torch singer holds court over a baby grand a la Dietrich or Garland. |
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Now that they are on holiday, give them a torch and set them to work. |
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Josh was just about to say something when someone shone a torch at us. |
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He came face to face with a man who shone a torch in his face. |
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John went in first, slowly, shining a torch light ahead of him. |
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I shone my torch in a sweep below me where I had last seen her. |
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She pulled out a small torch and shone the light into Collette's eyes. |
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Freed from Middle America, her focus shifted to New York's literary society, where two women hold a torch for the celebrity novelist who has shucked them off. |
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Between the torch brackets, images of long-dead nobility gazed down at them with an air of sorrow, as if their sightless eyes regretted the passing of more cheerful days. |
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Sometimes, a sharp tool such as a chert flake was used, while other times blunt instruments such as torch canes or the artist's fingers were employed. |
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He jumped with the shock of the noise, dropping his torch to the floor where the lens and bulb smashed on the hard floor with a single spark of power. |
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It seemed almost a torch of brilliance, a flaring star in the night sky. |
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I switched the torch off, nipped outside for a pee and had a think. |
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It is a soupily warm Friday afternoon in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, on the day the Olympic torch reaches the former host city, en route to Athens. |
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At the 1991 student Olympics, Britain's first spacewoman, Helen Sharman, carried the torch but fell over, extinguishing the Olympic flame in the process. |
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But a torch to compete with blazing headlights is no contest. |
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It looked like a candle or maybe a torch flame was dancing from a draft. |
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Now, Adele, who was once his main squeeze and still carries a torch for him, must convince him to give up his drinking and start swinging the clubs again. |
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It was a night for steenbok, springhares and Cape hares too whose eyes lit up by our torch lights raised diminishing levels of excitement as we saw more and more. |
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The woman managed to escape when her captor was distracted and spent more than four hours hiding in scrub as he searched for her with a torch and dog. |
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A torch shone down the walls will reveal bright red alfonsitos and the larger red and white catalufas, which have large eyes that glow in torchlight. |
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Behind her, there was another torch lit and another, until the great room itself was filled with lights and illuminations to bewilder even the lavished of all Romans. |
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It is possible that the leader gave orders to torch oil wells, launch chemical weapons or fire missiles, but that the commands were ignored, he added. |
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When the torch heats the flux, it incandesces, giving off a brilliant yellow-orange flare, just like the one you get when dripping salt water onto a gas burner. |
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The torch moved, came near his face and light shone over his features. |
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Still, you can't really fault the lady with the torch on this one. |
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Dom raised his flaming torch to the closest unlit one on the wall. |
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I slip out at night with a torch to check on nocturnal goggas. |
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The snakes were silver that faded into deep emerald and the pole was gold and was holding up a fiery torch with two blades criss-crossed in the background. |
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One unforgettable night, I shine a torch high up into the gum tree of our back yard and see, perched there, two tiny Leadbeater possums, pink noses twitching. |
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Thankfully, my father took up the torch and left no doubt that we were looked after. |
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It feels like someone is chopping up my legs with a machete or burning them with a torch from the inside out. |
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The 31-year-old will be riding her horse, Toytown, and will use the torch to light a cauldron at the racecourse. |
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We had a wireless, which was a swan like speaker, it operated on a small flat torch battery and an accumulator, we also had a piano which my mother played. |
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A torch was shown in her face and she recoiled back in pain hitting the wall of wood behind her, blinking hard to try and accustom her eyes to the sharp light. |
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They had no map, no torch, no waterproofs and little experience. |
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Eric glared at his former captor, the closest thing to a nemesis he could imagine, and suddenly, as the radiance from the torch touched his skin, inner fire consumed him. |
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Heat can be applied either with a hot air gun or a gas torch. |
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The midfielder is not exactly carrying a torch for his old manager but, for all the woe in his time in Scotland, he says he was a fan and still is. |
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A large roundish man stood at the doorway, holding a fiery torch. |
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The gang assaulted the couple with clubs, pliers and a torch. |
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At the same moment, they shone a torch at me to identify me. |
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Turning my torch on, I guide its beam towards the dock wall. |
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Two days after the flood, I heard loud banging noises once again, went to the kitchen and found the stabiliser burning like a torch and emitting heavy, tarry smoke. |
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Sarge was one of those to whom the torch was passed on Inauguration Day 50 years ago this week. |
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A thermic lance is a blowtorch that uses steel and oxygen as a burning agent instead of acetyline gas and oxygen as you would use in a blow torch. |
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One woman told of how her older sister did her rounds of the wards wearing a tin hat and with a small low light torch to pick her way in the blackout. |
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The main arguments for a date sometime after the mid-nineteenth century are those relating to electro-gilding, blow torch brazing and the metallurgical analyses. |
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I also took lots of matches, in case we ran out, and an electric torch. |
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The batteries in our torch expired and we hadn't any candles. |
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It looked impressive, but the light from the battery-operated torch bulb-lit lanterns could have been brighter to enable them to stand out better in the darkness. |
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Deller's theme is that the values of all fundamental religions are essentially materialistic, which leaves art carrying the torch for the spiritually minded. |
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It's the same story across Canada, where now and always, the junior leagues carry the torch for the spirit of hockey in small towns and big cities alike. |
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Picking up the torch of the golden age, the CFL proves that a sports league where no one is in it for the money can thrive in an entertainment-jaded age. |
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By August 31st, this important literary torch will pass from poet to poet. |
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But while the old peace movement carried a torch for Britain, today's protesters are defined by their lack of faith in Britain's political leaders and institutions. |
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Catherine discovers she still carries a torch for her old love, but that's only one of the complications as Catherine deals with past hurts and potential romance. |
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I will always carry a torch for classy early 80s shop-girl funk like this. |
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He knew that Steven still carried a torch for his former love. |
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Your ancestors were put to the torch and burnt in the name of the Lord. |
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A few villagers attempted to battle the invaders with old swords or axes that had hung upon the walls of their homes, homes that were even now being put to the torch. |
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Not so long ago they watched a neighbouring farm being put to the torch. |
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The walls of Carthage were torn down, the city put to the torch. |
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Moments later, she saw headlights in the middle distance and moved off the road, into the low hollow at the side, where she flicked off the torch and crouched low. |
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The blow torch wasn't working and hence the caramelisation had not taken place. |
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Adequate clothing, food and water must be carried by each team member, in addition to maps, first aid kit, torch and other important items. |
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The event highlight is a torch lit procession through the town featuring fire, lanterns, masquerade and music and mayhem. |
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Harry is allergic to sentimentality, yet under the blase surface is a smoky torch singer struggling to emerge. |
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Basildon-born torch singer Alison Moyet is back with a new album and a new tour. |
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John Stuart Mill was a pupil of Bentham's and was the torch bearer for utilitarian philosophy through the late nineteenth century. |
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In May 2012, Land's End received worldwide publicity as the starting point of the 2012 Summer Olympics torch relay. |
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A handful of grass is lit and the woman runs around the circumference of the mound touching the burning torch to the dried grass. |
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On 19 July 2012, Emin carried the Olympic torch through her hometown of Margate. |
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There are also backlit switches for the door handles and locks, a boot light that unclips to become a torch, as well as powered mirrors. |
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A group of young athletes, nominated by retired Olympic athletes, ran the torch around the stadium. |
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The Olympics torch relay ran from 19 May to 27 July 2012, before the Games. |
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Though the flame has been an Olympic symbol since 1928, the torch relay was only introduced at the 1936 Summer Games to promote the Third Reich. |
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There are several Olympic rituals and symbols, such as the Olympic flag and torch, as well as the opening and closing ceremonies. |
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But whatever it was, when I was playing Romeo I was carrying a torch, I was trying to sell realism in Shakespeare. |
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Romeo describes Juliet as being like the sun, brighter than a torch, a jewel sparkling in the night, and a bright angel among dark clouds. |
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But subsequent technology has made it possible to date the paintings by sampling the pigment itself and the torch marks on the walls. |
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Prior to the red flag logo, the party had used a modified version of the classic 1924 shovel, torch and quill emblem. |
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Brunhilde, a kind of earth-mother goddess, carries a torch for her lost love. |
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Into the middle arch of each desk silver-headed brads had been hammered to form a lion, a bear, a ram, a dove, and in the midst a flaming torch. |
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A hound stares at the reflection of the torch in the water, doggishly amazed to see a fire in the sea beneath its paws. |
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Sunita, despite seeing other men and almost marrying Irish charmer Ciaran McCarthy, never stopped carrying her torch for Dev. |
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A SCOTS firm have adapted the famous miners' Davy lamp to keep the Olympic torch burning. |
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Lately, however, a new generation has begun taking up the torch and is determined to cut the rug in much the way that their grandparents did. |
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They were asleep as offenders approached their tent, unzipped it, shone a torch in their eyes and then threatened them. |
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He'd feed the horses at midnight, ride out in the dark and cut the grass in the early hours in his longjohns with a torch tied to his lawnmower. |
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We did a black light search with this torch and black light and holy mackerel, honestly, it was like a galaxy. |
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A blow torch is lit, ensuing scenes see things burst into flames, and we find out the answer is Fiery Doritos Locos Tacos. |
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Dollop a tablespoon of meringue mix onto each doughnut then flash them under a hot grill or use a blow torch to brown the tops. |
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Like our Lady Liberty, the Egyptian version featured a woman holding aloft a torch. |
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The spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts with the Sochi 2014 Olympic torch will be an historic moment in the history of the Olympic torch relay. |
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This nifty little gadget from QVC is a wind-up torch that also charges your phone. |
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Ernst slipped and dropped his torch on the flagstones, shattering the bulb and plunging us into darkness. |
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He was searched and found in possession of a small torch and metal butter knife handle. |
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Good news is, the torch has been picked up by a number of successful micro-breweries. |
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It's a good idea to bring a torch and maybe binoculars for wildlife spotting. |
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Use your pocket torch and shine the light from the side to gauge the reaction to light on both sides. |
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Eleven days before the start of the Games, a flaming torch is ignited by the sun in Olympia at the ruins of the ancient Temple of Zeus. |
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The river, too, was colored, and every tree was like a torch burning stilly in the quiet of the evening. |
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The fire was reportedly the result of an accidental ignition, after a welding torch being used to repair flood damage had been left ignited. |
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The silver-and-red torch will then be taken out for an honorary space walk on November 9 by Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kotov and Sergei Ryazansky. |
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In 2012 Carlisle was one of the official stop off points for the Olympic torch before it made its way down to the Olympic Games opening ceremony in London's Olympic Stadium. |
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Add a sprinkle onto the top of the mac and use a blow torch to crisp or transfer the mixture into a baking dish, top with crumbs and bake for 15 minutes. |
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Lachey, for his part, seems to still carry a torch for his estranged wife. |
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Historically part of Westmorland, in 2012, Bowness was one of the official stop off points for the Olympic torch before it made its way to the Olympic Games opening ceremony. |
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Whether she's going all jazzy torch singer on us in Why or coming on like a female Bobby Womack on The Crown, she always engages and never sounds out of her depth. |
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A shame, then, that the organisers decided the day should be concluded by a non-athlete from the Isle of Wight riding a zip-line from the Tyne Bridge with the torch. |
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Where Manning's torch diva turns on Sings with the Original Artists shriveled up against spare backing, here they nestle into a winking popadelic hybrid. |
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It's been the most incredible ride but when I do retire I'll probably sleep for the first year then I'm looking forward to passing the torch on to my grandbabies. |
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Host favourite pool player Cha Yu-Ram, who won gold for nine-ball singles in the 2009 Asian Indoor Games and also the Goodwill Amabassdor of the 2013 AIMAG, lit up the torch. |
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This scene was reenacted during the 2012 Olympics torch relay. |
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Using a blow torch burn the sugar evenly and leave to set hard. |
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London 2012's Olympic torch relay will start at Land's End and travel as far as the outer Hebrides on an 8,000-mile journey to the stadium, it has been revealed. |
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The torch had three days outside the United Kingdom when it visited the Isle of Man on 2 June, Dublin in Ireland, on 6 June, and both Guernsey and Jersey on 15 July. |
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I spent years as a glass bead artist, using a torch in a process called lampworking, and created a popular line that was on the market for several years. |
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He has passed on the torch to us and it is our duty to keep it alight. |
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The torch was at the World Heritage site's hexagonal columns of rock, held aloft by Denis Broderick high above the Atlantic on Carrick a Rede rope bridge. |
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I used my torch to light the way home through the woods in the night. |
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Thereby the incomprehensible majestie of God, as it were by a bright leme of a torch or candle, is declared to the blinde inhabitants of this world. |
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Ms Biggs told the court a canister with a blow torch attached was also found at the scene and the deceased had been identified through DNA testing. |
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I think I may give the Victorian tear-jerkers a miss from now on, though, and turn to some good, sigh-raising Torch Songs. |
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School children waving flags and bunting along with street puppeteers Artastic will then welcome the Special Olympic Torch to the town. |
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The Dreadnoks want to spring Torch from the hoosegow, but Cobra commander tells them in no uncertain terms that the Firebat takes priority. |
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The event takes place after Stein carries the Olympic Torch up the steps of the capital. |
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Nadia Comaneci held the Olympic Torch aloft on top of the Millennium Dome in Greenwich with former basketball ace John Amaechi. |
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There was a great buzz in the air last Thursday morning June 19th with the arrival to the city of the Olympic Torch. |
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Summer and Marissa looking gorgeous in a pretty skirt and very cute dress both by Burning Torch. |
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The Olympic Torch is being lit on Centre Court and will wind its way around the club before continuing its journey to other landmarks in the capital. |
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We've been tracking the Olympic Torch as it's been traveling to the State Capitol Building where it should be arriving sometime in the next half hour. |
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Dumfries and Galloway was the only Region in the whole of the United Kingdom that had the Olympic Torch pass through it twice. |
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Verity Stob, a technology columnist for online newspaper The Register, wrote a parody of Torchwood called Under Torch Wood. |
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It is the first of 22 Law Enforcement Torch Run Polar Plunges that will benefit Special Olympics Illinois in February and March around the state. |
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On 9 February 2010, the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Torch Relay visited the Peace Arch. |
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During Operation Torch, American, Vichy French and German navy vessels fought the Naval Battle of Casablanca, ending in an American victory. |
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Its precursor was the 1976 Liberty Torch Run, a relay in which 33 runners marked America's bicentennial by covering 8,800 miles in 7 weeks through 50 states. |
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The 1936 Berlin Games also saw the reintroduction of the Torch Relay. |
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The occupation of the various French zones continued until November 1942, when the Allies began Operation Torch, the invasion of Western North Africa. |
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Operation Torch started on 8 November 1942, and finished on 11 November. |
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