Scrubby acacia bush gave way to tussocks of cram cram grass until that too disappeared. |
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The thing about a shed is you don't want it taking up the whole yard, but you've got so much stuff to cram in it. |
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Even for a fast learner, though, four months is an awfully short time to cram. |
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News is now a nationwide cram session, all-nighters for the general public. |
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I used to try and cram the whole twenty-four letter alphabet into one little symbol. |
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If you're self-catering, as we were, it's far worse, with bedding to pack and as much food as you can cram into the car. |
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Normally, we have a big car, but it's in the shop, so we have to cram into our other small car. |
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Crowds will cram into Cathedral Square to be among the first in the world to witness the dawn of the 21st century. |
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Billy is a teenage shutterbug who always seems to cram his camera in the most inopportune places. |
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Controversial plans to demolish a Covingham vicarage and cram 32 homes on to the site have been put on hold after protests from residents. |
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Having been hard at it all the morning trying to cram a day's work into a few hours, I decided that a cup of coffee would be a great pick me up. |
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They also don't cram dated pop-culture in-jokes down your throat like some film companies do. |
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You can cram for the exam at a one-week boot camp or take your time and learn gradually. |
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We've got a four day week here due to public holidays, and as usual, I have seven days worth of work to try to cram in. |
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Today, however, many of us have moved into jobs that do not require us to cram the workday between sunrise and sunset. |
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Turbochargers and superchargers pressurize the incoming air to effectively cram more air into a cylinder. |
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Do not cram the refrigerator so full that cold air can't circulate freely to chill food. |
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The local Rangers attempt to cram as much of the area into a 10 km jaunt as they can, with a circular walk to Carbeth. |
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There's only so much space for awkward dialogue and clumsy exposition when you have to cram a movie full of fight scenes. |
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But the Wrist PDA was the first to cram a fully functioning Palm OS-based personal organiser into a case you can wear rather than carry. |
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In every issue you folks manage to cram lots of good stuff onto those pages. |
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We were once again amazed how the plucky gallerist has managed to cram so many art works into such a tiny space. |
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It also means passengers can travel light on long-haul flights and don't cram cabins with suits or full-length dresses. |
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It took the combined efforts of a stewardess and all four fellow passengers to cram me into that middle seat. |
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Unfortunately, after holidays comes the time to rush to finish projects, and then cram for exams. |
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By using knives and forks to cut food into smaller pieces, we no longer need a large enough jaw to cram in big hunks of food. |
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In those Wisconsin cram sessions, we're told the emphasis has been on persuadability and brevity. |
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And predictably, the second week of the tournament sees players having to cram in their games in between the showers and the interruptions. |
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The more extraneous items you cram on a web page, the more you confuse and distract the visitor. |
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Surely, I suggest, he must have had to burn the midnight oil to cram in all the knowledge required to perform so well in the exams. |
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Parents drive their children to cram up for examinations and woe forbid, if the child is a prodigy. |
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I was rushing to get to class-and trying to cram for my next period's geography quiz. |
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Students cram for mid-term and final exams, and attend lectures for the rest of the semester. |
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Of course, not all destinations are accessible by bus, and you can't always cram two kids and the family dog onto a Greyhound. |
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I think we became the first people traveling from Shanghai to cram the experience into a day trip! |
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It was their final year of university and all the students were beginning to cram for final examinations. |
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It would be all too easy to go into activity overdrive to try to cram in as much as possible during a visit, particularly given the impossibly long summer days. |
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Don't try to cram too many people around a small dining room table. |
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Unless you have a Chevy Suburban or a trailer, you'll be hard-pressed to cram as much gear into a single cabin. |
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As I had more room than for the Manta Loading Bay, I wanted to add all the details I could cram there, in the most realistic way. |
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Until the middle of the nineteenth century the practice was to cram as many people as possible into the available space. |
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We should all together strive to make more attractive that phase our existence rather than build old people's homes to cram the elderly in them. |
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Opened up, the turbochargers have a single job: cram as much air and fuel as possible into the engine. |
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Ah! You mean the idea that the more you cram into your ears the happier you are? |
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I intend to cram as many of my goals and dreams into my early stage as possible. |
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Eventually, we cram into the other van, piling belongings in among us, and continue on our way. |
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It's usually a bad idea to cram all the decals that can fit on all flat areas of a model. |
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A writer makes a gross mistake when he tries to cram into his reader's mind a mass of unorganized ideas, facts, and viewpoints. |
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You would even cram yourself into the back of a trailer truck to get here. |
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Families of four and five cram into one-room shares without running water or reliable electricity. |
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If you cram that many scantily-clad people onto a beach in hot weather, things are likely to get ugly at some point. |
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They were in the midst of a cold and muddy winter in another Turkish camp, where the family had been forced to cram into a tent. |
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At first, the iPhone was a way for people to cram a cell phone, iPod, and datebook in the slender pockets of your skinny jeans. |
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But he seems determined to cram every A-lister he can into his film. |
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Fashionistas, loafers and creative-looking sorts cram the graffiti-garnished cafes on Kastanienallee, their confidence in their own hipness rising like steam from a miso soup. |
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Staff work around the clock to ensure these youngsters cram as much into their short years as possible while helping their parents to come to terms with the inevitable. |
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For more than a decade, the nearest university students came to rebellion was to sneak extra books out of the library so they could cram in some more studying. |
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In people, nonhuman primates, and other mammals with relatively large brains, the cerebral cortex's convolutions permit its large surface area to cram inside the skull. |
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Developers are seeking to cram far too many dwellings on to the site. |
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How did you cram so many nice things about me in that review? |
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Once again, writers like to cram a lot of material into a single sentence. |
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At almost every race on the calendar, more than 120,000 spectators cram into the grandstands, all vying for a view of the millionaire superstar drivers. |
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If you plan out your time, you'll feel less rushed and hurried and will be able to avoid a Sunday night, 3 AM cram session. |
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Last night the funny and fairly studious crowd at NYWIFT seemed to want a cram session. |
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The past weekend was the political equivalent of a cram session before final exams for Mr. Paterson. |
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But many journalists incessantly try to cram the issue of abortion into the equivalent of a phone booth! |
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Modern industrial development cannot absorb this superabundance of manpower, so these people cram themselves into shantytowns. |
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To the speechwriters, he was the hobgoblin of editors, demanding we cram in more statistics, more attacks, more examples. |
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We had so many games to cram in such a short space of time, it really stretched our squad and the lads were out on their feet. |
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Extra lessons carry youngsters through study well into the night, designed to cram into the head fragmentary knowledge which is likely to be included in the examination. |
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Once Nancy had put the teachers through their paces, there were just two days to cram some didactic material specifically geared towards teaching in Terena. |
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She also knows how to cram a book full of enticing color photos of more art projects based on rubber stamp designs than could easily be imagined. |
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Around 7.5 million commuters cram themselves into local trains every day and the fledgling metro and monorail are unlikely to make a perceptible difference in the near future. |
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I think there are difficulties with the fact that everything is trying to cram itself onto Radio 2, and what we desperately need, I think, is the opportunity to have dialogue. |
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He or she has the power to make or break a meal – get on the right side of one, and you'll be showered with more petit fours and complementary digestifs than you can cram in a good-sized handbag. |
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Families, like in many other countries, send their children to cram schools to better prepare for the competition. |
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Trying to cram that down into 250 words is fun and challenging. |
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Zip disks are around the same size as the traditional floppy but can cram in 250Mb of information. |
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But he's still managed to cram in all the laughs, poignancy and downright freakiness that we've come to expect from his projects. |
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In Turkey it runs pre-university cram schools called Dershanes, whose loyal alumni have been prominently placed in the police and justice apparatus. |
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Chief Superintendent Dave Pryer, from Northumbria Police's Operations Command, said the barrier did not cram supporters in and create an effective cattle herding. |
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Although Nazy and I eventually figured out a way to cram the pieces of the boot into the binding, our group, with Blitz, had ascended a gargantuan T-bar draglift. |
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During the holidays we usually hold a festive film day, where we cram in as many friends as we can to watch films, decorate gingerbread houses and drink Glogg. |
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I'm convinced we behave like this because most of us overwait for times of respite, and then we try to cram a month's peace into two weeks of hectic vacationing. |
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More weird spin on your part. Taking stuff that's not made up, then trying to cram it all together into something that is made up, that's tinfoilhattery. |
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The architect Ralph Adams Cram was such a fan of the Gothic revival that he became an Anglo-Catholic. |
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Cram the lumps of chicken into hot pitta bread with the spiced yoghurt and some shredded crisp lettuce. |
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Jarrow's famous middle-distance runner Steve Cram gave tips at a lunch celebrating the 30th year of the Great North Run. |
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Cram developed the cyclic urea unit as a particularly strong ligand for ammoniums, as it is a strong hydrogen-bond acceptor. |
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In 2010, former British distance runner Steve Cram inaugurated the Kielder Marathon which is a circuit around the lake taking in the surrounding gentle contours. |
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