Blake fired a cross in which had gone too far ahead of his team-mates in the box. |
|
We have gone too far with our lack of beds for those who are acutely unwell. |
|
One of the problems is that for a whole range of drink now, the actual alcohol content in them has gone up. |
|
He had gone down and packed it all up and had it put in storage until the day would come that he could move it all up to its new location. |
|
As with any postponement, opinions vary as to whether or not the game could have gone ahead. |
|
If she starts behaving badly I just walk away and let things calm down until her tantrum has gone away. |
|
He will certainly need to better his stamina, as he visibly wilted in the later rounds, never having gone further than eight rounds in the past. |
|
I have seen some of our juniors compete because we've gone on a few trips and things. |
|
When I asked if I could have dessert, she said the chef had gone home, but she could rustle something up if we wanted. |
|
Days turned into weeks and weeks into months until Alleyne and I had been gone a year. |
|
That's how humanity works, we only fix things after they've gone wrong, we're awful at tactical planning. |
|
The important information is that while he may have gone off the rails in the past, he's clean and sober now. |
|
I assumed it had gone missing during his various house moves and I just forgot about it. |
|
Many of those who gave up beef following the BSE scare have gone back to eating organic beef. |
|
So to toughen resolve and get US consumption, production and employment back on a more predictable track, they have gone for broke. |
|
If he had been a jobsworth he would have gone home but he stayed there for six or eight hours and got no extra pay. |
|
Once he was gone Silvia broke down fully in a fit of tears, still holding her son close and rocking him slowly in her arms. |
|
The spark had gone out of him and what he used to find amusing held no interest for him any longer. |
|
After that, the game could have gone either way, except that Tipperary were again forcing the pace. |
|
Yet another Pattern Festival has come and gone and this one has to be rated most successful. |
|
|
She is putting right what has gone wrong in her life and holding on to what is familiar. |
|
In-store activity had been holding up well but has suddenly gone very quiet over the past couple of weeks, he told me. |
|
His mission is to seek out wondrous treasures, discover strange new lands and to boldly go where no action-packed adventure has gone before. |
|
Make this project actionable, so you feel value in having gone through the process. |
|
Mostly gone are the days when the average citizen could get free water heater blankets or window treatments from her utility. |
|
I ripped with all my might, but after a moment, all my strength was gone and I blacked out again. |
|
A micro-pig entrepreneur has gone bust after mistakenly selling customers ordinary baby pigs, which then grew too big. |
|
Bucks had complained vigorously for having to recall their players who had already gone on holiday for the league recess. |
|
But it can offer no way back and an overs match where the first batting side collapses is a match gone beyond recall. |
|
Adam's face darkened, and his teasing, light-hearted mood was gone beyond recall. |
|
Chen Tsai-fu was criticized because of his failure to notice that a bullet had gone through the windshield in front of him. |
|
As with other settlement bills, its format is in keeping with what has gone before. |
|
But in the time that sorting out that mess takes, Charlie, to windward, has gone past her. |
|
David has lived in pubs all his life and is the third generation of his family to have gone into the trade. |
|
It's as if the screenwriters have gone through the Gospels with a blue pencil, trying to recast the words so that we can accept them. |
|
Over the last decade, it has gone to rack and ruin and is now a haunt for bikers and four-wheel-drive vehicles. |
|
Once the woman was gone and the door was closed once again, Jeremiah grinned again. |
|
I think after the England game we had gone into the match against Italy with a little trepidation. |
|
Nurse Debbie McCall has gone back to the job she loves after taking a career break of 18 years. |
|
The new year is barely four days old, and two distributors have already gone into administrative receivership. |
|
|
We then went airside, only to hear that staff had gone back on strike and our flight was cancelled. |
|
Byrd is favored but people have gone to the poor house betting against Evander Holyfield. |
|
We'd seen a good man resign and we'd gone through a lengthy leadership contest. |
|
Long gone are the days when this flag carrier was considered so sacrosanct its planes were blessed by priests on the tarmac before departure. |
|
The manufacturers of these rubber stocks have gone to a lot of trouble to produce a product that feels slightly tacky in the hand. |
|
I love it when third parties confirm my evil machinations have gone to plan. |
|
The amazing, continued escalation of AK47 hype has certainly not gone away. |
|
The IFS concludes that taxes would have gone up whoever won the last election, because it was the only way to balance the books. |
|
Sympathy was expressed to all the families connected with the club who suffered bereavements during the year gone by. |
|
No sooner had the lights gone out than there were mumblings of sabotage, some kind of conspiracy, foul play, under-hand machinations. |
|
My beautiful children who I'd had were just gone out of my life in that one single moment, that one simple, selfish act. |
|
The unprecedented state and local effort that has gone into preserving the sage grouse should provide a template for future conservation efforts. |
|
In five minutes, the game had gone from hanging in the balance to having an air of predictability about it. |
|
On top of that, I was upset because we'd just gone four miles and the horse had jumped really well. |
|
Previous management were either too proud or too arrogant to accept the fact that their attempts at empire building had gone seriously awry. |
|
Meanwhile, I've gone through the archives with speed and alacrity, but still can't find the name of the hotel. |
|
He was part of a diving group that were using inflatable equipment to raise a boat which had gone down earlier. |
|
I wanted to go out rabbiting with Oscar, but you've been gone ages and now he's gone to sleep. |
|
Rarely has an actress of her beauty and status gone so completely auteurist in her approach to choosing projects. |
|
I'd gone to Australia for the final act, thrown myself into the requisite lusty self-destruction, the absence of care. |
|
|
Again, he scored with the local touch he managed to bring, proving that a lot of homework had gone into its making. |
|
Chief Executives have gone from heroes in gray pinstriped suits to heels in orange jumpsuits. |
|
I would like to thank you now for your kindnesses as I will be gone before you rise. |
|
Instead, it's a sadly bloated and floundering example of an experiment gone awry. |
|
He is convinced that the tilt towards the environment at the expense of productivity has gone too far. |
|
No player this season has gone from benchwarmer to franchise stud like Randolph. |
|
The toy that came with it was one of those plastic nails with a kink in it that you put on your finger and it looks like it's gone right through. |
|
Reviewing past models is useful in identifying where the Strokes have gone so very wrong. |
|
No wonder the tabs report every month or two that she has gone on yet another crash diet. |
|
She sat down on an old red brick wall at the front of someone's garden and recomposed herself until the wave of nausea had gone completely. |
|
This is the 21st century, and no matter how badly some people want to fight it, the buttoned-up attitudes of the 1950s are gone for good. |
|
It has a wistful quality, a longing for a world gone never to return, which an author of Sampson's vintage can and should be excused. |
|
Children who come of age and have not gone through the puberty rite are liable to be forcibly seized to undergo the procedure. |
|
Officials seem to believe that once the refugees have gone home reconciliation has been completed. |
|
Representatives of his religion burned and persecuted witches in years gone by. |
|
I managed quite well and could've gone on longer only I had other infernal machines of torture to subject my poor, aged body to. |
|
Yet they seem to have gone on a solo run, bent on forcing change without recognising their own vulnerability. |
|
The festival, launched four years ago, has gone from strength and the town will be buzzing with activity for the next two weeks. |
|
The dashes of red had gone and there were a number of highly contrasting garments in black and white. |
|
Given the amount of crime committed by young people, it is sometimes tempting to think that a whole generation has gone off the rails. |
|
|
Much of our traditional winter run of bream, tailor and blackfish have gone and we wait for the good whiting and flathead of the summer months. |
|
As the rupiah gains strength against the U.S. dollar these days, the prices of some imported goods have gone down slightly. |
|
The nightmares had overrun his dreams again, leaving a sour ache in his soul, and he'd gone and taken it out on her. |
|
He's since gone on to chronicle his experiences in a book, and of course act as advisor in the movie. |
|
Much as those times were good, gone are they, for this is the age of ready-mades. |
|
He estimates the vehicle has gone about a million miles on nine tours and three different motors. |
|
I had gone back to check some facts when Angier emerged awkwardly from the bathroom. |
|
All I know is my head hurt real bad during that time and then it was gone after a while. |
|
They had not been gone for five minutes when the discussion of their private lives began. |
|
Upon returning to earth, Dr. Evil learns that his empire of awfulness has gone legit. |
|
Nobody has won both Iowa and New Hampshire by such wide margins and gone on to lose the nomination. |
|
Just because Mom's gone and my father's never around doesn't mean Trisha's a latchkey kid, or something. |
|
While most rely on experiences of colleagues, who have gone places last summer, some do indeed plan their own vacation. |
|
We've gone from the rah-rah of Capra to the cynicism of Kubrick, Coppola, Stone and, well, Kubrick again. |
|
Once you've gone down that road it is mostly downhill and getting steeper by day. |
|
Loretta and Teresa had been gone a long time and Chandra's curiosity was raging. |
|
Yes, she's gone to an awful lot of trouble to assemble all your favourite people and prepare a lavish spread. |
|
It would be a fine thing to have food prepared as it was for festive occasions in days gone by. |
|
Horses should not be just something from days gone by, but part of the future. |
|
There are the usual family shots, newspaper clippings, and other photos of days gone by. |
|
|
In days gone by, you tended not to travel as far or as much as you do today. |
|
The Buddhist thought of the Three Kingdoms does not seem to have gone much beyond research into the texts of Hinayana and Mahayana. |
|
As we think back to days gone by, we tend to focus on certain sounds, smells or tastes. |
|
In days gone by we were able to explain wars in simple terms of good and evil. |
|
He was a pleasant man who tended to tell horrible jokes and reminisce too much about days gone by. |
|
In days gone by it was a refreshing experience eating at someone else's house. |
|
The staff have a thousand stories of golf stars who have stayed at the hotel in days gone by. |
|
The island's only stately home is a testament to the grandeur of days gone by. |
|
In days gone by, traffic wardens were known as the extra police force, for parking and traffic control. |
|
Safely ensconced midway through the year 2002, any millennial tension feels like a long gone fad. |
|
It's not far from here down to the Thames, and the river was even closer in days gone by. |
|
The old forge, which was very much part of rural Ireland in days gone by, is also worth viewing. |
|
He was happy to meet the old men of the village and talk of the days gone by. |
|
Most of the time, he did not have the time or energy to think of days gone by. |
|
I believe similar blood flows in the veins of men and women such as flowed in the veins of the martyrs in days gone by. |
|
By the end of the manuscript, the copyeditor's monologue has gone on so long, the anger has turned into rage. |
|
I don't know how much longer I could have gone on, seeing good theatre day after day. |
|
The firm, which makes internal mixers, mills and calenders for the rubber and plastic industry, has gone into receivership. |
|
But they had only gone a few miles down the road when someone realised that the door to the luggage compartment on their bus had opened. |
|
He had gone a little distance down this hall when he saw a door with an unfamiliar symbol on it. |
|
|
He took her across street upon street, only stopping when he felt that they had gone quite a safe distance. |
|
I've been to Yosemite National Park at least half a dozen times since I was a kid, but I've never gone there in the dead of winter. |
|
Sweets had gone on ration in 1939, along with sugar and most other food and clothing items. |
|
We had gone a good distance on a dimly lit road when a strong, foul and suffocating odour swarmed into and around our car. |
|
I had gone to visit my parents for the weekend, and my mother drove me to the Greyhound station for my return trip. |
|
We went back to the North African restaurant where I had gone with the cast the night before. |
|
John used to go to the greyhound track every night before Denis was attacked, but he hasn't gone since. |
|
Schools' costs have gone up because of the increase in national insurance and higher contributions to teachers' pension schemes. |
|
In addition, the life expectancy for women in 16 of the 27 countries studied has gone down. |
|
Prices have gone up because of an increase in demand for oil, particularly from China. |
|
The wholesale cost of electricity has gone up by 23 per cent since November. |
|
She had only been gone about fifteen minutes when the first raindrops began. |
|
I think it would have been much better for him and the Trust if he had gone at the same time as the chairman. |
|
Dad had been gone all day for some case that required him to travel three hours away. |
|
If Liverpool fail to win against Fulham it will be the first time since October 2000 that they have gone four matches without a win. |
|
Despite his physical fitness Jack's weight has already gone from 14 stone to 12 stone sapping him of vital energy. |
|
You know, anybody who's gone without sleep, even for just one night, knows that it can really sort of, you know, mess with your head. |
|
This was coming from the guy who had once gone an entire weekend without sleep before his first external examination. |
|
Instead of getting rid of the effect of lack of sleep I ended up with an eye infection, which still hasn't gone completely. |
|
The a la carte menu's gone and she now serves traditional, home-cooked grub. |
|
|
Campaigns to introduce daylight saving have come and gone regularly over the years and there is another on the go. |
|
The days of a manager commanding respect from his players simply because of who he is are long gone if they ever existed at all. |
|
The challenge of studying extinctions is that it can be hard to know when a species is finally gone for good. |
|
We have been told the trees will camouflage the mast but when the leaves have gone it will be clearly visible. |
|
The bruising is almost completely gone and she's putting more weight on it every day. |
|
The previous weariness was now completely gone from her features and instead was replaced by obvious excitement. |
|
Those golden days, if they ever existed, are long gone in most professional sports. |
|
Once the stone is gone it's very difficult to replace and we have to hope the thieves are found and brought to justice. |
|
Firefighters were called to the scene at 9.15 am and were astounded that the building had not gone up in flames. |
|
We have kept hoping for as long as we could, but we have to accept Margaret has probably gone and at last her suffering has ended. |
|
The grin was gone, and his voice had gone so emotionally dead that it was almost frightening. |
|
The money had gone in excessive compensation and unapproved bonuses, fees and loans. |
|
She said without the support of her friends and family she would have gone completely off the rails. |
|
I was sure that she must have gone deaf because she didn't answer until I was merely a few feet away from her. |
|
I put an arm around him and try to think of something comforting to say but my mind's gone blank. |
|
One horrified witness later told police the defendant looked as if he had gone crazy. |
|
When Bates took control, the board had gone some way to mitigating that position, and yet disaster still lurked. |
|
I hate umbrellas, won't normally use them, but I must have gone soft over the last few months. |
|
The parade organisers would have gone bankrupt on account of the crippling public liability insurance. |
|
His meeting must have gone well because he looked a whole lot happier now then when he left. |
|
|
You can't pick up a newspaper these days without thinking that the world has gone mad. |
|
Much of Murray's efforts have gone towards trying to raise money from the private sector. |
|
The effort that has gone into the research and compilation of this publication is remarkable. |
|
It is no accident that they are quality staff, because huge investment has gone into training. |
|
Call me a fusspot, but I don't see why the fire-fighting equipment couldn't have gone in the dressing table. |
|
Long ago, when he was just a schoolboy, his closest friend had gone by the name St. James. |
|
Not only does its very concept paint a picture of happier days gone by, where a slower, simpler way of rural life was all the go. |
|
Councillors will be going, going, gone next month when they are put under the hammer as lots in a charity slave auction. |
|
But their early free fall practically ensures that Beltran will be going, going, gone before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline. |
|
It will be a case of going, going, gone next Tuesday when buy4now.com launches a real time lunchtime auction site. |
|
Going, going, gone will be heard all tomorrow as the hammer comes down at Debenham's on Manningham Lane, Bradford. |
|
Let me state, right away, that I do not think the Spanish Prime Minister has gone against anybody's decision. |
|
The administration has finally gone along with what we in Congress have been proposing, which was an increase of about 25,000 in the Army. |
|
I've never gone along with all the talk about Michael and me being too much alike to work as a partnership. |
|
The defeat he always insisted was inevitable has come and gone and cost Celtic nothing. |
|
If we had gone at them I think the points would have been there for the taking. |
|
The clocks have gone back, summer is over and many of us are dusting off our electric blankets ready for the long cold nights. |
|
The clocks have gone back, it's getting colder and driving conditions are about to get a great deal tougher. |
|
By now even the most unobservant should have realised that British Summer Time is dead and that clocks have gone back one hour. |
|
So the clocks have gone back and it was dark, it seemed by mid afternoon, yesterday, halloween is over and for me it is now winter. |
|
|
Today I got your letter, dated the 19th, and see that my last letter must have gone astray or been delayed. |
|
Eventually, as the crowd drifts away, you realise that your suitcases have gone astray. |
|
But critics claim the decision is premature and that the PCT has gone back on a promise made last spring to find an alternative site. |
|
His motive was that his employer, having promised him the tenancy of the Dolaucothi Arms, had gone back on his word. |
|
In the past 30 years, hundreds of ships have gone down in mysterious circumstances, taking all hands with them. |
|
In Britain, the bulk of venture capital has traditionally gone into the comparatively safe area of backing management and institutional buyouts. |
|
They eventually went down 30-24 but could well have snatched it if the game had gone on for a couple more minutes. |
|
She's gone for rough boys in the past but maybe she's trying to change her image. |
|
She has really gone for it and it must have been so difficult for her at first in a place where no one spoke her language. |
|
While cruise lines have practices to assist passengers whose luggage has gone astray, those procedures vary widely. |
|
Nat, I know, was humbled when he was told the lengths to which his old adversary had gone to honour his name. |
|
A lot of hard work and time has gone into them and they are to be commended on their interest and enthusiasm in seeing it through. |
|
The clocks have gone forward, the evenings have got lighter and finally summer is on its way. |
|
For some, it should have long since gone the way of fans with rattles and balls with laces into a museum. |
|
Our company has gone through a restructure and a takeover, which means job cuts and relocation. |
|
White-haired gentlemen haunt grand old cafes from days gone by, sipping coffee under dusty chandeliers. |
|
I used to be a major Izzard fan, but in the last couple of years I've gone off him big time. |
|
They were gone at last, the warm wind whipping her long brown locks as they bounded through the grass. |
|
Within an hour and a half the tide had gone out again and the clean-up operation began in earnest. |
|
He says he and a friend were just about to go snorkeling when they noticed the tide had gone out much farther than usual. |
|
|
I haven't gone over the speech and checked the accuracy of all of the statements, but it is simply untrue that he appeared crazy in some way. |
|
By some small miracle, his leg had gone undamaged, but he had since contracted a severe case of the shakes. |
|
Charlie had spent the entire morning shopping, and had already gone through the money Adam had given her. |
|
In the past year, nearly 14,000 family-owned small businesses have gone under. |
|
If the bank had gone under, it would have been the biggest financial-sector bankruptcy in Germany's history, according to Business Week magazine. |
|
Apparently, bygones haven't been gone by for long enough yet, and the attempt was repulsed. |
|
Mrs Cooper admits that, if she had not got her own source of funding, she could have gone under three times in the early years of the business. |
|
It's surprising that people investing in some firms that have had huge run-ups don't know what they do, just that they're gone up 100 percent. |
|
Aside from the Norwich Union building, almost every high post-war building that has gone up in York has been a disaster, he points out. |
|
We'd gone river rafting in California, and on a platter-smooth stretch of water, I stupidly removed my life jacket because it was stiflingly hot. |
|
But then young Master Thomas had gone up to Cambridge, and Elsie's black mood had descended. |
|
In the middle of July gone by, she journeyed to America to meet friends and enjoy a vacation and had a marvellous time. |
|
At first we were recycling reams and reams of paper but that has gone down as we are using less and using both sides. |
|
She'd gone to the wrong college, shacked up with the wrong man, and had denied herself the pleasure of having a child of her own. |
|
In the space of less than a week I have gone from being somewhat depressed to feeling like life is back on track. |
|
Just a raw-boned, tough player who has scored 50 goals twice and gone over 200 minutes in penalties three times. |
|
Since the ink incident she hasn't gone anywhere near me, and I find that quite an agreeable situation. |
|
She's gone to bed a lot happier now but I guess we'll have to keep an eye her until the results are known. |
|
I'm a 46-year-old Ohio river rat who's gone there half a dozen times to mountain bike and ski. |
|
If we'd gone home at the end of the meal, all would probably have been well. |
|
|
There's a couple of times where she's gone to school and she's just in floods of tears and yeah it's really tough on them. |
|
He had once gone down to the practice ranges to mock her archery skills when she'd first begun to learn. |
|
Since then the printing industry has gone through enormous technological advancements. |
|
Buffalo has a legacy of dreams gone sour, and even today, surrounded by the horn of American plenty, we are still very much the rust belt. |
|
Your mate has gone through the same reasoning, which leaves you both vulnerable. |
|
Brelghtmet will be still be disappointed with their lowly position as a number of their defeats have been close and could have gone either way. |
|
In an Austrian village where distant cowbells are usually the only sound, the curtain has gone up on one of the world's most unusual festivals. |
|
He's gone in a whoosh, leaving the trio to dissect his speech. |
|
Some kangarooer had camped here for a season and gone his way. |
|
He was told it had gone well, he said, and he has already received two more invitations to the granite State. |
|
Several have gone on to other cites in higher ranking responsibilities including Thomas Murphy who is now the Chief of Police in Garfield Heights. |
|
When Mal could come back each sort of week or weekend with the film rushes, he'd tell me the latest of what had gone on the set, and it was quite unusual. |
|
British Airways said today that as many as 20,000 bags had gone astray at Heathrow airport in recent days amid the chaos following the security crackdown. |
|
Mr. Cowley records how he received three panic calls from Bermuda that day fearing that their money had gone astray, and had to make a few visits to the local branch manager. |
|
In just a few dozen years, astrochemists have gone from knowing nothing of molecules in space, to finding a plethora of them practically everywhere. |
|
They had gone from raw recruits to men of honor in a year, and so had he. |
|
It populated the battalion partly with soldiers who had gone through basic training elsewhere as tank destroyer crewmen and partly with raw recruits. |
|
After a while, as we were arguing about the thicket, it occurred to us that all in the house save Arch and me had gone to bed. |
|
Police have so far been unable to trace the white Conway trailer, but a cheque from the Donnes has gone some way to lifting the youngster's spirits. |
|
The prices have gone up in line with the budget approach to protect front line services, but the loyalty card offers an even better discount than before. |
|
|
So while Travis Bickle might have gone in search of coffee and pie on his break, his real-world equivalent is more likely to want a plate of saag and a decent cup of chai. |
|
It is an ancient village, a very important village in days gone by. |
|
People dressed up in period costume to re-enact days gone by. |
|
They followed the road for a couple of hours, then, after they had gone about a dozen miles, they veered off of it and into the woods for another four or five miles. |
|
None the less, I had gone barely half a mile in my Scenic when a bus driver, alongside me at a junction, put his window down to express his admiration. |
|
It would take over an hour to reach the fishing grounds but we had gone barely a mile before we saw one of the most magnificent sights in the world. |
|
With just over four minutes gone it was again level at 24 apiece. |
|
The most I've gone without sleep is somewhere around the 55-60 hour mark. |
|
He lived life to the full and even though he has gone at a young age he fitted a lifetime of achievements into his life. No matter what, he always had a smile on his face. |
|
When Wood returned to the truck parked on Panorama Drive, her bike was gone along with two others belonging to friends visiting from Washing-ton state. |
|
Have they gone completely mad, have they lost all sense of perspective? |
|
I have gone at it pretty hard this year, even in my off weeks, because I've been preparing for other events, so I'm not sure what my energy level will be after the Ryder Cup. |
|
Every time they've made a promise, they have gone back on their word. |
|
He has promised me he will do it and he has never gone back on a promise. |
|
They also claimed the family's Rottweiler dog had attacked another dog, killed one woman's cat and gone for another woman in the street leaving her shaken up. |
|
Now the clocks have gone forward, we must move forward with them. |
|
Well, we're two hours ahead, now that the clocks have gone forward. |
|
The clocks had gone forward that week, which meant she had to cover a very short distance in the dark to catch the bus to San Miguel, a few miles away. |
|
Neighbours say they were convinced a bomb had gone off when the firework exploded with a massive bang earlier this week in Harington Avenue, off Melrosegate. |
|
I may have a small steak tartare, but I've gone off food terribly. |
|
|
Sharon, who has been teaching English in Thailand for three years, was on the beach near her hotel when she noticed the tide had suddenly gone out. |
|
As I have analysed this and gone over the incidents a few times in my mind, right now I am having a few doubts to say the least about my reading of the situation. |
|
Businesses have gone under, and there has also been an impact on jobs. |
|
Blockades have gone up around the World Bank and IMF buildings. |
|
His success was revolutionary, but what would the crusader think if he saw the massacres that have gone unstopped today? |
|
With spring quickly leading into summer, and our roadsides having gone from daffodils to bluebells to wild garlic, it is hard to imagine flowers being endangered species. |
|
Sunderland might have gone further ahead when leading scorer Stephen Elliott wriggled into the penalty area only to drive his shot into the side netting. |
|
But also, many of them have gone through the Cultural Revolution just like me. |
|
Captured documents and interrogations have revealed that since 1997, Nepali teams have gone to India for training and returned to set up training camps. |
|
I am a risk-taker and I would have gone for broke during the dotcom boom. |
|
Mrs James, whose parish includes Minety, Leigh and Ashton Keynes, has even gone as far as to try and change the shape of the crucifix a symbol of Jesus's ultimate sacrifice. |
|
While consultation documents on wheelchair strategy have winged back and forth, the creeping paralysis of the National Health Service has gone unabated. |
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Lots of children have gone to university and spread their wings. |
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Two weeks ago, we took the frog to the doctor's as she had been unable to shake off an infection and her production of slimy, yellow, globulous mucus had gone into overdrive. |
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He is looking for me and when he finds me he is going to feed me rice and gone off fish till I die as he knows I have not pooed in a week because he read my dead end blog. |
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The police have gone out and caught the recidivist burglars. |
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With the St. Kieran's senior and under 21 teams gone out of the reckoning in their respective championships, much attention will now be focussed on the minors. |
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Then he said to the Americans that the ban would be gone by lunchtime. |
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We didn't stop giggling and laughing all night and by the time we left, Debbie's jaw was aching her make-up had gone from wiping away the tears of laughter! |
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Once he was gone the women sagged against the wall she was bound to. |
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It is possible that Hagar is still living there and that Isaac has gone to visit her following his mother's death. |
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Oh for crying out loud, it's just gone 4am and I haven't slept a wink. |
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Now, bourbon and rock and roll had gone hand in hand long before leather pants and hairspray hit the scene. |
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Now that the national has gone from relaxed and comfortable to alert but not alarmed, everyone's a little touchy about who might be up to no good. |
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Or what if an ingredient in your beer or cocktail machines has gone bad without knowing it? |
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As one of the three cofounders of the Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Club, he knew too much about everything that had gone wrong. |
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He had previously gone on week-long tours in Donegal and West Cork. |
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We could well have a more radical left-wing party with some trade union support while on the right the Eurosceptics might have gone and formed a new party. |
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They have gone running like overgrown school sissies squealing to teacher about the boy they don't like in the hope that teacher will give him a jolly good thrashing. |
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You see what an expense you've jolly well gone and caused there? |
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This has already been a hard week on wrestling fans with the passing of Stu Hart and now one half of the greatest tag team of all time is gone also. |
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The Tea Party hate machine has gone into overdrive in South Carolina, so how has Lindsey Graham survived so comfortably? |
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Again and again, journalists and TV reporters have gone undercover to show the shocking misogyny of sharia courts. |
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The benefits to the city could well continue long after the fashionable hats, toppers, tailcoats and cut-glass accents have gone back to more familiar haunts further south. |
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The remote controlled flying craft has gone from covert military ops to a communal backyard hobby. |
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I expected him to follow up this statement with a regaled tale of personal career direction gone wrong, but slowly realised he had just passed judgement on my capabilities. |
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I was railroaded into a way of making music I wouldn't have gone for. |
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Wasinger has even gone so far as to call on Comstock to drop out and run as a Democrat instead. |
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She faltered at his tone, but would have gone on to press him some more when a shadow crossed over his face and she realized Kim was approaching once again. |
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Kennedy was given the concurring opinion, which said the Court should have gone much further. |
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