She told me that many black students experience unintended racial insults, and that racist expression, intended or not, often gets a pass. |
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It insults our intelligence, dumbs the global experience down for us into easily digestible particles, and lies when it could really enlighten. |
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I do not see how you gain by adding to his family's pain with your vile insults and cruel words. |
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The acute management of patients with locked-in syndrome is similar to that for patients with other acute brain stem insults. |
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The speech was liberally salted with the standard Lathamite insults from Werriwa College of Invective. |
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But they sandbagged her, so the last thing she was going to do was take insults from the man who almost ruined her career. |
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We got into yet another argument over something stupid that turned into exchanging insults and maledictions. |
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Hate is manifested in a whole range of insults in football and nobody is spared in an arena where the lowest common denominator rules the roost. |
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The pair took their lad bants a bit too far as they passed their time in the jungle by hurling insults at each other. |
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A thickset woman with very short, dark hair, she was silent and barely flinched as people passing her hissed insults into her ear. |
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It insults the intelligence of clear thinking peoples and plays to the hearts and minds of the weak. |
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By her own admission this self-styled intellectual is happy to live in cheap subsidised housing provided by the citizens of the city she insults. |
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Suffering insults us by calling into question our self-sufficiency and integrity as individuals. |
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The pair had been expected to trade insults and vitriol at their post-match press conference following an acrimonious second session on Friday. |
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Strong language has been used, insults have been traded, attacks have been personalised and bitterness is made visible. |
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They spent the next little while trading creative insults, the result being that Ellen was reduced to giggling and chuckling constantly. |
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Rival groups jostled for space and traded insults, but there were no arrests. |
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As soon as the scrum broke up it was all in, punches traded, insults thrown and another lecture from the referee. |
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I'm quite interested in political debate, but there's a difference between debate and trading insults. |
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It's never too early to start sharpening the insults and perfecting the ad hominem attacks. |
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Furthermore, a characteristic could be something temporary or transitory if the subject of taunts or insults. |
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They poked at her mischievously, while most likely sharing insults in their own language. |
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It's no surprise then that he starts most of the fights, and suffers most of the insults, at the hands of his fellow bandmates. |
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Just because you've got blue blood running through your cold veins doesn't mean I have to put up with your insults! |
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People telling me what to do, dismissively, unclearly, insults me, rather than scares me. |
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Your piece last month on sporting insults was missing a memorable sledge from an Australia v Zimbabwe cricket match. |
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The art of the classic political sledge has been lost as MPs resort to crude invective over clever insults. |
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They rushed up, shouting insults at the sage who was then deep in meditation. |
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It's my own duty to expose Caz for the flimsy lies and unfounded insults she slaps up here on a weekly basis. |
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Furthermore, I deeply deplore the unfounded allegations and personal insults put forth in the letter. |
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Agnes and I sat in her filthy living room, reliving all the mean, thoughtless slights and insults she could remember. |
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But then I remembered I'm halfway around the world and the Greek and Cypriot history is rich enough that small insults or slights are laughable. |
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All of us when we're in politics suffer real or imagined slights, insults, whatever, but the fact is they were bad things. |
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No amount of recognition is sufficient, however, and other people's innocent comments or actions are misinterpreted as insults or slights. |
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The likelihood of that appeared very slim in a country where the president and prime minister regularly exchange public insults. |
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Luckly mom and dad, and I use the term loosely, were no longer slinging the insults any more. |
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On their way out, the women shout various slurred, unintelligible insults at the stage. |
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When someone insults us or does something unkind to us, an internal formation is created in our consciousness. |
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The most common forms of bullying are name-calling and insults, followed by being the object of lies or rumors. |
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Instead of having a calm, rational debate about legitimate issues, he started name-calling and casting insults. |
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He asked please and then the petty name-calling and childish insults started. |
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A child with coprolalia may blurt out insults, racial slurs or obscenities. |
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However, a Workers Online search of industrial insults painted the manager's effort as both unoriginal and lame. |
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Denizens of Belfast choose between smick and spide as their insults of choice. |
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She got sneers, insults, and hateful looks all day, not to mention suggestive ones from the male population, but she had just ignored them. |
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With the flamboyant, unsubstantiated claims come exaggerated insults directed at anyone who criticises or questions his work. |
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The speaking trumpets were sometimes used for shouting insults at rival parties. |
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Thrown spears are probably the first weapons to arrive amongst the opposing side, other than shouted insults. |
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Occasionally she even demonstrates some viperish spirit, as when she traded insults with another model. |
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I mutely watched two petite viragos lob insults at each other over the ethics of having a friend hold one's place in line. |
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She says the insults were received with a degree of shock by the local residents who'd come out in support of their bushland. |
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Banter or insults that in the past would have been brushed off with a smile or a riposte are now made a matter for the police. |
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Others hurl insults at neighboring Syria, blamed by many Lebanese for having a hand in the crimes. |
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He may have been handy with insults, but he was always the kindest, politest, and most generous of colleagues. |
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The United player kept his counsel, winning back public opinion with his stoicism in the face of the insults. |
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When you see ideological opponents stoop to a barrage of personal insults, do you think that they've scored a political point? |
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Many of these enzymes, such as catalase and glutathione peroxidase, are constitutively active and protect the lungs against everyday insults. |
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Worse still, in their name, those seven Maori members are subjugating them to absolute insults. |
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In his usual manner, he refused to be drawn into politics of insults and character assassination as being perpetuated by some opposition leaders. |
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They both were subjected to a daily barrage of insults, hits, cursings, and cruelty. |
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One day I sat her down to explain to her the word oxymoron and then to describe a magnificent and bucolic world of insults. |
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There's hair pulling, tickling, stomping on toes, Chinese burns, graffiting of limbs with highlighters, and very nasty insults. |
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These men were all palagi and their signs were in French and English, with the only Samoan writing being insults. |
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Last week's session ended up in mayhem, with deputies expelled and the rest hurling insults and swearing at each other. |
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None of these friends are in any way responsible for any mistakes, howlers, insults, etc., in what follows. |
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The ones who were subjected to insults and humiliations hung their heads down in shame. |
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Problems included loud music, out-of-control dogs, residents being assaulted and abuse and insults hurled at people in the street. |
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The court heard that it ended with Young hurling abuse at the cashier including racist insults. |
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Hughes endured a barrage of insults as he jogged in front of the animal enclosure. |
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This cheapens and degrades the movie and insults the current style of the comic franchise. |
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This included 126 physical assaults, 62 sexual insults and threats and nine cases of racist abuse. |
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The young have complained to me that the trouble with our leadership is that when they explain, it insults their intelligence. |
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Keenly sensitive to these insults, Raglan had to grapple with a French command whose sense of purpose seemed infirm. |
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Then again, this is a man who attracts insults like a bride attracts confetti on her wedding day. |
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The arch tastemaker meant it as a compliment, but barbed remarks and outright insults have dogged her throughout her career. |
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This is the crowning insult to a lifetime of perceived slights and insults, which exist nowhere but in his head. |
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He's been a never-ending source of insults and putdowns, to keep the hecklers at bay and the fans in stitches. |
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As the physiologic insults to each organ system accumulated, the outcome for this patient became worrisome. |
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For this reason, various environmental insults that damage intestinal tissues also lower the levels of lactase. |
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She'd like more control over her emotions so as to appear immune to perceived insults and snubs. |
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Still addressing me with tearful insults and telling me that I was a coward, she irrupted in the living room with a large knife in her hands. |
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The guy laughed, and soon enough a torrent of crude jokes and insults were flying around. |
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This led to another huge argument with insults flying from left to right and back again. |
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The political insults flying about the place certainly make it feel as though the starting pistol's been fired. |
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If that weren't enough, the insults and accusations were flying like sand on a pre-school playground. |
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By 1912 the term pomegranate, or Pommy Grant had taken its place alongside Jimmy Grant as insults for newcomers or new chums. |
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Every night ended up with the two of them exchanging insults, often culminating with her storming upstairs. |
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He pulls me through the crowd, much as I try to fight back, hissing insults and cussing at him like a sailor. |
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For all of its politically incorrect insults and potty-mouthed wordplay, the movie is disappointingly dull and toothless. |
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Players know there is a line between gamesmanship and personal and aggressive insults. |
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He's the nasty who goads opponents with vocal insults, and more noticeably, a series of physical kicks and digs when the ball is miles distant. |
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I think it treats readers like idiots, insults their intelligence and denigrates the whole point of delivering news in the first place. |
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So it is that jokes that might once have been accepted as bad-taste gags can now be denounced as intolerable racial insults. |
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To this end, helpful responses are mildly sardonic, while acerbic comments are scathing, derisive insults. |
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Clearly, the writers saved all of their best insults and put-downs for his character. |
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Refrain from insults, put-downs, and expressions of disgust, and avoid generalizations which are not only stereotypes, but often hurt. |
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Why are humorous put-downs needed when direct criticism or insults could suffice? |
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We hardly recognize the egregiousness of insults like this when they most urgently need to be remembered. |
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I can ask that the searches and scrutiny be done in a professional manner, with no insults and nothing that offends my dignity. |
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Cowen responded diplomatically to the insults and joked that politics was not a beauty contest. |
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I am so disheartened at the slurs and insults that have been hurled at those people who accept free lunch for their kids. |
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No blows were exchanged, but many insults were flung, many tears were shed and many shoulders were cried on. |
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There had been an exchange of insults between them with allegations of each being a dosser. |
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One second he is drawling and smirking and throwing cheap insults at me, the next, he's gaping like a dumbstruck fool. |
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These complaints were not the normal tirade of abuse and insults we receive but seemed genuine. |
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Despite officers warning him about his conduct he continued to hurl insults and was arrested. |
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Thinly veiled insults and acerbic comments are the tools of his or her trade. |
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It began with loud jibes and insults issued at both sides, and quickly developed into a shoving match. |
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Inmates at Buckley Hall Prison have to run a gauntlet of insults and racism from some members of staff. |
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Two terribly eager young men were dueling with megaphones, exchanging jocular insults across the concourse. |
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He also responded to insults with more creative insults, and occasionally responded to legitimate criticisms with well-turned phrases. |
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You want to root for them, but their humanity rarely rises above the constant din of insults. |
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As the march swung past Number 10 there was a cacophony of whistles, boos, jeers and insults. |
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Masters served their slaves, accepting taunts and insults that would be punished by the lash or death any other time of year. |
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He handled some predictably hostile and downright rude remarks with very solid rebuttals and a refusal to take insults. |
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First, he insults the national dress of Scotland by wearing that skirt masquerading as a kilt at the Tartan Day celebrations in New York. |
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In fact, all those insults come from real guests who think the show is on the level. |
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There are some people on the other side of the world who are tossing insults at American football, the game and the players. |
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When she insults Miss Bates at Box Hill, Mr. Knightley's reprimand really shames her. |
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When confronted about Fischer's comments in interviews, Amis retorted with some insults of his own. |
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A good hour and a half later, Erial once more stepped outside the sickroom, this time not mildly irritated and hiding her slight anxiety under good-natured insults. |
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Mrs Walsh said the four men arrested for abusive language hurled insults at the police outside the pub after staff helped officers to clear the bar. |
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But supposing somebody is in a hotel abutting a public place and insults his wife in a hotel room, that would be an offence under this section, would it not? |
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Hungarian freedom fighters shouted insults as they picketed in front of Talent Associates headquarters at 444 Madison Avenue. |
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This is the thin-skinned Gucci model Franco who hurls tweeted insults with the churlish gusto of Kanye West. |
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How would he feel if his father had been gassed, shot or hung in Auschwitz or Dachau, instead of his luckier fate, enjoying a good, long life hurling insults at others? |
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I was tempted to launch a sarcastic commentary about the difference between nerds and geeks, and their ineffectual nature as insults, but decided it probably wouldn't help. |
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After it's been decided, the tossers will have to swallow their insults. |
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Last September, white students at Elsinore High School in Riverside County confronted Latino students with racial insults and flags bearing iron crosses and swastikas. |
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The etiology of a pulmonary exacerbation is likely a variety of airway insults including respiratory viral infections, reactive airway disease, and pollutants. |
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Many of the agents were insensitive and crass, shouting insults and expletives at the detainees in Spanish. |
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His dialogue is positively literary in the creativeness with which he invents new ways to use and morph curse words into insults. |
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When people argue, they often resort to vituperation and insults. |
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Some of the parliamentarians turned puce with passion in their speeches, but they didn't seem to be hurling insults at each other or constantly trying to put each other down. |
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Yet even as her mother lobbed insults, Melissa was shown looking on, delight and pride in her eyes. |
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They begin a round of verbal sparring about their past together, Linklater's camera constantly swivelling to catch all the insults as they fly across the room. |
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I find your honesty quite refreshing, and your insults do not offend me. |
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But if the First Amendment rises to that level, surely it rises to the level of schoolyard insults. |
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The details of supposed slights and implied insults are trivia. |
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The witty repartee, the insults, and the jabs were all so natural. |
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They can go to school, do everything right, and still not get that job, still deal with casual slights and insults, still get stopped by the police. |
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It has now fallen to the level of Eristics, in which the winner of a debate is the one who shouts the loudest and has the best arsenal of insults. |
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There's never any call for resorting to insults and name-calling. |
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A string of vitriolic insults were hurled at the referee who should have at least administered a yellow card for diving if he felt a penalty was the wrong decision. |
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It serves as a shield to give her the strength to get through each day, to ward off the insults that have been hurled at her almost from the day she arrived. |
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Prosecutors allege that after a row in which insults were exchanged, Collins returned to his house in All Saints Street and returned with a knife in each hand. |
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Albert is a regular at this place, bringing along his gang of ruffians and louts to watch him eat sloppily and hurl insults at everyone that walks by. |
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They were roundly subjected to insults, smutty comments and had a multitude of aspersions cast about their manhood for the duration of their walk around the town. |
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The eagles are courting, the crows building nests, the Steller's jays have come back to sit and fling insults and we can see baby salmon in the shallows of the river. |
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In this private exchange I think the insults got even more vicious. |
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The losers walk away with their tails between their legs as small children hurl rocks at them and wizened babushkas cackle insults in obscure Slavic dialects. |
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Cities have their own, distinctly unharmonious giving league, which recently featured an exchange of insults between rival bidders for the Olympics. |
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I can't wait for him to set foot in parliament as a backbencher where he is going to be face to face with the people he always arrogantly insults. |
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It is tempting to refuse to answer those who have nothing to contribute but rude remarks, insults, and attempts to accuse others of things never said. |
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In 1324 idiots and lunatics had different rights in law, but now these words have lost their more precise meanings and become little more than insults. |
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Her piece is a colorful collection of insults, long on invective and heavy on the adjectives. |
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Bower describes him as the son of a docker, a barrow boy and an aspiring second-hand car dealer, as if these trades alone could be hurled as insults. |
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Wendy was busy inventing new insults with which to bash Nats. |
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Their fellow Muscovites taunted them on the sidewalks and on the streetcars, loudly criticizing their appearance, hurling insults at them, sometimes attacking them. |
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Even if of goodwill towards the others, they felt conflicting obligations, were bound by tradition to avenge insults and to assist others of their group. |
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In my column for CNN, I detail why lobbing slurs and insults at Sandra Fluke only emboldens her cause. |
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They traded blows, insults, and annoyed mutters for several long minutes. |
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Meetings sometimes end in shouting, name-calling and insults. |
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The man came around from his counter and began yelling insults at me. |
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With Australian spies among their number, they face a season-long barrage of insults and sly remarks if the world champions add the Captain Cook Cup to their trophy haul. |
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But he overhits it, bringing bitter insults from his team-mates. |
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Reputations have been attacked, insults traded, legal action threatened. |
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Instead of throwing a hissy fit, flinging insults, and taking down the flag, Hamm quietly negotiated to ensure his people got the best possible deal. |
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Visitors to the interactive exhibition can perform in front of the tough panel with the judges delivering their verdicts, more often than not trading insults among themselves. |
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Although a second traumatic event may serve as abreaction or a cure for some dissociative amnesic states, this seems unlikely in the event of two severe neurological insults. |
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My policy is to ignore readers who feel it necessary to resort to insults. |
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Easily hurt by insults and just as easily swayed by compliments, she dwelled in an angsty purgatory familiar to most adolescents. |
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To many of those white-haired and mottled men, the ambassador's six-minute apology and the invitation to visit Japan were insults. |
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I mean it's certainly less polemical than having some Greenpeace types confront these hunters with Zodiacs and boycotts and insults in the media. |
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Thus the fines for insults, injury, burglary or damage to property differ depending on the rank of the injured party. |
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In insults the ideophone occurs either in its characteristic position, the verb phrase, or uncharacteristically as a modifier in a noun phrase. |
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The peace talks became inamicable and the participants fired insults at each other. |
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By the joviality of their insults Babbitt knew that he had been taken back to their hearts, and happily he rose. |
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I don't defend, offend or vanitize my body or appearance so compliments or insults in that area go over my head and past me. |
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But after the water rat insults Miss Mousie, she flees home to her burrow in shame. |
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They've had to put up with wolf-whistles, taunts and insults from their opponents during their matches in Coventry's Sunday League. |
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They accept the underestimations and insults of the partner as a normal condition. |
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This mourning oneupmanship isn't just banal, it insults the British Legion. |
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A woman who's had too much in the departure lounge and insults everybody while her wee bauchle of a husband is scared to shut her up. |
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People feel very strongly about the heresy of decaff in New York, although surely it insults the point of retail even more. |
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In fact, we regard these efforts as insults on our understanding, and to such the pride of man is very difficultly brought to submit. |
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He stated that Thaci's insults are aimed at defocusing the public from the loss in Tetovo. |
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I leaned over her shoulder to see two cybergirls yanking out each other's hair. Katy was typing insults that appeared onscreen. |
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The former Stamford Bridge outcast grew up with friendly insults like Fanta-Pants, Coppertop and Swan Vesta and laughs at Kitson's ginger snap. |
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That said, avoid the urge to argue with a customer who is combative or flinging insults just to start or fuel a flame war. |
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Forbidden insults have included coward, guttersnipe, hooligan, rat, stool pigeon, swine, and traitor. |
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And when you happen to be part of one of showbiz's stroppiest families, the insults always outlast the relationship. |
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Paul Gibbons, 47, traced John Jones, 43, after they exchanged insults in a chatroom. |
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Like, the most vicious, cruelest, most amazingly crafted insults ever. |
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The coach said that from the moment Labes walked onto the pitch in her uniform, there were insults coming down from the stands the whole time. |
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Most men gave him a wide berth, and for the sake of peace accepted sneers and insults that made the blood boil. |
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Hodgson in which he describes his mastery of the Portuguese language, consisting mainly of swearing and insults. |
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He did not wish to bear Queensberry's insults, but he knew to confront him could lead to disaster were his liaisons disclosed publicly. |
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He argued cuttingly, his biting satire did not shrink at insults, and his expressions could be rude and cruel. |
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Misunderstandings with nonverbal communication can lead to miscommunication and insults with cultural differences. |
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Green, Madden and Simpson were subjected to derision and insults by the mob before they were hanged. |
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Beyla adds that Thor will bring peace to the quarrel, to which Loki responds with insults. |
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Notably, when given a copy of the Novum Organum by Bacon, Coke wrote puerile insults in it. |
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The British too were offended by what they considered insults such as the Little Belt Affair. |
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Right-minded people do not throw away their lives because trivial insults occur. |
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The ushers threw the woman out of the auditorium, because she kept shouting out insults to the guest of honor when he made his speech. |
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After hurling their insults, they ran like the clappers to get away. |
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On the extreme end of dieting, some research indicates that paring food intake to the bare minimum may protect the brain from a lifetime of everyday insults. |
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Hamlet feigns madness but subtly insults Polonius all the while. |
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In a rage, Hamlet brutally insults his mother for her apparent ignorance of Claudius's villainy, but the ghost enters and reprimands Hamlet for his inaction and harsh words. |
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Mountaineers have been saved from death, taxis have been ordered at 3am without recourse to a phonebox smelling of wee and insults can be hurled by text. |
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Among thousands of comments left since 2007, some included racial insults. |
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The American rapper Snoop Dogg has become embroiled in a legal battle in India where Zoroastrians charge that his latest music video insults their faith. |
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A series of insults were then traded between the two, both of which were audible through the stage microphone, causing claims that the whole event may have been staged. |
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Of all the blessed insults rolled into one, this here's the worstest. |
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The religion should not be played with because it is known from a long time ago that the insults towards a nation give birth to pathologic nationalism. |
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Many of the insults go well beyond the accustomed malignment of political opponents and are better labelled as character assassination and demonization. |
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Only one, Helvidius Priscus, was put to death after he had repeatedly affronted the Emperor by studied insults which Vespasian had initially tried to ignore. |
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Tumor Infection Trauma Angioma Perinatal insults Stroke Etc. |
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You are a Member of Parliament and insults go with the territory. |
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Contempt for the Presiding Officer, faded jeans and slogans scribbled on hands insults the generations of Home Rulers who fought for Scotland to grow up. |
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Destiny, by contrast, performed her athletic feat away down in the bush leagues, and so had to make do with the insults of a PETA farm club, the Animal Activists of Alachua. |
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Samir Nasri was shown a second yellow card moments earlier after squaring up to Jamie Vardy, with the two players going forehead to forehead after exchanging insults. |
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