As wonderful as it is to relive these music video memories, I'm forced to pause and interject criticism. |
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Well, as a journalist in the media, you're not supposed to interject your opinion. |
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At various points, the director and members of the cast interject voiceover comments about the proceedings. |
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Throughout the analysis I will interject commentary on the status and use of the constructs. |
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Violet is waiting to interject, but she knows better than to cut him off in mid-flow. |
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To interject a personal note here, I eat meat, sometimes happily, sometimes queasily. |
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She rather amusingly shoved her shorter husband aside from the mike whenever she wanted to interject a point. |
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I want to interject, Mr. Speaker, to say that I want to split my time with the member for Cypress Hills-Grasslands. |
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I'll ask the first couple of questions, and I apologize if I interject, but as you know, we have only a short period of time. |
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Mr. Dave Thompson: If I could interject, I may not have made myself as clear as I should have the first time I was here. |
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I didn't allow him to interject the last time, so I need to allow him to do so this time. |
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I will interject here to say that is why Standing Order 119 must be respected by committees. |
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And by the way I will interject here to say I wish he were still a parliamentary secretary, but that is none of my business. |
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The Chair: If I could interject here, I was thinking the same thing myself. |
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Through their writing, these people interject their personality and special areas of interest, in addition to the specified article content. |
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The sitter seems about to interject some witty remark with a laugh in her eyes that easily matches the most accomplished paintings. |
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Only other members of the tribe could interject or show enthusiasm for the words expressed. |
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They keep pinging the ball around, only for an Algerian boot to interject and skelp it back upfield. |
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Mr. Gar Knutson: Let me just interject here that I'm assuming everyone's acting in good faith. |
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If I could, I'll just interject, because I'm not understanding your answer. |
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I have one more quick question to interject here, but perhaps you first could give me a response, Dr. Dossetor. |
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His comments led Land Minister Thoko Didiza to interject, saying only the Khoisan would benefit from land restitution if the cut-off date was shifted. |
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She raised her hand when she wanted to interject, looking like a kid wanting to be called on in class. |
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She also ignored his voice and did not try to seek him out visually when he would at times interject comments during the exam or immediately afterwards. |
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Mary spoke before Spam could get the chance to interject his own ideas. |
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One can only regret that he will not be able actually to preside at the marriage ceremony and be given the opportunity to interject a number of his jokes into the proceedings. |
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The goal is to interject military forces under the command of the United Nations between two enemies who first must agree to the presence of these troops. |
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The Deputy Speaker: If the Chair could just interject for a moment, I would like to remind the House that while we are at report stage of the bill, there are no questions or comments. |
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The politician had a bagful of humorous anecdotes she could interject into any spur of the moment stump speech. |
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I just want to interject one quick thing, Mr. Trudell. |
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Others would interject, with cause, that I should have discussed global imbalances and the great savings glut, or the role of soaring commodity prices in precipitating a downturn, or any number of other factors. |
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It resists all attempts to interject political issues, and it takes precautions lest its aims and purposes become lost or buried under political propaganda. |
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To interject 300 high-level jobs into this community will transform the city and will elevate academic programs for our students and the high-tech industry. |
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However, feel free to interject and correct me if I'm wrong. |
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I don't mean to interject as chair, but I would just say that. |
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A general readjustment in contracts would be enormously complicated and time-consuming and would interject an undesirable element of uncertainty into economic and business activity. |
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I will interject here that I am also now, and have been for a number of years, the industry co-chair on DFO's advisory committee, and I have the wonderful privilege of sitting with the director. |
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But interject something that causes the driver to be less alert, or add intersecting roads, or put other drivers on the highway, and even 40 miles an hour may be dangerously excessive speed. |
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At the breaks, you should interject with the questions and ask the observers to write down a couple of key words which summarise their response at that stage in the presentation. |
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We advocate, therefore, greater transparency in the briefings made to the Security Council and for non-Council members to be allowed to hold watching briefs without the right to interject or interact. |
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I don't like to interject myself if I feel like my opinion is not wanted. |
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