Not a drop of alcohol passed our lips last night which was cool after lapsing on Tuesday night following Debbie's tumble. |
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You'll witness alternative cartoonists lapsing into fanboy stupor when someone whose work they really respect is around. |
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He made it to a phone box where he called for an ambulance before lapsing into unconsciousness and was pronounced dead at hospital. |
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The Many-Headed Hydra, without lapsing into anachronism, bears out this claim. |
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Now, Simon is lapsing into Hollywood speak to say he didn't do anything wrong. |
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At the risk of lapsing into national stereotyping, it does seem to come with the territory. |
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He willed the farm to Annie before lapsing into delirium and feverishly mumbling his last words in the Maori he knew so well. |
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The challenge confronting animal liberationists is how to create an alternative perspective without lapsing into anthropomorphism. |
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Susan's first thought was that he had died after lapsing into a diabetic coma. |
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Joking about the troubles of parenthood is how we share its exquisite joys without lapsing into maudlin sentimentality. |
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The next day though was a real oddity, I found myself lapsing into a darker, and grumpier mood. |
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Their age and mere existence confer legitimacy, and sometimes inspire campaigns to revive traditions that are lapsing. |
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They therefore had to resort to stereotypes, sometimes lapsing into sensationalism, to identify them. |
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In this increasingly global age, the inherited explanations of each region are lapsing into meaninglessness. |
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It's to Chandor's credit that he contrives an ending that is both graceful and dramatic without lapsing into melodramatics. |
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And just as the national party seems to be lapsing into fratricide, so a vicious internal war has broken out over the governorship. |
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In the public sector, it appears that this lapsing policy exerts pressure on managers to spend in order to avoid lapsing funds. |
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The lapsing of funds policy is a basic principle underlying parliamentary control of public money. |
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What is there to counter the growth forecasts for China and India, without lapsing into a ridiculous-sounding euphoria about Europe? |
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Note that these figures are actual expenditures rather than budgets as there appears to be some lapsing of funds in recent years. |
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For Indigenous youth there was a focus on employment generation to help keep them from lapsing into despair, apathy and anti-social activities. |
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By not doing it, they're lapsing in their responsibilities under the Oceans Act, in my belief. |
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The Centre has a budgetary lapsing authority to fund its operating and contribution expenses. |
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The Commission's operating expenditures are funded by a budgetary lapsing authority. |
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He spoke softly, evenly, often lapsing into a thoughtful whisper. |
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She also argues that unrecognised mental health problems can wrongly culminate in a child being excluded from school and lapsing into a life of crime. |
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When he lost the ability to communicate but was still aware before lapsing into a coma, artificial food and water would not help him, said the judge. |
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It is impossible for a modern author to create the necessary tone for an epic without lapsing into irony, because the material conditions preclude the creation of new myths. |
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Perhaps madness is the result of brain processes lapsing into chaos. |
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Last month the forecaster broke cover by briefly lapsing into English. |
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Remaining a pop phenomenon for 20 years without dying or lapsing into self-parody is quite a feat. |
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A policy becomes paid-up when there were enough premiums paid into it so that the failure to pay future premiums did not result in the policy lapsing or going off the books. |
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We particularly endorse the proposal for a peacebuilding commission to address the need for sustained action to prevent countries emerging from war from lapsing back into violence. |
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The fact that the work force is aging, along with the continued reality of workplace restructuring means that employers must be vigilant to avoid lapsing into practices that can be challenged as discriminatory. |
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And now my cab driver is in danger of lapsing into a hyperglycemic coma. |
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At the same time, however, the world had seen an unacceptable number of peace agreements disintegrate within five years after the end of a civil war, with countries lapsing back into deadly conflict. |
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It is therefore right for fraud to be eradicated and for us to have a Commission regulation that prevents us lapsing back into situations which, as I said earlier, give rise to the same old black sheep. |
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Gray, 25, died in hospital on 19 April, a week after lapsing into a coma from injuries sustained during his arrest and transportation in a police van. |
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Neil Warmington's set, with its upstage floral aquarium and gleaming patch of AstroTurf, also evokes a world that is garishly strange without lapsing into the clichés of fuliginous futurism. |
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Reports on representation work must be filed with the Mining Recorders Office within a period of 90 days from the claims anniversary date to keep the claim from lapsing. |
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Only the third partita for two viols and continuo, a study in echo effects, risks lapsing into banality. |
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In other words, the ethical judgement of nature is a value judgement depending on the case being analysed, without lapsing into relativism or extremism. |
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The vesting of the award or lapsing of restrictions is a nonevent, the same as under the current rules. |
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We are so deeply inside Eric's thoughts that it becomes mesmerizingly difficult to see when he began lapsing into the verboten. |
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Secondly, lapsing an allocated diversification fund because of a contract expiry date may fit fine with policy planners, but it does little to help a hurting community to trust and plan for its survival. |
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Moreover, the lapsing of the measures against Chinese imports would entail the lapsing of the circumvention measures with regard to the imports of the product concerned from Taiwan. |
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Never lapsing into mere pastiche, Tin Hat Trio fuses the structural incisiveness of classical with the sensual fluidity of jazz, offset by probing, avant-garde atonalities. |
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Clinically one sees gradually developing oedema, often a strikingly puffy face, increasing mental obtundity, the patient finally lapsing into confusion and stupor. |
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