I can't sit puzzling over words when there are fresh-baked cakes to nibble. |
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There it's used as a palate cleanser between bites, but I like to nibble on it all the time at home. |
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Though you nibble on just two or three cookies at a time, the night always ends with a box as empty as the 1,440 cookie calories you consumed. |
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Rats and guinea pigs nibble and graze continuously without well-defined meal times. |
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Nevertheless, I enjoyed the attention and liked it even more when she started to nibble my left ear lobe. |
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Yes, a few are able to nibble at the important trends of the future but not feed directly enough. |
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Meanwhile, just down the river, a white father and son are fishing for food and not getting a nibble. |
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I skipped starters and had the goulash soup instead, but had a nibble at the other two's plates. |
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With a teasing nibble to Shanza's earlobe, he trailed feather soft kisses down her jaw-line. |
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Just a nibble on a Rich Tea biscuit in the morning would soon banish the malaise. |
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For those of us hopeless optimists for whom every nibble is surely an interested salmon, the fly can seem sterile. |
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He said anyone who goes through what he did without even getting a nibble from a fish on his line deserves his money back. |
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Under the broken birdhouse a mouse plays with a nibble of yesterday's bread. |
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Or at least I would have spluttered over my cornflakes if I could eat cornflakes, or toast, or even a nibble of a Rich Tea biscuit. |
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We went out for brunch because Libby mentioned she was starving, having only had a nibble of the breakfast Pam's mom had cooked. |
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When confronted with a waffle for the first time, Sugar sniffs delicately and digests a tiny nibble. |
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Gaup and Mai join our group and after being introduced they try their first nibble of Japanese food. |
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Lander just stared at her openly and played with the third strawberry in between his fingers before taking a nibble of the fruit. |
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A couple of the crumbs that materialized in the last year seemed substantial and nourishing at first nibble. |
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Of course, waaaayyy back when Mike was a prepster, the best a running QB could do was a nibble from Va. Tech. |
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But in a statement today the Basingstoke telco said that while it's had a nibble, it's unlikely to amount to much. |
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Our waitress came round with good fresh bread, three or four varieties, then two fresh shell on prawns each to nibble on. |
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She amuses herself by holding her feet very still until bullheads come to nibble at her ankles. |
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He is also known to nibble on British Comedy and is an omnivorous consumer of the popular musics. |
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This cheese, served as a nibble, was stale, dry and tough enough to make one wonder if it was left over from some opening night ceremonial. |
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Then we scramble down the slope to the stony beach, and nibble on wild rose hips. |
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Waiters were summoned and I wonder what it's worth to McVities to know that their digestives are the favourite nibble of the royal pooches. |
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Buy some chewy onion flatbread to nibble alongside, and serve a crisp Riesling and icy lemonade to sip. |
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Happy and surprised passers-by streamed off of the street to nibble at the samples and admire the displays. |
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Success in crappie or panfishing often depends on being able to detect the slightest movement of the bait or the lightest nibble. |
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The little helpers known as cleaner fish, which nibble parasites off larger reef fish, actually prefer to nibble their clients. |
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However, Darcey's favourite nibble slips down the nutritional pecking order on account of its sugary fondant centre. |
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Wait three minutes between smelling different fragrances, and nibble on a cracker while waiting. |
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En route they have stopped to nibble their rucksack staples cheese and pickle sandwiches for two plus Eccles cakes for afters. |
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When preening, birds nibble and stroke their feathers, returning them to correct position. |
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In the afternoons, one can play croquet, sit amidst the blooming azaleas, nibble on some Devonshire tea, and adamantly wish for a quick death. |
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At fish-cleaning stations, cleaner fish nibble the parasites from the gills and mouths of fishes much larger than they are. |
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I try not to get into them too often, but what I will nibble on are pretzels dipped in ranch dressing. |
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He's bowling round the wicket, to a defensive field, but the Aussies still manage to nibble three runs off that over. |
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It has been suggested that the phallic shape and spicy ingredients made them a popular nibble at the saucy Lupercalian and Floralian festivals. |
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In the summertime, elk come to nibble on the luxuriant grasses that grow on my living roof. |
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If your appetite is gone, simply sip water and nibble on saltines for awhile until you feel like eating again. |
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Well keep these in your overnight bag so if you have a couple hours wait you always have a nibble handy. |
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Upon chancing a nibble, however, I felt that it could have done with a little bit more of the basics, namely salt and pepper. |
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Here I munched my sandwich and watched a sheep carefully and daintily nibble flowerheads off thistles. |
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Also, fill baggies with your fave snacks so you'll have stuff to nibble on when you get the munchies. |
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Next I nibble on the chocolate cookie, reminding myself of the rabbit I had when I was younger. |
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I assumed these were for guests, to nibble on while they waited, but I still picked up a few, from time to time, on my way out. |
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At Rue 57, a bustling midtown Manhattan French bistro, along with the hard-boiled eggs displayed on the bar for snacking are salted edamame, a perfect bar nibble. |
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It was very relaxing to watch the boats go by with their night lanterns on and on occasion feel the nibble from the fishing rod hoping you would catch the big one. |
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He inched his little body forward slightly and started to nibble. |
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In the afternoons, one can visit local gardens, play croquet, sit amidst the blooming azaleas, nibble on some Devonshire tea, and adamantly wish for a quick death. |
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Grey-skinned office refugees fill Edmonton's Churchill Square, the bright midday sun forcing them to squint as they nibble on their pallid tuna sandwiches. |
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Sticking with edibles, food manufacturers may be worth a nibble too. |
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This is a place to giggle quietly, nibble daintily and sip tea. |
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While I was in the lake, little fishes would nibble softly on my toes, beside me slid a beautiful California king snake and a bird swooped down to his prey. |
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You can sample wine, nibble on meze and hobnob with friendly locals. |
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Will he nibble around the edges, or will he actually take on the oil companies? |
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You'd not go there for posh nosh but if all you're after is a reasonable cup of coffee and an honest-to-goodness everyday nibble then it does very nicely. |
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You have to rely on senses and a vague idea about what a fish eating a worm feels like through the line, and what it looks like as the nibble bends the tip of your rod. |
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Now, if you have that diversified, broad portfolio, only after that do you start to nibble at individual stocks and try to play these opportunities that we see in the market. |
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You can sit with the fishermen at the bar, or nibble on good bread and fresh pats of unsalted butter while you peruse the menu and affordable wine list. |
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She was giggling, occasionally giving him a kiss, a lick, a nibble. |
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A mile off the Ft. Lauderdale coast, mom and daughter dropped their baited lines, hoping for a nibble from grouper or triggerfish to take home for dinner. |
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I discovered this when she was about 16 months old, after letting her have a nibble from the corner of a premium plus cracker with peanut butter on it. |
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Would he be able to nibble on foie gras, slurp fettuccine Alfredo, and sample chocolate mousse without putting on weight again? |
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I wouldn't mind if they had a little nibble now and then, but no, they've got to have the whole thing. 2 pumpkin plants, 3 lettuce seedlings and damage to my marrow plant. |
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In this tiny, narrow gorge, under the cool shade of the palms, a fountain of hot spring water feeds a warm, thigh-deep pool, where inch-long fish nibble my feet. |
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It means drawing a baited line through the water and waiting for a nibble. |
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A nibble here, a little slice there, it was all gone in about a minute. |
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Yet the night-prowling wolf spider Camptocosa parallela readily eats hornworms that nibble plants lacking nicotine. |
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I once worked with a couple whose profile had not gotten a nibble from even one of some 50 birth mothers. |
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William is expected to be nibble on the Titi bird, the fatty chicks of the storm-petrel, raw seaweed, kina sea eggs and fiery pepper leaves. |
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And wild lilac invites mockingbirds, thrashers, bushtits, and finches to nibble on its berries and to seek shelter among its leaves. |
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A cow would find no joy in scampering up craggy hills to nibble nothing more than an agarita bush. |
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The nibble marks of the stone adze were still visible, though crusted over with scale lichens in most places. |
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Please, cat owners, be aware that the tinniest nibble of a leaf or a speck of lily pollen on their fur, which they then will lick and ingest, can cause their death. |
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Oh you haven't lived till you've had a nibble on a fur burger! |
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A plodge or dip in a pool full of the strangely glowing broth from Nippon would certainly beat the recent fad of having those daft fish nibble at your tootsies. |
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Britain's first well-known chain restaurant was the Lyons Corner House, where middleclass housewives could nibble a rock cake and fantasise about Trevor Howard. |
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He would still go down for his daily dog paddle in the faculty swimming pool, and would still nibble the raisins he likes to keep in his briefcase. |
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So kids just a word of warning if you're thinking of trick or treating round Danny Mylo's house think again, unless you fancy a bag of red lentils or passata to nibble on. |
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We have a pie supper once a week but I'll nibble a few more at weekends. |
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