Michelle Rodriguez sneers the whole way though while sweating buckets of blood and perspiration. |
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While Robert Shaw's Britisher sneers at all things NYC, Matthau's cragged face and forlorn voice implicitly champion NYC values. |
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Despite media sneers at his gushy style of presentation, his warmth and interest in his public is sincere. |
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The sneers and muffled giggles that accompanied his every mispronounced word attested to the fact. |
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With her pointy-witch proboscis, she gurns and sneers at her audience like a ringmaster gripped by mad cow disease. |
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I share the rising public anger at a government that sneers at integrity and trust. |
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Now is a time for cynics to drop their superior sneers, swap their sarcasm for a sleigh and listen to the Santa in their soul. |
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The absence of confident sneers, knowing smirks and sceptical raised eyebrows also makes an enormous difference. |
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I was instantly flanked by two guards with a countenance of half sneers, half smiles on their faces. |
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Most of the time he fell back on cold disdainful looks and mocking sneers, which were working out pretty well. |
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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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Englishmen walked tall through the streets, refusing to be drawn in by the traditional cracks and sneers. |
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Sometimes when we tried to speak Spanish we were met with withering sneers. |
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The historical dramatist had worse to fear than the sneers of the literati. |
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Despite missing her lines on a number of occasions, she made up for it with fantastic sneers and sarcasm. |
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The straggly, scrawny kid who grabs a guitar in hopes of finally getting some kind of attention from the girls other than sneers and spitballs is no more. |
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Neither condescends, still less sneers, at people often stigmatised as poor white trash. |
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He sneers at her approach and waddles forward to block her passage. |
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And, on top of all that, she has had to put up with insults from the President and the sneers of a certain newspaper. |
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As she hurried over the long crossing of Canal street, and threaded her way between the hacks that had already taken their station, she felt the rude eyes, and ruder sneers were upon her. |
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Most said they hated the images, which led to sneers and smutty jokes on buses and in workplaces. |
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But the air was just as thick with the old sneers and jeers. |
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Twelve guards entered the room, scowls and sneers on their faces. |
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Perhaps to spite the moderate Mr Bayrou, Mr Madelin is now touting his own presidential candidacy. But the sneers are a touch facile. |
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The trio has traded in their pedals and sneers for slides and acoustics. |
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An unpleasant feedback loop has developed: between the sneers and the moral panics, gamers have become hyper-sensitive to criticism. |
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And I notice that it's a world without humour, a world that sneers, that mocks the weak and looks up to the rich. |
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Taking the jeers and sneers of every passing son-of-a-gun. |
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Effectively what this means is that Ed Miliband's Labour party sneers at people who work hard, who are patriotic and who love their country, and I think that is absolutely appalling. |
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It's a matforming groundcover that sneers at dry soil and should only reach two to four inches tall. |
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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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A quarrelsome media, sneers and jeers, doubts and suspicions. |
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He sneers alike at those who are anxious to preserve and at those who are eager for reform. |
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But how could she have helped herself? I asked, imagining the sneers and the laughter, the adulation of the toadies, the scepticism of the professional poet. |
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Sneers and bad feelings had grown stronger at Kat's slight improvement in mood. |
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