Had I known, I would have kicked and screamed and thrown my finest temper tantrum each time I so much as saw a swing-set. |
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As I was bombarded with more questions and exclamations, I could feel myself starting to lose my temper very fast. |
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His temper was obviously getting the best of him, so he muttered a few undistinguishable words and scribbled down something. |
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It is probable that the boldness of her temper impelled her sometimes to speak unwelcome truths to some of the people concerned in her affairs. |
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Ferguson's fiery temper and outspoken nature contrasts with the other's reserved, low-key and media-shy approach. |
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I began to be aware of a change in the temper of my thoughts, a greater boldness, a contempt of danger, a solution of the bonds of obligation. |
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She has her Dad's temper and as her older brother, Mason, will attest, she can be a fireball. |
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He remains cool under pressure, and even his temper outbursts turn out to be mere ploys to gain advantage. |
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That may not be the most compelling reason to stop the war, but it should certainly temper her teary-eyed invocation of soldier mythology. |
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The robber gives predictably blood-curdling answers as his temper flares at the thought. |
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Within days my energy levels pick up, and my tendency to ill temper and irritability fades away. |
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Funds that are not tethered to a specific sector of the market can use that flexibility to temper risk. |
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I have met men who can fix a broken kettle or a toaster without flying into a temper and shouting at the kids. |
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As the others flounced and stamped their way through the jungle, Blackburn's equable temper won through. |
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His temper and recklessness in such key moments contrast vividly with the folksy image he projects on the campaign trail. |
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As she gets into her job in intelligence, she's forgetting herself and her temper is starting to show through. |
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In fact, he became the worst crank and complainer I have ever seen even to the point of letting his temper erupt in public. |
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With a creeper glint in his eyes, Peter eschews any form of anger management in favor of destroying his career in one glorious temper tantrum. |
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But as Christmas approaches and everybody's temper gets frayed, it is the low-level aggression that wears staff down. |
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She also had a temper that could strip paint and curdle milk, but her humour made up for that. |
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She argues that rice husks used to temper clay pottery at Koldihawa and Mahagara sites indicate that a domesticated rice was grown at that time. |
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He had a hot temper and a weekly column in which he could publicly tear to shreds anyone who dared gainsay him or meddle with his works. |
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There were about a hundred souls assembled, and Jeffrey's seasoned eye assayed the political temper of the throng. |
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His edgy temper flared again on April 18, when he lowered the boom on a dry cleaner. |
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Since you temper your gut instincts with pragmatism and cool thought, trusting them is usually a safe bet. |
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That should be perfectly understandable, seeing as that old geezer has an even worse temper than mine, and that's really saying something. |
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Dunst is a believable golden girl whose determination and temper have earned her a feisty reputation. |
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It's only a little mark, but its misuse arouses more bad temper among purists than any other punctuation. |
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This vessel was incompletely oxidized during firing and has large amounts of grog and bone temper in its porous clay body. |
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She became more aggressive, her temper became shorter, but she was still blunt with a few smart-alec remarks here and there. |
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The duo's scat lyrics and drum-n-bass delivery really temper the album, preventing it from becoming too soft at points. |
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The candidate's campaign scheduler says the only time she saw Dean lose his temper was over rock chipping. |
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Charles exploded, losing his temper and nearly shouting at his shocked son. |
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A lifelong friend has never known him to be out of temper or speak ill words of others. |
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Rather than temper their hunting, the kings, princes and sheikhs are seeking to produce their own supply of houbaras. |
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Yet, there are times when I wonder if my love is misplaced, if I should temper my affection. |
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The player with the self-confessed short temper revealed the foul and racist remarks that emanate from the stands are sometimes sickening. |
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Mr Johnson said in his statement that Jones had a short temper and boasted about being in fights and knocking people out. |
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When I was young I had a short temper on and off the pitch, now I'm hopefully more level-headed. |
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Thus supporters of globalization are keen to temper its most unpopular effects by modification of neoliberal policies. |
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A gruff man with a short temper and a big voice, his shortcomings were as obvious as his merits were hidden. |
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We lose our temper and, as soon as we've had a cup of tea and a biscuit, we feel better. |
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She finally lost her temper and turned into this thin old hag wearing a black dress. |
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Popular taste is a good guide to the temper of the times, much more so than highbrow high culture. |
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Now when the ill-humored husband spied Lennie's wide smile, his temper boiled over. |
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Her occasional outbursts of temper and impetuosity are followed by self-admonishment. |
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He lacks strategy and good judgment, and his quick temper and impetuosity too often get the better of him. |
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He notes the instructions to governors to conciliate and protect the natives, and argues they did their best to temper the hostility of settlers. |
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Scientific temper is his watchword, education his mission, communal concord his theme and tolerance his telling weapon. |
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I recall a US State Department manager who finally realized he had to control his temper tantrum throwing inner child. |
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Got back on Sunday evening and chucked a full on 5 year old temper tantrum at having to be back in this noisy, filth ridden corrupt town! |
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Meade was not a brilliant general, and his filthy temper made him a difficult man to serve. |
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Like most members of the Plantagenet royal house, the Duke had a tightly-reined temper that flew off the handle from time to time. |
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It's easy to interpret his angelic temper and indifference to human intrusion as friendliness. |
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All who cherish disunion sentiments are now being educated to the exact temper of doing this. |
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This man noted in his diary that he did not usually lose his temper with servants. |
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It leads to insanity and death, and soon brings about marked changes in the temper and in the health of the etheromaniac. |
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She's completely opposite to me, tall, honey brown hair, fiery temper when provoked, bluey gray eyes, freckles. |
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His temper in the office could be fiery, and he might seem a bit hot and bothered, but deep down, he was a softy. |
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He was a man of violent temper and sarcastic tongue, a strict disciplinarian, and ruthless in his exactions. |
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His true marvel has been to maintain an equable temper in conditions which really ought to have quadrupled his 15-a-day smoking habit. |
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Her mood swings had become erratic, her power uncontrollable and her temper volatile. |
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He never has shown up on the police blotter, nor did he throw temper tantrums during his year in limbo. |
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He had a brain in him the size of a bloated brontosaurus, but unfortunately he had a temper to match. |
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But she was going to have to keep her temper in check if she was going to make the best of this situation. |
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His explosive temper not only caused an opposing player's arm to be broken, it sullied the reputation of one of his players. |
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Not that her failure to do so in any way excuses what sounds like a doozy of a temper tantrum on her part. |
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It's better to temper the praise, be firm, but not overly emotional and explicative in delivery. |
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As it turned out before bedtime I played witness to one of Mia's explosive temper tantrums. |
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Oftentimes, irritability and temper outbursts diminish when a mood disorder is treated. |
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He was known for his temper tantrums, raging over such things as inauthentic headdresses for a film's extras. |
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Dolly took full advantage of the outrageous disruption to vent her bad temper and to express her extreme displeasure in all directions. |
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Clearly, Marlowe had a temper to match his scholarly and artistic accomplishments. |
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Verbena quelled him in mid-grumble with a patient, long-suffering gaze, like a mother enduring a weary child's temper tantrum. |
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Troy Stevenson, a murderer, was formerly a big man in the drug business with a quick temper and a bigger attitude. |
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I have a quick temper which can flare up and be over in seconds, which makes me rueful, but at least provides bystanders with entertainment. |
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Normally, he was quite calm and quiet, but he had a quick temper that subsided as easily as it came. |
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Denise has little concept of humility, and allows her quick temper to interfere with her common sense. |
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You can be rather selfish, though, and a partner needs to be able to deal with your quick temper and impulsive tantrums. |
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To her finer qualities must be added a quick temper and considerable hauteur, more readily apparent to the Chinese than to most foreigners. |
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In this novel, Beverly Lamark is a successful mystery writer with a quick temper and acerbic wit. |
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Age and size are a bad mix, and Brown has a quick temper and slow feet to boot. |
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The quickness of his temper was counteracted by the generosity and benevolence of his heart. |
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I am still burning with anger and rage and all that temper stuff of emotions! |
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My temper has been short to the point of exploding, I have raged at the smallest thing. |
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I lost my temper and ranted and raged for 10 minutes, then jammed the phone down, and felt very, very bad. |
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And the rapprochement between China and South Korea has helped temper Cold War tensions in Northeast Asia. |
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Radical organizations leverage the militant tone and temper set by the delegates to propagate their malevolent agitprop. |
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They'll temper that with the suggestion that the mother put words into the boy 's mouth to come up with this story. |
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It is precisely to temper the passions of the people that we resort to representative rather than direct democracy. |
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The fact that McCain had been portrayed by a home state newspaper as a vindictive philanderer with a volcanic temper only adds zest. |
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He admits that his coping skills and personal resources were stretched beyond their limits and he lashed out in a temper outburst. |
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He would grow increasingly frustrated and lose his temper because he could not use his right arm properly or hold a pen. |
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But lilting Irish brogues and ebullient ribaldry are not enough to temper O'Casey's disgusted misanthropy. |
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Anyone who disagrees with this assertion should of course be ready for my temper tantrum. |
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This ludicrously overrated copycat director gives a nonperformance to temper the ardor of his most slavish fans. |
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And, on the odd occasion, she did get a glimpse of a violent temper lurking beneath the calm surface of his apparent good nature. |
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With that terrible temper she owns, I can safely pronounce that I would not be astounded if she possessed other unmannered habits. |
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I used to be big on temper tantrums as a child, and some skills are forever. |
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When my son was younger and had a temper tantrum, I found the simplest methods were best. |
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They have more temper tantrums and mood swings and refuse any kind of authority! |
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In fact, they describe him as an extremely driven character prone to mood swings and temper tantrums as much as euphoria. |
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When he was young she used to point to the TV where McEnroe was making an exhibition of himself, throwing temper tantrums at Wimbledon. |
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I would say we have a happy marriage except for the fact that he occasionally loses his temper and shouts at me. |
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He only loses his temper in the dressing room when our performances are letting him, and ourselves, down. |
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Before his hot temper could boil out wrongfully, Ryuko turned his back on the guardian and walked wordlessly off. |
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All were in bad temper and soaking wet, eyes burning and sore from the oceans' salt as they sat along the disheveled bank. |
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As I said he was in a bad temper most of the time, frustrated to the point of tears by his incapacity. |
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Gabe stalked over to the weapons rack and pulled down two wooden staves, in a bad temper because his preferred sword hadn't been chosen. |
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Don't be put off by the first track where someone in a bad temper attacks a keyboard for a minute and a half. |
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His temper had not calmed from his earlier encounter with the Johnson twins. |
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That would certainly put it in a bad temper and might explain why it was always so scary. |
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Her temper was sweet and calm, much like a sheep's, until she had a blade in her hand, and then she was as quick and merciless as a she-wolf. |
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The bad temper of earlier was gone and his eyes were shining with anticipation. |
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The only problem was, unlike my mother, my father had a temper he could lose easily. |
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Emerald was a cunning, quick, but brutal girl with a temper as bad as tempers come. |
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His temper was sparked easily, but he also had patience and civility like none other. |
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Your temper is as bad as mine. You've shed blood enough in your time, and need not rail at me. |
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I have a flaming temper and have a tendency to rebound people's accusations back on them, especially if I'm not feeling good. |
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Classmates said that he had a terrible temper that easily flared, and that he clung to people far too easily and became jealous and angry. |
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He had to overcome a violent temper and a tendency to excessive self-criticism. |
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But don't get the wrong idea, he doesn't have a bad temper with Sherry or his kids. |
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Despite his mean temper and violent tendencies, she did not draw back from him, and Heathcliff found this delicious. |
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I watched her as she walked away from me, obviously in a temper from that confrontation a few minutes ago. |
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In this connection it is well known that molybdenum additions to Ni-Cr steels can eliminate temper embrittlement. |
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The resistance to atmospheric corrosion is improved and copper steels can be temper hardened. |
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One book might teach you how to temper steel, another how to cut a thread, a third how to weld. |
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Alloying elements may have different effects on steel after tempering at the steel proneness to temper embrittlement. |
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But let's temper expectancy with caution, knowing that a team is only as good, or indeed as bad, as its last outing. |
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Always remember, however, that sea breezes will temper the heat and might cool things considerably. |
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The meantone temperer is used to temper the connected musical instrument to any desired meantone-tempered scale, which is selected by the user. |
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It was hot still, perhaps even hotter, and some daft woman crashed into my bad leg with her trolley, so my even temper was becoming strained. |
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This event marked a major change in the temper of the civil rights movement. |
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Even as one thing after another goes wrong, he's still a lovable goof who loses his temper but never lets it get the best of him. |
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Hearing the temper tantrum she was throwing roused him enough to stand up and turn around to face her. |
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I wanted to let my blood boil and my temper flare, to lash out without thinking of the consequences. |
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Now on medication which keeps his infamous temper in check, Souness says he has matured, if not actually mellowed. |
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The survey also revealed that one in six parents of babies or toddlers lose their temper with their child every other day. |
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The wind's temper gradually drifted away until there was nothing left but a soft breeze. |
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Roofs covered in greenery reduce stormwater runoff, minimize heat gain, temper the microclimate, and improve the view. |
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This was taken almost universally to be evidence of her temper and instability, and therefore, somehow, her husband's unsuitableness for office. |
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How about they introduce a bigoted, racist old muppet, with bad hair and a temper problem? |
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Gregory snarled, but gradually, his temper faded away, and the rage he felt became like steam, and drifted up into the cloudy sky. |
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To get chocolate to be that perfect hard, snappable feel that is loved across the world we need to temper it. |
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Allan Compton, mitigating, said Carter did not intend using the knife but lost his temper and snapped under provocation. |
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One woman with fiery red hair and seemingly a temper to match seemed unimpressed with Sparrow's act. |
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He was always in a sort of bad temper about not being able to get jobs he thought he was equipped for. |
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A screenshot from Reddit shows a bunch of presumably grown men and women throwing epic temper tantrums. |
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The choleric Latin temper of that era and Shakespeare's 16th Century Italian world are seemingly similar with blood feuds, tight pants and hot blood galore! |
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Also, the imposing grandeur of classical architecture, especially buildings based on prototypes from imperial Rome, suited the nationalist temper of the times. |
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When tantrums do occur, it's important for a parent to remain calm and not lose his or her own temper as a result. |
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The high prevalence of bad temper makes for unenjoyable reading. |
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However, advocates who think in terms of economics should temper their enthusiasm and recall some basic theory. |
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In these circumstances, perhaps Capriati could be excused for growing rattled and her temper exploded at 15-30 in the second game of the second set. |
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When Andrew entered my room, I could feel my temper rising quickly. |
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Most emerging markets have hiked interest rates or the reserve requirement to temper credit growth. |
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Careful judicial oversight also acts to temper any potential for over-reaching, and helps to reinforce responsible police practices. |
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Mrs Wood, a graphic designer currently working as a cleaner, said some people automatically associated red hair with a bad temper and fiery nature. |
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This government investment in sport accords with the temper of the times. |
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At the same time, his bad temper and lustfulness make him a mirror of his master, and this makes the mistaken identities of Act Two all the more realistic. |
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Generally, they can be counted upon to demonstrate a fair and unprejudiced judgement that attempts to temper personal bias through recognition of wider social implications. |
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Although he is in a bad mood, he can also moderate his temper and then you can communicate with each other. |
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The men lose their temper and start grappling while the crowd boos. |
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Antony, with his dirty blonde hair, green eyes and his fiery temper could have had any girl he wanted, but he had eyes for only one, his on-off girlfriend Daisy. |
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What we did have was a fund of stories of catastrophes and narrow squeaks that encouraged us to temper our hopes for our day out with a great deal of caution. |
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His odd appearance and manner attracted the attention of local children, who would continually taunt him, provoking him to lose his temper and damage property. |
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While I'm pleased about that, I now realise that it was wrong to lure them here under false pretences by losing my temper and shouting the odds all over the place. |
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Losing her temper and cool with the various journalists tasked to interview her seemed only to increase the public's antipathy towards her as a mother. |
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What took place was a momentary loss of temper and he struck out in anger. |
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If it's bad, you don't want your temper to flare and have it trigger off the rest of the team. |
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I lose sleep, I have a bad temper and I am tearful, tired and upset. |
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Don't sulk and get in a filthily bad temper unless you've got an audience to notice this change in mood, and at least one person who will bravely ask you what's wrong. |
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In spite of serious differences, nations should approach their problems with the basic temper of peace and not in a threatening and hectoring mood. |
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General Powell lost his temper and fired the gun into the air. |
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My Latin temper snaps, and I'm censured by a security guard. |
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They had a temper tantrum and we called them on it, so they ran out of this place. |
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She was instructed to stop doing that, because he might think this attention was a reward for having a temper tantrum. |
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Your baby may become irritable to the point of having a temper tantrum in which she holds her breath until she turns blue. |
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I always got angry easily and would lose my temper like that. |
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Jennifer was getting angry at him, but she kept her temper in check. |
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He would lose his temper in a flash and couldn't hold down a job. |
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What's more, Hydro-Québec's grid is made up of very long transmission lines, making it even more vulnerable to the Sun's temper tantrums. |
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He was in a foul temper and this was not making matters any better. |
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Already kept waiting for more then two hours, his temper was fraying. |
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He did have a bad temper sometimes, but it usually wasn't a problem. |
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She saw herself as the custodian of the government's covenant, direction, tempo and temper – its quality controller, as well as leader. |
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He is said to have received a warning from the overall al Qaeda organization to temper his videos. |
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By his tone of voice, there was no question he lost his temper while doing a live broadcast. |
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It is then subjected to light cold rolling in a temper mill to give it springiness without affecting gauge, temper or surface hardness. |
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They're known for having a nasty temper and a love of drinking. |
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Lolle was a freewheeler, without a family to temper her freedom. |
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Who knows what I might do tomorrow in a fit of temper or in a fit of rage. |
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It has also been shown that the development of temper embrittlement is directly linked with the rise of impurity concentration near the prior austenite boundaries. |
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My father was a full-blooded Highlander, with the temper to prove it. |
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Alloys in the T4 temper are susceptible to room-temperature aging. |
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When cutting end gets cold, it is cleaned with the stone and the heat from the shank of the tool is allowed to temper the cutting edge to the correct colour. |
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He now has a very short fuse so far as temper tantrums are concerned. |
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We need to temper the Promethean impulse referenced in Shelley's subtitle. |
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Under what conditions does populism temper the potential ethnicity to provoke disintegrative social conflict, and instead promote pluralist democracy? |
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Even though I have a very quick temper, I did not lose my temper towards this person. |
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I realize that if I didn't change, my quick temper would drive away my family and friends. |
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The struggle against austere conditions appeared only to temper her character by giving it force and resoluteness. |
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Literature, perhaps more than anything else, exercises a leavening influence on the temper of a person's moral life. |
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Uncovering the source of a testy temper is a great place to start when focusing on behaviour change. |
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That way they can make allowance for your short temper and sharp tongue. |
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No wonder Drake had such a short temper when it came to Alan. |
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He was an enfant terrible of culinary art, impossibly difficult to work for, fastidious about his creations and possessing a volcanic temper and savage tongue. |
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For a start, he's got a real temper on him, which some are marking out as a good attitude, but for a first proper Wimbledon appearance he seemed a mite melodramatic to me. |
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Even his jokes had a habit of sounding like pomposity or bad temper to those who did not know him. |
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I can't concentrate on my work or stop eating cheeseburgers or contain my temper in peak moments of stress. |
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But his truculent behaviour and volatile temper is outraging purists. |
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An 8-year-old girl in Missouri was held in a police car for two hours after throwing a temper tantrum in March. |
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Her Irish temper was rising, and Logan was glad he hadn't lost the touch. |
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He could be very funny, harshly cruel, and would use his sharp wit and temper to scare the living daylights out of paranoid politicians who had him followed in the night. |
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If he can temper those tendencies, the debate could propel him to the first tier of the race. |
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Introspection is majorly in order, as you address certain excesses and make strides to temper them. |
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Evidence at the hearing indicated that he lost his temper quickly and was difficult to work with. |
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What kind of judge does it take to temper the media circus that is the Casey Anthony trial? |
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While these encouraging signs are welcome, we again must temper our remarks by noting the underlying reality that the recovery is fragile. |
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Losing your temper could trigger a heart attack or stroke, according to research in this month's European Heart Journal. |
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It's not about suddenly losing your temper and lashing out, but we treat it as though it is. |
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He faced the situation with placid courage, and unsoured he kept to the end of his long life the playful humour and kindly temper which made him loved alike by old and young. |
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This guy's nasty, explosive temper outweighs his good points by far! |
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Actually, losing your temper is the most counterproductive thing you can do as a parent. |
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He was solidly built with short black hair and curiously red eyes, his physical strength was apparent, as was his short temper when he snapped at his brother. |
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But given his even temper and reputation, managing in Japan is a natural choice. |
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He accepted the question with an even temper and expounded on the answer, using it to put forth a more forgiving view of his players in general. |
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Stamina, precision, clarity, courage, patience, and an even temper are necessary, though calculated impatience or anger may be used as a tactic. |
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At a time when the two enemies viewed each other as inhuman, her insights helped inform — maybe even temper — the occupation of Japan. |
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But for whatever reason, he snapped and lost his temper that night. |
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For once, it was I who had to temper Paul's somewhat transgressive creative mind! |
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My father was untroubled, my mother happy to see time pass without anything upsetting the even temper of domestic life. |
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Abstaining from alcohol or tobacco did little to soothe hunger pangs and gave rise to occasional bouts of short temper even among the more devout. |
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Any argument I try to hold comes tumbling out in the form of a whiny temper tantrum. |
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While reporters can be insistent, and sometime even rude, never lose your temper or be rude in return. |
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Its light, humorous, unmoralizing attitude could not entirely temper the vicious tone of the man it portrayed. |
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The third gave an account of losing her temper in traffic, after being cut up by another driver, then bursting into tears. |
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For in him the dandiacal temper had been absolute hitherto, quite untainted and unruffled. |
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Since Sam was known as a man with a hot temper and the sand to back it up, the bad-hat decided he'd pick on Roy. |
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Your childish temper tantrums are not going to change my decision on this matter. |
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You don't want to get on that guy's bad side. He loses his temper very quickly and easily. |
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They are also prone to headaches and, particularly in the case of Opal Koboi, violent mood swings and temper tantrums. |
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Driscoll lost his temper with Welsh, became verbally abusive and stormed out of the meeting. |
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Use a closed fist or assume the Dracula sneeze pose to temper germ transmission. |
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For his fifth episode, Mr Bender likens the progressive social reforms of the 1890s onwards to changes Europeans also made to temper the free market. The breadth of view is exhilarating, and the reading daunting in scope. |
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Your disapproval of the sponsoring group would temper the passion you could bring to the task, and a lukewarm letter of reference is no reference at all. |
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You start losing your temper with friends, with students, with colleagues. |
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Making threats or losing your temper will not work in the long run. |
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Not losing your temper creates a good atmosphere. |
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In all honesty, losing your temper is easy. |
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Brian's good nature and even temper are a godsend. |
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Vizslas are lively, friendly, of even temper and easy to train. |
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Strive to use listening skills, a willingness to compromise and an even temper to navigate around conflicts that will only serve to worsen relationships and build barriers to teamwork. |
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Will he face without either loss of temper or self-denigration the scorn, criticism, envy and jealousy of public, colleagues, not to mention inner voices? |
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He said we must be ambitious but temper our ambition with reality. |
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They asked me to readoff a result or temper a calamity like I was involvedin the unfolding reaction with everythingelse, they wanted me to reside at 478 Pavilion Avenueand the story would resolve itself munificently. |
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Harding's ill temper was largely down to his discomfort with television. |
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These low rates will be favourable for consumer spending, but the high level of household debt and the gradual rise in debt service costs will temper future spending growth. |
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Her temper was part of my growing up, like Pennsylvania mugginess and the hot spells that could kill old people in their stifling row houses and expand the steel tracks on the street enough to derail trolley cars. |
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I then lose my temper and threaten to returning to Lhassa but nevertheless I lost face because, I am only able to take pictures using the telephoto lens. |
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Children who were having a temper tantrum were spanked right away. |
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Nowadays Argentines themselves drink beer and less, but finer, wine. Yet a glance across the Andes, whose towering, snowcapped peaks form the dramatic backdrop to Mendoza's festivities, ought to temper the euphoria. |
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I'll say again that we have to temper our optimism with careful attention. |
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Much has been written on the influence of mental misery, sudden reverses of fortunes, and habitual gloominess of temper on the disposition of carcinomatous matter. |
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Anquetil was considered to be cold and calculating, though in the peloton he was as admired for his courteousness and sense of fair play as Poulidor was disliked for his bad temper and selfish tactics. |
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They wait out temper tantrums with unflinching patience and counter fits of rage with the effective therapeutic use of humane interaction and positive relationship. |
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Next, a vivid mint and pea velouté containing a deliquescent droplet of pea pod jelly, with a grissini of cardamom-flavoured yoghurt to temper the sweetness. |
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What temper at the prospect did not wake To happiness unthought of? |
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Here's a visual: Child throws a temper tantrum. |
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Did the temper tantrum do any good, Beard was asked. |
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That caused Karimov to have a temper tantrum. |
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Anyway, that's my temper tantrum for today. |
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Example: The toddler has a temper tantrum in a public place. |
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But this is no ordinary two-year-old's temper tantrum. |
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Immersed in new surroundings where other children in the ward could not speak her language, she often illustrated her frustration by throwing temper tantrums. |
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There are destructive behaviour, temper tantrums, and hyperactivity. |
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Whether it's time for college or the fact that your five-year-old throws temper tantrums, it's wise and fair to consult the other parent on major issues. |
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Black ripstop shorts and traditional pink tights temper the brightness of her leo and legwarmers. |
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Lincoln did not know or care very much about appearances and proprieties, but his new wife did, and she had difficulty controlling her volatile temper when they disagreed. |
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His abrasive and apparently autocratic leadership style sparked a campaign of whispers describing foul temper tantrums, incivility to staff and intemperate demands. |
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In adolescence, this national love affair with Italy conflicted rather eccentrically with a secret aspiration to temper and anglicise my innately Latin character. |
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Veterans temper the romanticized view of soldiering and warfare and add a level of complexity and humanity that official histories seldom touch upon. |
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McCain's famously quick temper is often discussed as a liability. |
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Once again, her quick temper got the best of her. |
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Nabila was impetuous, with a quick temper and a strong sense of self. |
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He is tough, with a quick temper that brooks no foolishness. |
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Losing my temper with Alastair Campbell in the aftermath of the 2010 election: he argued it was not in the national interest for Gordon Brown to resign immediately. |
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We would all like to see certain outcomes from elections because of our own political beliefs, but some of us have to temper our language and our thoughts because of the positions we hold. |
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I am going to suggest to you that we always have to temper our enthusiasm with caution and a judicious skepticism, which seems to be almost completely absent in today's commentary. |
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And while rising international demand for feed barley does bode well for prices in the long term, ample domestic feed supplies would likely temper nearby cash bids. |
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It can also temper other mental disturbances in older adults. |
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The presence of donor organisations or development partners can temper political discussions within the membership or with central government politicians. |
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We can agree with him that it is dangerous and we must, however, temper this view with the fact that it is also dangerous to drive a car or ride in a car or walk across busy intersections at a time when the hazards appear. |
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She suggests that the use of the word 'paddy' to describe a temper tantrum is offensive to Irishmen and women. |
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Tomonori reacts exactly like a 15-year-old would, and after he finishes his temper tantrum Rizel explodes. |
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She would cry down the phone and tell me that her husband lost his temper over the slightest thing. |
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There was nothing of disorganization, nothing of procrastination, nothing evincive of a temper to embarrass or obstruct the public business. |
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He was also infamous for his piercing stare, bullying, bursts of temper and, on occasion, his sullen refusal to speak at all. |
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In the heat of the afternoon, while Roger Clemens threw a temper tantrum and the Boston Red Sox became unraveled, Dave Stewart kept his cool. |
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In theory, high unemployment should temper inflation, as consumers pull the reins in on spending and prices come down. |
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