We knew the planetary alignment would wreak havoc with our cosmic biorhythms. |
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I think he was embarrassed by being thrown out and sought to wreak revenge. |
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Dozens of miracles and curses will allow you to wreak havoc on your enemies or even raise them from the dead to fight for you. |
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Allowing the tiny twosome to wreak havoc is the Brazilian midfield minder, prone to fisticuffs and protective of the rearguard. |
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According to Mary Bryan, the society's chief executive officer, even seemingly small mistakes can wreak huge amounts of damage. |
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Down I rode from the Black Sea steppe to wreak vengeance on the men of Athens. |
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There is, however, an equally strong risk that these responses may be misused and manipulated towards the perceived need to wreak vengeance. |
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And David O'Brien's father thinks Maria is the ghost of the mythical Dubhana, come back to wreak vengeance on him. |
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If Brown-Lee decides to wreak vengeance on me for sending him nasty looks across the dinner table, I might need your assistance. |
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And so, whatever happens, let's hope we're not going to have an administration that is set up to somehow wreak vengeance on the other side. |
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It would be a sin to wreak vengeance on the innocent, but it would be a temptation very tough to control. |
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I sat in the cafeteria for a little while longer, stewing in my juices and trying to concoct a way to wreak revenge on Robb. |
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They wreak havoc on our nervous systems and, all in all, make for generally unsavoury experiences. |
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Their traditional role in mythology was to wreck the sacred sacrifice, the yagna, and wreak havoc on figures of power and authority. |
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The injury that laid him up for so long, and caused him to wreak revenge was self-inflicted, a result of that desperate lunge. |
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Glaciers can move and calving can occur, causing huge icebergs to break away and wreak havoc. |
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As if the tonal mess weren't enough, the movie is riddled with plot holes that wreak increasing confusion. |
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But when such disputation is telegraphed to a wired world in real time, it can wreak havoc with U.S. diplomacy. |
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They were being manufactured for unlawful ends to wreak violence through terror. |
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Small impactors deliver meteorites, while large ones infrequently wreak global devastation. |
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Now, a year later, a new locust threat is poised to wreak havoc of biblical proportions, but this time, it's headed for Montreal. |
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But a parasitic mite, Varroa destructor, has started to wreak havoc on honeybee colonies. |
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He aims to create a new majority of right-wingers that can wreak tyrannical havoc over the rest of us. |
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Wherever he goes, Han-gi seems to cause pain and wreak havoc, with something of a supernatural tinge to his unreasoning brutality. |
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The official machinery was blatantly misused to wreak vengeance and carry out vendetta. |
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Naturally, the dress was removed in short order and the sprog was let loose to wreak havoc upon the house and garden. |
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I was embarrassed by my callousness in the face of my own ability to wreak minor havoc in the lives of others. |
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An erratically fluctuating power supply can wreak havoc on any system and may cause it to hang or shut down spontaneously. |
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Her family work as daily labourers and a day off can wreak havoc for the family's economy. |
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So with brain power that isn't far behind that of the local chavs they wreak havoc in the village street and it's the chavs that get the blame. |
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But Chaudhuri insisted that neither his views, nor any one else's, would have caused Nehru to wreak a petty act of revenge. |
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Kaka continues to wreak havoc in the Celtic defence with his inch-perfect passes. |
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A war might pass without a pitched battle or siege, but never without an attempt to wreak destruction in enemy countryside. |
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To understand the damage humanity can wreak on irreplaceable flora and fauna, New Zealand is the place to be. |
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It is hopefully apparent what havoc this formulation of foreign policy will wreak. |
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These are two young bucks full of guile and cunning, mobile and versatile in the modern fashion and eager to wreak havoc with Dutch organisation. |
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Touching your face can wreak havoc on your makeup, even if you wear a primer. |
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I tell this story in the context of this month's cover package on psychopathic bosses and the organizational havoc they wreak. |
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Similarly, in a nuclear environment, electromagnetic pulses would wreak havoc on computers and networks that are not hardened. |
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The disruptive behaviour of a small minority of pupils can wreak havoc in the classrooms and corridors. |
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The physical exertions would plague him for days, never mind the damage it would wreak on his mental ability. |
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The Allies supported Burmese guerrillas, who were able to wreak havoc behind Japanese lines. |
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The feeling is that a Grexit won't wreak the same sort of damage on the eurozone as it would have three years ago when European banks and financial markets were weaker. |
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Welding litigation may lack the sexiness of asbestos or tobacco, but the verdicts that he is aiming for could wreak financial havoc on the welding industry. |
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In the back of his mind, he believes he may corner Laeddis and wreak his vengeance on the man who caused the death of the most important person in his life. |
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Before the fight, Ward made it clear this would be his final bout, so he had every motivation to wreak vengeance on Gatti and end his career a winner. |
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A natural urge in newly freed countries is to wreak vengeance on, or at least deny continued privileges to, the oppressors of the previous regime. |
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In mutant form, superbugs can wreak havoc in hospitals and rest homes, infecting open wounds and forcing the closure of wards and operating theatres. |
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This spear, or javelin if it was thrown, was used to keep enemies at bay, and also as a missile weapon to wreak havoc among the ranks of their enemies. |
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They might be home-made, but these boys' toys can wreak dreadful damage. |
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Native Americans had dwelled for 11,000 years along the San Pedro with little impact, yet a mere 20 years was all that was needed for Anglos to wreak major changes. |
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Daniel Gross on how the shutdown could wreak havoc on a key part of the U.S. economy. |
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As the economic meltdown continues to wreak havoc, I can only imagine that there will be more and more stories like mine. |
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It is blatantly unethical to wreak vengeance upon innocent bystanders. |
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Ethanol can wreak havoc on older boats, particularly ones with fiberglass fuel tanks. |
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Leading from the front, he has a cannonball of a shot and can wreak havoc from distance. |
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They eat more than 500 kinds of plants and could wreak havoc if released into the North American environment. |
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Ron Paul punched a show ticket, which will keep his faithful energized enough to wreak havoc indefinitely. |
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Why didn't God empower the israelites to wreak vengeance on their enemies who were evil people? |
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It is 1969, and a cloistered block in west Philadelphia is shaken to its core by long kept secrets, betrayal and lies that wreak terrible damage on two families. |
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Then, by one o'clock, the storm moved off to wreak damage in the north. |
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Today it was the turn of Cathryn Fitzpatrick to wreak havoc with the bat. |
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Welch justifiably observes that this dredging is a massive and expensive undertaking that will perhaps wreak more environmental damage than leaving the river at rest. |
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The local bourse did not open Wednesday for fear that investor panic in the wake of Tuesday's attacks would wreak havoc on the already depressed markets. |
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She can move mountains with her telekinetic powers, create impenetrable force fields and wreak havoc if she loses control. |
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Should snakeheads establish themselves in Maryland, officials feared they could wreak havoc on the local ecosystem. |
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Few foods can wreak havoc on a perfectly good wine like the artichoke. |
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Tenderis opened the door to find no heanlings huddling in hudder-mudder, preparing to wreak havoc with their devilshine. |
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Now was the time to be avenged on his old enemy, to wreak a grudge of seventeen years. |
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And rush upon his foes and take on them his wreak, At push of sword and pike, in fury uncontrolled. |
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Baby Mama delivers an abundance of hearty laughs as Kate and Angie wreak havoc. |
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In the short term, converting the lanes and erecting tollbooths would wreak havoc on traffic. |
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The mother also made a plea to the violent ones who wreak such havoc. |
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Each spring, the western corn rootworm awakens from its winter slumber to wreak havoc on corn crops across the United States. |
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Gluttonous jaunts through foreign lands can wreak havoc on even the lithest figures. |
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This summer's punishing heat wave could wreak havoc on grocery bills. |
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Spartan's sharp-looking sendup is anything but scary in looks, but deep down is a phantom wraith ready to wreak havoc at will. |
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Unchecked, the sludging of America may wreak more havoc on the land than it did in the ocean. |
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Set in Denmark, the play dramatises the revenge Prince Hamlet is called to wreak upon his uncle, Claudius, by the ghost of Hamlet's father, King Hamlet. |
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These sieges often took place in the runaway peasant Cossacks' old towns, leading them to wreak havoc on their old masters and get the revenge for which they were hoping. |
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When a coronal mass ejection nears Earth, it can wreak havoc. |
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These aren't slasher films but rather well-known computer viruses and their ability to wreak havoc on a computer system makes them an MIS director's nightmare. |
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Central heating and chill winter winds can wreak havoc on skin, to say nothing of the effects of burning the candle at both ends during the festivities. |
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The continual capacity of this terrorist outfit to wreak havoc in Nigeria and destabilise it has gone beyond alarming proportions and entered the realm of a quotidian curse. |
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In the genetic universe of Yakub's tricknology, such duping assumes the form of offspring whose ultimate purpose is to wreak havoc on their forebears. |
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Some pickthank contrived to let the little great man know what had taken place, and he, so she informed me, was ungenerous enough to wreak a mean revenge. |
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