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said and more
He said no more.
`` We're going to Philadelphia '', Kitty said, pulling her skirt down around her legs all the more.
Once more, in other words, Steele is said to be indebted to Swift for his `` wit '' ; ;
Nogaret is hardly an impartial witness, and even he did not make his charges against Boniface until the latter was dead, but there is some truth in what he said and more in what he did not say.
Then, all but blind, he said there was nothing in Back to Methuselah --, -- `` G.B.S. ought to have known that '', -- and `` I look at my bookshelves despairingly, knowing that I can have nothing more to do with them ''.
Mr. Freeman said that in many of the countries he visited on a recent world trade trip people were more awed by America's capacity to produce food surpluses than by our industrial production -- or even by the Soviet's successes in space.
He said he had No. 2's enough to last two weeks more.
In addition, he said, he has answered more than 400 messages of congratulations which led him to the comment that he himself had decided he wouldn't send another congratulatory message for the rest of his life.
The football opponent on homecoming is, of course, selected with the view that said opponent will have little more chance than did a Christian when thrown to one of the emperor's lions.
Scotty said the same words more loudly.
The Vice President said with a slight bluster, `` There isn't anyone who loves the President more than I do.
`` I'll get more snow '', I said.
Howard, who had been sitting against the wall, said he needed more fresh air, and took the spot on the edge of the porch where Bobby Joe had been sitting.
`` You'll be a darn sight more comfortable there, Howard '', Ernest said, laughing, and they all laughed.
( B ) to finance, for not more than two years beyond the end of said period, such grants, contracts, cooperative agreements, and studies as may theretofore have been undertaken pursuant to this Act ; ;
and ( C ) to finance, for not more than three years beyond the end of said period, such activities as are required to correlate, coordinate, and round out the results of studies and research undertaken pursuant to this Act: Provided, That funds available in any one year for research and development may, subject to the approval of the Secretary of State to assure that such activities are consistent with the foreign policy objectives of the United States, be expended in cooperation with public or private agencies in foreign countries in the development of processes useful to the program in the United States: And provided further, That every such contract or agreement made with any public or private agency in a foreign country shall contain provisions effective to insure that the results or information developed in connection therewith shall be available without cost to the United States for the use of the United States throughout the world and for the use of the general public within the United States.
He would tell the Poles, he said, that they had been `` given a fine place to live in, more than three hundred miles each way ''.
And the same thing, more or less, can be said of the contents of Picasso's first collage.
`` And it's all the more tragic because it's so little deserved '', said Mr. J. J. A. Frans, a Belgian official of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization.
From that point on he said he went to the post office and then walked leisurely to where his niece was staying, more than a mile away.
She named 48 items, and said there were `` many more things which it would take too long to write ''.
The attendant recognized me once more and said, `` What did you do about that office ''??
A man with a sketch pad in hand sat with a large pink woman in a small office at the end of a long, dim corridor and made pencil lines on paper and said, `` Is this more like it, Mrs. MacReady??
that what he had said was no more than one of those things one does say, lightly, meaning nothing.

said and loudly
There is much to be said for such a college -- and Dartmouth men have been accused of saying it too often and too loudly.
Carefully he put down his steak knife and said loudly, `` Mr. Chairman ''!!
In many countries like Singapore where Muslims are not the majority, mosques are prohibited from loudly broadcasting the call to prayer ( adhan ), although it is supposed to be said loudly to the surrounding community.
[...] I began again, but I had not played more than a few measures when Rubinstein said loudly, " Have you begun?
If said loudly, " loud " is autological ; otherwise, it is heterological.
Although head coach George Seifert later said he only pulled Young because he was getting manhandled by the Eagles ' defense, Young had had enough of being scapegoated for 49er shortfalls and loudly ( and visibly ) lambasted Seifert over his decision.
He said, " No pair has been more wrong, more loudly, more often than the two senators from Massachusetts – Ted Kennedy and John Kerry.
Hallelujah ", laughed loudly and then said " Yes.
He was said to turn up unannounced at stores either by helicopter or Bentley to patrol the aisles and shouted loudly if something was not right.
Upon entering the Hall during a tour, conductor Jan Pascal Tortelier is said to have clapped loudly and on hearing the acoustic qualities, immediately requested the venue for a concert.
He raised the issue of democracy and civil liberties in the Communist states, but Assembly responded by loudly applauding a delegate who said that " the so-called dissident issue was not a matter for the international peace movement, but something that had been injected into it artificially by anti-communists.
", another loudly said that was just going to use the bathroom.
" Nightingales were said to sing loudly in the garden, which, together with the fragrance of the roses, " created an atmosphere of beauty and enchantment ".
At the first night of Peter Brook's production of Oedipus during which a giant golden phallus was unveiled onstage, Browne turned to her companion Val Gielgud in the stalls and said loudly: " Well, it's nobody we know, darling.
English Church Grims are said to enjoy loudly ringing the bells.
He illustrated casuistry by citing mostly Jesuitic texts allowing excuses to abstain from fasting ( citing Vincenzo Filliucci's Moralium quaestionum de christianis officiis et casibus conscientiae ... tomus, Lyon, 1622 ; often cited by Escobar ); from giving to the poor ( indirectly citing Gabriel Vasquez from Diana ; for a monk temporarily defrocking himself to go to the brothel ( citing an exact quote of Sanchez from Escobar, who was curving around Pius IV's Contra sollicitantes and Pius V's Contra clericos papal bulls, the latter directed against sodomite clergy )); in the Seventh Letter, propositions allowing homicides ( even to the clergy ) and duels as long as the intention is not directed for revenge ; others permitting corruption of judges as long as it is not intended as corruption ; others allowing usury or Mohatra contracts ; casuistic propositions allowing robbery and stealing from one's master ; others allowing lying through the use of rhetorical " mental reservation " ( restrictio mentalis ; for instance: saying, loudly " I swear that ...", silently " I said that ...", and loudly again the object of the pledge ) and equivocations.
They said, ‘ The Quraish have not yet heard the Qur ’ aan being recited openly and loudly.
" Over the years ," said Ronald Radosh, " the Rosenbergs ' defenders have loudly demanded the release of government documents on the case, only to deny the documents ' significance once they are made public.
Critic Roger Ebert said, on At the Movies, that Pauly Shore was the " cinematic equivalent of long fingernails, drawn very slowly and quite loudly over a gigantic blackboard " and noted that although his co-host, Gene Siskel, extremely disliked Chris Farley, he would " rather attend a dusk-to-dawn Chris Farley film festival than sit through any 5 minutes of Jury Duty.
Williams said in a campaign pamphlet in 1828 that Woods cried " bitterly and loudly "; the Jackson camp claimed he was belligerent and deserved to die.
Fred's character was developed to loudly repeat everything he said, similar to the way Looney Tunes character Foghorn Leghorn speaks.

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