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is and damn
I was the first to get my squad on the ball, and anybody thinkin it was easy is pretty damn dumb.
I'm sending you a couple of customers -- yeah -- just get them out of my hair and keep them out -- I don't give a damn what you tell them -- only don't believe a word they say -- they're out to make trouble for me and it is up to you to stop them -- I don't care how -- and one more thing -- Cate's Cafe closed at eleven like always last night and Rose and Clarence Corsi left for Quebec yesterday -- some shrine or other -- I think it was called Saint Simon's -- yeah, yesterday.
It is not having his baby nestled warm and fat against your breast and it is not having somebody that really gives a damn whether some tramp cracks your skull.
You feel where he is and what he sees, and at night you feel when he is asleep or with the other woman, the one that never could love him the way you do, the one who got him because she didn't particularly give a damn whether she got him or didn't.
Van Driessen is fired from his job in the " School Test " episode by Principal McVicker, who blamed him for Beavis and Butt-Head being " so damn stupid.
Technology critic Gary W. Tooze wrote that " The colorization is damn impressive ", but noticed the print used was not as sharp as other releases of the film.
In the often-quoted words of Thomas Starr King, pastor of the San Francisco Unitarian Church at the beginning of the Civil War: " The Universalists believe that God is too good to damn them, and the Unitarians believe they are too good to be damned!
While he believes that there will be no more evil in the hereafter, it is arguable that this does not preclude a belief that God might justly damn sinners for eternity.
A damn Yankee is someone from the North who comes to the South and stays there.
However, he also stated that performance was more important than race or religious affiliation: " I don't give a damn who the man is.
Newsweek magazine's David Ansen, summarizing the theatrical release, wrote, " The payoff to The Abyss is pretty damn silly — a portentous deus ex machina that leaves too many questions unanswered and evokes too many other films.
" Dean continues and states that Howard Hunt is blackmailing the White House, demanding money immediately, and President Nixon replies that the blackmail money should be paid: "… just looking at the immediate problem, don't you have to have – handle Hunt's financial situation damn soon?
Also, in Argentina and Spain, the variety C. chacoense is commonly known as " putaparió ", a slang expression equivalent to " damn it ", probably due to its extra-hot flavour.
He appears at the end of the race, ready to offer Garraty the Prize, but is mostly unrecognizable to Garraty, who initially mistakes him for a " damn fool " who should not commit a capital crime by driving on the road.
One often-cited tale is that of Fernand Lachance, from Warwick, Quebec, which claims that poutine was invented there in 1957 ; Lachance is said to have exclaimed ça va faire une maudite poutine (" it will make a damn mess "), hence the name.
It damn well ' urts !” Lawrence: “ Certainly it hurts .” Potter: “ Well what's the trick then ?” Lawrence: “ The trick, William Potter, is not minding that it hurts .”
Donald Martino, the 1974 winner, said, " If you write music long enough, sooner or later, someone is going to take pity on you and give you the damn thing.
The proof of the pudding is he didn't give a damn about those poor horses or show any respect to Mr. Scott.
After the Senate rejected one of his wealth redistribution bills, Long told them, " mob is coming to hang the other ninety-five of you damn scoundrels and I'm undecided whether to stick here with you or go out and lead them.
The routine is changed to " Who's on crack, Say What's on smack, and I Don't Know freebases ", with Thurgood ending the routine with an irate " Shut up, you damn stupid crackhead!

is and hard
It is Eromonga -- look hard, you can see with your naked eye the wooden scaffolding on the cliff ''.
It is hard to see how the situation could be otherwise.
he knows that the land is hard and pitiless.
Understanding, as he did, the difficulty of the art of poetry, and believing that the `` only technical criticism worth having in poetry is that of poets '', he felt obliged to insist upon his duty to be hard to please when it came to the review of a book of verse.
The Chicago contingent of modern critics follow Aristotle so far in this direction that it is hard to see how they can compare one poem with another for the purpose of evaluation.
It is hard not to lay most of the blame for their failures on the pope.
It is hard for me to know how I feel about Lauro Di Bosis.
He's hitting the ball hard, in the batting cage, and his whole attitude is improved over this time last year.
When we become firm enough to stand for those ideals which we know to be right, when we become hard enough to refuse to aid nations which do not permit self-determination, when we become strong enough to resist any more drifts towards socialism in our own Nation, when we recognize that our enemy is Communism not war, and when we realize that concessions to Communists do not insure peace or freedom, then, and only then will we no longer be `` soft ''.
The weekly loss is partly counterbalanced by 500 arrivals each week from West Germany, but the hard truth, says Crossman, is that `` The closing off of East Berlin without interference from the West and with the use only of East German, as distinct from Russian, troops was a major Communist victory, which dealt West Berlin a deadly, possibly a fatal, blow.
Berlin's resilience is amazing, but if it has to hire its labor in the West the struggle will be hard indeed ''.
It is, I insist, hard to define the Rayburn contribution to our political civilization because it is so massive and so widespread and so complicated, and because it goes so deep.
It is a flavor that might take a little getting used to -- not because it is unpleasant, but because the flavor is hard to define in the light of our experience with other fruits.
Aeschbacher's work is very much akin to Schnabel's, but the sound on his Decca disc is dated, and you will have a hard time locating a copy of it.
This design is hard to beat for timber hunting or for packing in a saddle scabbard.
Paperweight may be personalized on back while clay is leather hard.
Although there is no question but that the process of washing fabrics involves a number of phenomena which are related together in an extremely complicated way and that these phenomena and their interrelations are not well understood at the present, this section attempts to present briefly an up-to-date picture of the physical chemistry of washing either fabrics or hard surfaces.
It is hard to understand how he concluded that most snakes do not grow appreciably after attaining maturity ; ;
Particularly hard for the therapist to grasp are those instances in which the patient is manifesting an introject traceable to something in the therapist, some aspect of the therapist of which the latter is himself only poorly aware, and the recognition of which, as a part of himself, he finds distinctly unwelcome.

is and concentrate
Even so astute a commentator as Harold Clurman of The Nation has said that `` Waiting For Godot '' is `` the concentrate of the contemporary European mood of despair ''.
In this article we will concentrate on the advances in the application of electronics in bio-medical research laboratories because this is where tomorrow's commonplace equipment originates.
that is to say, to concentrate on a particular crop or activity in a particular area at a strategic time, rather than any broadside engagement with management throughout an area or the State.
For example, if two characters are wrestling the relevant attribute is Strength ; a character could reveal a weapon, changing it to Warfare ; they could try to overcome the other character's mind using a power, changing it to Psyche ; or they could concentrate their strength on defense, changing it to Endurance.
A burning glass or burning lens is a large convex lens that can concentrate the sun's rays onto a small area, heating up the area and thus resulting in ignition of the exposed surface.
The Viking lenses effectively concentrate sunlight enough to ignite fires ; however it is not known whether they were used for this purpose.
Eisbock is a traditional specialty beer of the Kulmbach district of Germany that is made by partially freezing a doppelbock and removing the water ice to concentrate the flavour and alcohol content, which ranges from 9 % to 13 % by volume.
To some scholars, such as Donald McCaffrey, this is an indication that Chaplin never completely understood film as a medium, but Gerald Mast has argued that by deliberately adopting this approach, Chaplin made " all consciousness of the cinematic medium disappear so completely that we concentrate solely on the photographic subject rather than the process ".
Once a patient is stable and no longer in immediate danger, the medical staff may concentrate on maintaining the health of patient ’ s physical state.
The Prophet Mohammed told them that, despite this being good, it is also a blessing to raise a family, to remain moderate and not to concentrate too much on one aspect as not only can this be unhealthy for an individual as well as upon society, it may also take one away from God.
The company produces concentrate, which is then sold to licensed Coca-Cola bottlers throughout the world.
Cranberry wine is made in some of the cranberry-growing regions of the United States and Canada from either whole cranberries, cranberry juice or cranberry juice concentrate.
Some patients report fatigue or non-specific neurocognitive problems, such as an inability to concentrate ; this is sometimes called post-chemotherapy cognitive impairment, referred to as " chemo brain " by patients ' groups.
In 1772, Antoine Lavoisier used a lens to concentrate the rays of the sun on a diamond in an atmosphere of oxygen, and showed that the only product of the combustion was carbon dioxide, proving that diamond is composed of carbon.
If this goal is met by a DBMS, then the designers and builders of the specific database can concentrate on the application's aspects, and not deal with building and maintaining the underlying DBMS.
*** Solar thermal energy ( the sun as the heat source ): solar parabolic troughs and solar power towers concentrate sunlight to heat a heat transfer fluid, which is then used to produce steam.
Most known exoplanets orbit stars roughly similar to the Sun, that is, main-sequence stars of spectral categories F, G, or K. One reason is that planet search programs have tended to concentrate on such stars.
The aim is not only to make the code more readable, but also to allow programmers to concentrate on the important aspects of a program without getting bogged down in implementation details.
The purpose of this is to allow the user to concentrate on manipulation of the instrument, whilst retaining auditory feedback on the radiation rate.
One strategy, packing, is to concentrate as many voters of one type into a single electoral district to reduce their influence in other districts.
Otherwise the beer would qualify as a " beer concentrate ," which is illegal under ATF rules governing beer production.

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