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Their and replacements
Their replacements, Elijah Pitts and Jim Grabowski, were both injured early in the season, forcing Green Bay coach Vince Lombardi to use veteran reserve running back Donny Anderson and rookie Travis Williams.
Their replacements were electric guitarist Bob Johnson and bass player Rick Kemp, who brought strong rock and blues influences to the sound.
Their replacements were Bobby Jay and Frankie's brother Lewis Lymon, respectively.
Their replacements were Marco Aro and Per Möller Jensen.
Their replacements, planted in a ceremony involving well-known people from television shows such as Blue Peter and including locals Gloria Hunniford and Caron Keating, were vandalised, leaving only one standing.
Their replacements would be chosen by Fletcher from a list provided by Stumbo.
Their quality and the quality of other replacements is disputed.
Their replacements, like Berck, had trouble filling the void.
Their replacements, Émile Mbamba and Lazar Popović, were not of the same calibre, and would be released mid-season.
Their replacements combined with the additions of Tommy McQueen, Gary Strodder, David Kelly, Allen McKnight, Liam Brady, Julian Dicks and the return of McAvennie in March 1989 failed to save West Ham from relegation in May 1989.
Their ranks were to some extent made up with replacements with strong spiritual beliefs but little military experience.
Their replacements did not do as well, and when Watford started the 1987 / 88 season in poor form, the blame was placed squarely on Bassett who was sacked in January 1988 when relegation to the Second Division looked inevitable.
Their replacements, television shows, were false contexts designed to be just compelling enough to keep people watching.

Their and were
Their conversations were, almost invariably, accompanied by the same gestures -- arms and pointed forefingers darting toward each other in arclike semicircular motions.
Their heads were in the air sniffing.
Their writings assume more than dramatic or patriotic interest because of their conviction that the struggle in which they were involved was neither selfish nor parochial but, rather, as Washington in his last wartime circular reminded his fellow countrymen, that `` with our fate will the destiny of unborn millions be involved ''.
Their President, Jefferson Davis, interpreted their Constitution to mean that it `` admits of no coerced association '', but this remained so doubtful that `` there were frequent demands that the right to secede be put into the Constitution ''.
Their books found no less willing readers outside than inside the South, even while memories of the war were still sharp.
Their ham butts, cured in oak-log smoke, were also esteemed when roasted or boiled, and served with this original sauce:
Their two boys were `` well adjusted '' and, like their parents, always did the right thing at the right time and damn the consequences.
Their old errors of judgment were equated, in the curious logic of the time, with present treasonous intent.
Their props were two stepladders, a chair and a palm fan.
Their cars weren't small enough, they didn't have the power, they were old-fashioned.
Their meditations were approaching a violent cusp that would shape Martian art for many millennia.
Their skins were exposed to harmful ultraviolet rays that had previously been absorbed by the water.
Their raids throughout the three parts of Gaul were traumatic: Gregory of Tours ( died ca 594 ) mentions their destructive force at the time of Valerian and Gallienus ( 253 260 ), when the Alemanni assembled under their " king ", whom he calls Chrocus, who " by the advice, it is said, of his wicked mother, and overran the whole of the Gauls, and destroyed from their foundations all the temples which had been built in ancient times.
Their most famous battle against Rome took place in Argentoratum ( Strasbourg ), in 357, where they were defeated by Julian, later Emperor of Rome, and their king Chnodomarius was taken prisoner to Rome.
Their territories were small and mostly strung along the Rhine ( although a few were in the hinterland ).
Their children were born at various places throughout the Roman Empire and Agrippina acquired a well-deserved reputation for successful childbearing.
Their houses, scattered throughout Lombardy and Venetia, were united into a congregation by St Pius V, under the Rule of St Augustine with a mother-house, residence of the prioress general, at Pavia.
Their aunt tried to teach the girls how to run a household, but their minds were more inclined to literature.
Their return was blocked, and they resolved to march on Athens, where the Long Walls were not yet completed, winning a victory at the Battle of Tanagra.
Their answers to the problem were similar, with the United States developing the M56 Scorpion and the Soviet Union developing the ASU-57, both essentially air-droppable light anti-tank guns.
Their turretless construction bears similarity to later tank destroyers and they were used as an anti-tank component of the reconnaissance units.
Their best finish of this period was under the management of Englishman Jesse Carver, when in 1954 55 they finished as runners-up, after Udinese who originally finished second were relegated for corruption.
Their duties at first were simply ministerial.
Their offices were compatible with other offices, i. e. they can hold two benefices or offices at one and the same time, some conferred by the Cardinal Vice-Chancellor, others by the Holy Father.

Their and Anne
Their only daughter was Anne of Cilli.
Their principal argument was that copyright had not been created by the Statute of Anne ; it existed beforehand, in the common law, and was perpetual.
Their surviving children, Margaret and Edward, were cared for by their aunt, Anne Neville, until she died in 1485, when Edward was 10 years old.
Their parents were Pierre Montgolfier ( 1700 1793 ) and his wife, Anne Duret ( 1701 1760 ), who had sixteen children.
Their two older daughters were already married: Henrietta to Godolphin's son Francis in April 1698, and Anne to the hot-headed and intemperate Charles Spencer, Earl of Sunderland in 1700.
Their daughter Anne was born in August 1439 in Northamptonshire.
Their two daughters, Mary II and Queen Anne would each one day reign in their own right.
Their granddaughter and eventual heir, Anne Mortimer, married into the Yorkist branch of the English Royal family.
Their son Sir William Stonor, KB, was married to Anne Neville, daughter of John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu and had two children: John Neville, married to Mary Fortesque, daughter of Sir John Fortesque of Punsburn, Hereford, but died without issue ; and Anne Neville, married to Sir Adrian Fortesque, who distinguished himself at Bosworth Field and at the Battle of the Spurs ; he was beheaded in 1539.
Their children are Kares Anne and Bret Carter, an architect.
Their first child, and the Queen's first great-grandchild, a daughter named Savannah Anne Kathleen, was born on 29 December 2010 at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
Their mother Queen Anne revoked the late king's will to arrange for a power-sharing agreement with Cardinal Mazarin, who had been serving as Louis XIII's chief minister.
Their children included James Craggs the Younger, and Anne Craggs, wife of Robert Nugent, 1st Earl Nugent, Elizabeth wife of Edward Eliot and Margaret wife, firstly of Samuel Trefusis and secondly of Sir John Hinde Cotton.
Their sister Anne Marie has worked extensively in the music industry, managed tours for the brothers ' respective bands, and was credited for " coordination " on Loveless.
Their daughter Sharon Anne Shelby was born a year later on September 27, 1944.
Their daughter Lady Frances Anne Vane-Tempest married Charles William Vane, 3rd Marquess of Londonderry, and was the great-grandmother of Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill.
Their daughter, Anne, married Rev John Tindal and was the mother of Dr Matthew Tindal, the eminent deist and author of Christianity as Old as the Creation.
Their daughter Augusta Sophia Anne Pierrepont married Major-General Lord Charles Wellesley.
Their plans all backfired, and in the season finale, Anne was left broke and homeless.
* Benham, Edith Wallace & Hall, Anne Martin, compiled, Ships of the United States Navy and Their Sponsors, 1797-1913 ( Privately Printed, ___ ), p. 49, 50.
Their names were Anne, Mary ( 1906 1912 ), Ernestine, Martha, Frank Jr., William, Lillian, Frederick, Daniel, John, Robert and Jane.
Their children included William and Philip, who both were Earl of Pembroke after their father, and Lady Anne Herbert who died young.
Their father John is a farmer and mother Anne is a homemaker.

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