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Page "Front 242" ¶ 21
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They and have
They would have to go west through the narrow river valley that separated Leyte from Samar and hope that it didn't close in before they returned.
They were married over the week-end, though he was easily sixty and she could not have been even thirty.
`` They wouldn't have sold me in the first place if there'd been food enough to go around ''.
They have pulled out all my teeth and now she will carve out my tongue with her hacksaw!!
They couldn't have much dough, but then none of the freight-bums Feathertop rolled had much.
They have also led the nation in the direction of a welfare state.
They believe that if the South had been let alone it would have produced a civilization superior to that of modern America.
They, too, have fragments of the go code with them.
As Wisman put it, `` They have separate pieces of the pie, and we have the whole pie.
They are huge areas which have been swept by winds for so many centuries that there is no soil left, but only deep bare ridges fifty or sixty yards apart with ravines between them thirty or forty feet deep and the only thing that moves is a scuttling layer of sand.
They are in general those fears that once seemed to have been amenable to prayer or ritual.
They are presumed to have plunged to a common grave in this fatal embrace.
They have indicated the direction but they have not been explicit enough, I believe, in pointing out Faulkner's independence, his questioning if not indeed challenging the Southern tradition.
They have an ancestry extending back, however, at least to 1728, when William Byrd described the Lubberlanders he encountered in the back country of Virginia and North Carolina.
They tell us, sir, that we are free, because we have in one hand a ballot, and in the other a stock certificate.
They all have this in common: the earth is situated near the center of the deferent.
They were in fact quietly laughing at him, for their King wished to have nothing to do with the Western world.
On December 21, the day that the Irish House of Commons petitioned for removal of Sir Constantine Phipps, their Tory Lord Chancellor, Molesworth reportedly made this remark on the defense of Phipps by Convocation: `` They that have turned the world upside down, are come hither also ''.
They have remained on the opened page of my mind in all the years which since have passed.
They, in effect, have compromised the opposing positions of the nineteenth century.
They, too, have links with the city's ills.
They opposed the Forand bill, which would have placed the major burden of financial support upon the individual himself through compulsory payroll deduction ; ;

They and made
They made Jess double over.
They differed in the balance they believed essential to the sovereignty of the citizen -- but the supreme sacrifice each made served to maintain a still more fundamental truth: That individual life, liberty and happiness depend on a right balance between the two -- and on the limitation of sovereignty, in all its aspects, which this involves.
But I suspect that the old Roman was referring to change made under military occupation -- the sort of change which Tacitus was talking about when he said, `` They make a desert, and call it peace '' ( `` Solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant ''.
They made the tests and came to Fred ; ;
They made it, killed every last one of the Krauts, took the village on schedule.
They were carpeted, but made for pumps and congress gaiters, not the great clodhoppers he wore.
They made the world seem friendly somehow, though he knew it was not.
They are made of gold and covered with emeralds, pearls and other jewels.
They both tried to keep smiling and winking for a long time, but it made their lips and eyelids tremble.
When someone says, for example, `` They took x-rays to see that there was nothing wrong with me '', it pays to consider how this statement would normally be made.
They had ruined the radar warning system with their window, they had made themselves invisible above their flares.
They dug up a speech he had made two years earlier as a Congressman, decrying the more than two hundred statues, monuments, and memorials which `` dot the Washington landscape as patriotic societies and zealous friends are constantly hatching new plans ''.
They attended school and selected courses primarily on the basis of decisions others made ; ;
They made sense and yet they didn't.
They can hardly restrain themselves from raising the question of whether Republicans, if they had been in power, would have made `` amateurish and monumental blunders '' in Cuba.
They also will visit properties on which appeals have been made.
They indicated that no new errors were being made and that all old errors would be corrected `` within 60 days ''.
They decided that they thought Rembrandt's self-portrait made him look `` sad '' ; ;
They have not done so for the simple reason that such appeals have hardly ever been made.
They fasted or ate very little ; a statue of the god was made out of amaranth ( huautli ) seeds and honey, and at the end of the month, it was cut into small pieces so everybody could eat a little piece of the god.
They withdrew to Mercia, but, in January 878, made a sudden attack on Chippenham, a royal stronghold in which Alfred had been staying over Christmas, " and most of the people they killed, except the King Alfred, and he with a little band made his way by wood and swamp, and after Easter he made a fort at Athelney in the marshes of Somerset, and from that fort kept fighting against the foe ".
They are also thought to have pioneered the modern alto format of viola, in contrast to older tenor violas, but this stating is not correct since Gasparo made violas from altos of 39 to tenors of 44, 7 cm.

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