Only a man who loved someone beyond their looks could get over this hurdle, and for that, I applaud him. |
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Now I know that there is no way to get over the trauma of my own making but by myself. |
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Unfortunately, Krausz never did get over her disastrous balance beam performance. |
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We scrambled in squadrons of 12 aircraft from Biggin Hill and climbed like crazy to get over the Germans so we could dive on them. |
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I also want to get over to the museum and see about doing some research on him. |
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This act made me cry instantly and I cannot seem to get over the fact that someone would have taken these things. |
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Bear left when the road forks onto Lacey Drive, and then get over on the right. |
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Once you get over the self-conscious notion that this is a pastime for septuagenarians, it turns out to be enjoyable and mildly contentious. |
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Emotions ran high in packed taverns and shebeens with some fans literally drowning their sorrows to get over the disappointment. |
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I can never get over the shock of seeing Jake actually partake in classroom activities. |
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It's very hard to get over your sugar cravings, but that is what people are addicted to. |
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Once you get over the weirdness of the premise, it takes a hard heart to remain unmoved by this simple yet deeply emotional tale. |
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South Africa, if they get over the scars of the recent past and the anguish they seem to carry in their bosom, can be that team. |
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I suppose, that unless it changes, or I can get over that feeling of unrequitedness, of him being unreachable, it won't ever work out. |
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The pair only just survived them, gunning their engines to get over the lip and come flying out the other side. |
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Proven scientific methods of training to get over stage fright and personality development can work wonders in children. |
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Bret thinks that Calgary was the only place where a move like a headlock or an Abdominal Stretch could get over. |
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Cars can get over the ramps fine but ambulances and long vehicles like hearses have trouble with the ramps. |
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They climbed on to a tree stump and squeezed through barbed wire to get over a concrete fence next to their hideout. |
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If audiences can get over a few stylistic tropes that define Indian cinema, then the sky's the limit. |
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She's not going to get over him by locking lips and bumping hips with some pretty little himbo! |
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It took Fats a tune or two to get over his initial discomfort, but soon he was swinging like only Fats Waller could swing. |
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The pilot reported that he used his remaining airspeed to get over a seawall, stalled the airplane, and pancaked onto the runway. |
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It's hard to get over the sheer weight, chunkiness and lack of flexibility of these shoes. |
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There are multiple humps to get over, corners to putt round, small pipes to putt through and an impossible basket to putt into. |
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I must grit my teeth and remind myself that I did need a laptop, and that I did get over a hundred pounds off it. |
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I'm very disappointed in the outcome and, in the cold light of day, it feels even worse, but we have to get over it. |
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It's just a low-level bug that takes two or three days to incubate and two or three days to get over it. |
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You can either help me get over it or you have the option to divorce me, take your pick. |
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This diplomatic argy bargy will blow over once the Indons get over their elections. |
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But if not, at least get over there, check out the competition, and link someone, okay? |
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Noah's eyes were slightly jealous, but he was so complaisant that I figured he'd get over it in a day. |
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It took me years to get over the first burglary, and now my home and privacy have been invaded again. |
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Trying very hard to get over this fluey whatever-it-is before I have to leave for Sundance. |
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He wasn't sure if she'd forgive him for his angry words very quickly, but she'd get over it and this would help. |
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I began fumbling for words to say in response, still struggling to get over the fact that Tristan was, indeed, a Gypsy. |
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Our early attempts of making films could not get over the Dad and Dave outlook which gave so fake an impression of our country folk. |
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He has already managed to get over his initial preconceptions of the country, which were based on a lack of knowledge. |
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Once you get over that price tag, this is an automobile designed very much with the requirements of its owner in mind. |
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I suppose I'll just have to get over myself and stop dwelling on what I can't change and change what I can. |
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You need to get over yourself, and stop acting like the world needs to be perfect. |
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I wish he would get over himself and stop torturing everyone with his presence. |
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Then I thought, oh get over yourself, if you don't want to watch it just don't watch it. |
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It's not as though we're dating or in love or anything like that, Dude, so get over yourself. |
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We just have to put it down to experience, get over it and get the necessary points required. |
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He took to the rinks again in 2001 to help him get over the death of his wife and to aid his recovery from a heart attack. |
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I know from personal experience that you never ever really get over this awful loss in your family. |
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It's horrible to have to get over a loss like the one you've experienced, but people do it all the time. |
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People get over all sorts of disabilities and recover from all sorts of things. |
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He wants to play more to help him get over the most painful loss that he had experienced. |
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Countries that experience this level of violence usually take decades to get over it. |
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It is time to get over our memories about the brief ignominious period and look forward to a much more glorious future. |
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While others might get over with dancing and theatrics, with Houston, it all comes back to her mesmerizing, God-given golden pipes. |
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I was told to get over to the National Archives, and pick up these papers which were being declassified, which were there for my edification. |
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If black enfranchisement meant the dilution of Caucasian suffrage, whites just had to get over it. |
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Now, so it is in the interest, the enlightened self-interest of the developed world to help the developing world to get over their problem. |
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It takes a little time to get over the wackadoo premise and for the show to really warm up. |
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Some people get over their acrophobia by going skydiving or bungee jumping. |
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Cancelled race meetings are one thing and racegoers will get over their disappointment very quickly when the action resumes. |
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Most cookbooks get over this difficult stage by saying mix thoroughly and knead well. |
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The view of my trunk blocked the view of the RV for the moment, but I knew it would ram into my car again if I didn't get over. |
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It will take a long time for them to get over this defeat and analyse where it all went wrong. |
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Stuck in Fryburg, California, a white-bread suburb of San Diego, Vinnie tries to get over on and is protected by Agent Barney Coopersmith. |
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Liberals also need to get over their allergy to the cleanest form of energy, nuclear power. |
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It's an ambitious feat, but he's hoping it will help him get over his recent divorce. |
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She has rendered the novel in the simple present to get over the problem of switching tenses which sounds alright in Tamil but clumsy in English. |
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If we could only get over the 'yuck factor,' a bug sector may be a welcome addition to the roster of Canadian agricultural products. |
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My mom tells me that an angel is always watching over me and helping me to get over the bar. |
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One minute I feel we can get over this but the next I'm angry with him and feel I could never trust him again. |
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And thirdly, despite having always been resolutely opposed to sexism, lookism and shapeism I couldn't get over how ugly the crowd was. |
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I wonder if I'll ever get over this sense of astonishment that hits me every now and then. |
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We get very high tides and very low tides every month and the seasons here never get over ninety degrees. |
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How I envy your ability to get over things and move on. I should be so lucky. |
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They are perhaps the best tag team in the world and would get over with any wrestling fan. |
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Even so, guests can only get over to it when the local mailboat runs from Stonington. |
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Saw Bryan and Jacque there having quite a couple of shooters, hope it helps him get over his head injury, or should we call it a babalaas. |
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If you are thinking of joining the brain drain and hopping the ditch, then these changes will directly influence the wages and conditions you get over there. |
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The navigation will be a key element, as it will be necessary to find the the best passes to get over some difficult ergs, through breathtaking landscapes. |
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It's time for me to cheer up, and get over myself, isn't it? |
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Now if these aforementioned groups could only get over their either naive or implied anti-intellectualism, I'd be more willing to place my emancipatory wager on them! |
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That means sometimes playing a more lofted club, to get over a ridge, or on double-breakers, flying the ball far enough to eliminate the first break. |
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Why don't you just get over yourself and explain what is going on. |
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We cannot get over how lovely it is but the one thing we miss about home is the people of the Lancaster area not to mention unsmoked bacon, stuffing and gravy granules. |
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It doesn't seem that people are particularly unsocial now that they've got cell phones, they just have this cell phone addiction that they have to get over first. |
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There are some sensible ways to get over a miserable, runny, achy-breaky, head-full-of-gunge, coughy, sneezy, won't-go-away cold, and I do not recommend this as one of them. |
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Biology, it seems, is why boys will be boys, and why women would do well to get over it and stop demanding that they learn to talk about their inner landscapes. |
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I keep nagging him to get over it and get on with posting but to no avail. |
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You live in Canada, it snows here in the winter, get over it. |
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If we all kick in a few bucks we can help them get over the hump. |
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The instructors taught me how to pick locks, hot-wire cars and get over barbed wire fences. |
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I barely get over one season of schmaltz, before I'm faced with another. |
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The messages the party must get over are, it turns out, about wooing key groups of voters, particularly women, on bread-and-butter issues such as pensions and tax. |
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No, I take my oath that the thing that gravelled him most, to start with, was not this, but the price he had fetched! He couldn't seem to get over that seven dollars. |
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He then walked towards the pool and jumped in to get over the cold faster, he was a little bit worried his navy blue shorts would come off so he tightened the drawstring. |
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I couldn't get over the stunning encrustation of the Munchen by soft corals at this depth, suggesting that the tide runs fast and hard over the wreck. |
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People were starting to get over the fact that I was an eight-foot tall merkin and I think, more than anything else, I have drugs to thank for that. |
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That means the husband probably croaked, and she still can't get over it. |
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It didn't take her long to get over her broken engagement with Malcom. |
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Every kid is a picky eater, but if you work around that and go out of your way to always cook for them the things they like, they'll never get over it. |
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He has already helped us to fall in love, improve our lives by reading Proust, console ourselves with philosophy and get over our mixed feelings about going on holiday. |
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Objections causes bitterness between clubs which takes years to get over. |
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Quite frankly, I think your SIL should grow up and get over herself. |
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Everyone seemed to have a good time, even Fiona, who was apparently trying to get over having the mopes whenever she was not the direct focus of Albert's attention. |
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You're gonna get over this stupid fear of cats if it kills me! |
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Anyone within hailing distance of a currach should get over there. |
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The second half has not been so good as I had a bad car crash and my car was a write-off, which meant I couldn't get over to the gym for about three weeks. |
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He is unable to get over his ex-wife as he meets other women, and we are supposed to feel sorry for neill. |
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We must get over this dovish thing, this lily-livered and feline urge to withdraw from battle. |
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Once you get over the first initial shock, it proved easy to use, though there was noticeable understeer if you enter the corner carrying too much speed. |
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I can't even bring myself to wear earrings because I can't get over the feeling that putting holes in yourself to hang decorations off is undesirably primitive. |
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I always like to get over the horribles first, so that the good things of life may leave the last impression. |
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Jeebus, get over it. It wasn't as if I called you the wrong name while we were having sex. |
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Brayder introduced them to one or two of the men, hastily and in rather an undervoice, as a thing to get over. |
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It seems that people across the world still can't get over the final performance of the Eurovision Grand Final runaway winner Conchita Wurst. |
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New research makes it possible to get over jet lag and shift work by taking pills. |
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There's been research done that says it can take up to 18 months to get over an osteitis pubis problem. |
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It is a hard thing to get over, as this season sees the start of the inaugural 1st Division Twenty-Twenty league. |
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But I could never get over the fact he looked that smart but spoke gorblimey Cockney with an accent you could cut with a knife. |
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For this reason, some singles and even albums get over certified by hundreds of thousands of units. |
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Brand managed to get over 35 record companies in the UK interested in signing the Stereophonics. |
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This sport possibly evolved from the shepherd's need to occasionally get over an open area in the hills as they were tending their sheep. |
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The German 4th Army succeeded in capturing bridgeheads over the Somme river, but the Germans struggled to get over the Aisne. |
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That is the danger that always menaces people when they get over into their Promised Land. |
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There, they meet a distraught Winky, who is struggling to get over the loss of her sacking. |
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And trust me, it may take decades, but this woman will get over you eventually, and even go on to live a semiproductive life. |
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Here I was all alone, no one to help me get over my mom's and sister's death, just me myself and I. It was as if I died and all I could see was black. |
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I'll never get over the liverish mud bursting into my mouth. |
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He also thinks that I can just get over my asymmetriphobia too so maybe it's just my resentment of him about it that makes me question his judgment on other things. |
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The raw recruits helped one another get over the first few days. |
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In our lectures we need to get over the importance of online safety. |
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It is long past the time for the new bigots of political correctness to get over their condescending sanctimony and to enter into the real world of brotherhood and fellowship. |
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