Forr the next few days there was some intensive egg-eating to work through the googie surfeit. |
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At 67 minutes, It may seem a little long, but there's such a surfeit of grooviness you can forgive the odd indulgence. |
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In vv 24 and 26a Paul asserts a surfeit of desire and passion by the people he is denouncing, which he characterizes as impurity and dishonor. |
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Like a champagne socialist he wallows in this surfeit of e-government assistance and yet demands that we reply by post, why? |
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A surfeit of boldfaced names, from world leaders to media personalities, lend the book a sensational thrill. |
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The underdetermination of theory by data allows for a surfeit of plausible comparisons and interpretations. |
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Compulsory, unaffordable insurance and a surfeit of red tape would encourage providers to move to more profitable alternatives. |
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The problem is, the surfeit of data sits in silos, available only to one particular agency. |
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Despite pre-tournament warnings the game cannot seem to rid itself of diving and there was a surfeit of the antic throughout the competition. |
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It's high tide, so the sea in its surfeit doesn't pound itself against the shore but sends its waves softly like gulls gliding. |
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The food grows so well here that Robyn has plans to turn the surfeit into jams and pickles to sell from the Cascina. |
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Indeed, the experience of all this confection, a surfeit of assorted fruit flavors and candy colors, is mouthwatering in an almost Pavlovian way. |
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As someone with a surfeit of embarrassing '80s hairstyle photo evidence I am all in favour of today's youth facing similar consequences. |
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That's no mean boast, since there's a surfeit of super-featherweight talent around. |
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Wenger may prefer Alexis Sánchez, or to see Welbeck as just another in his surfeit of utility forwards. |
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There is a self-forgetful surfeit of pleasures, more than the eye and mind can readily handle. |
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Given a surfeit of green PR bunkum, it is not easy to know whether they mean what they say. |
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David Hare, the great dramatic navigator of our life, times and moral debasement, has been lamenting the surfeit of bodies in television drama. |
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Oxford: what a surfeit of good will in its honey-gold stone and nut-brown glasses. |
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Sporting bodies who entangle their national teams in a surfeit of red tape tend to receive little sympathy. |
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His surfeit of knowledge, though, means that his trains of thought travel by such circuitous routes that the actual message is lost. |
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In mid-December, 80 days after submergence, oxygen levels dramatically increased, resulting in a surfeit of fish and later, arthropods. |
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Commissioner, the Union is often criticised for a surfeit of regulations, but it seems to me that it lacks a particularly important one. |
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The enzymes will be present in the blood as long as there is an infection, even if the infection is not caused by a surfeit of alcohol. |
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The problem lies not so much in a lack of information as in a surfeit of it. |
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The electromagnetic spectrum is not visible to the human eye and yet we inhabit a world that is surfeit with spectrum. |
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There are no wrenching epiphanies, just mild embarrassments and a surfeit of confusion. |
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A surfeit of properties being shunted onto the market by owners keen to cash in and growing concern over the number of Leith harbour developments are being blamed. |
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There is a surfeit of snowy peaks only 950 miles west of the Twin Cities. |
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The United States seemed to be suffering from a surfeit of power, which made it difficult for elites to formulate any coherent principles for its use. |
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As the production gags on a surfeit of imagination, you find yourself filling in an imaginary multiple-choice list, ticking off the useful and crossing out the padding. |
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Of course, Washington's profligate political class eagerly engaged in deficit spending to provide a surfeit of public-sector debt to close this circle. |
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The newly promoted person may also attempt to minimize the status difference through self-deprecation and a surfeit of leniency toward the new supervisees. |
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The notion that Canada possesses a surfeit of territory but skimpy and rather leaden history is occasionally echoed by glib commentators who, like Mackenzie King, understand little about the real scope of history. |
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Is there not a player overlap and surfeit? |
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If Americans need something to fear, it should be that by continuing to inspire this surfeit of heedfulness in generation after generation, America risks heading downhill, and not in the fun way. |
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Army recruitment centres are already struggling with a surfeit of brawn at a time when Israel's fighting machine is becoming increasingly automated, with drones rather than infantrymen to the fore. |
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We live in an age with a surfeit of stimuli and information. |
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Nine Tests provide a surfeit of cricket, and contests between Australia and South Africa are not a great attraction to the British public. |
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An intriguing premise gets bogged down in a surfeit of subplots and back stories in this unwieldy thriller set in Soviet Russia. |
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There is at present a surfeit of cash looking for a home. |
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It is my opinion that this measure is suffering from a surfeit of rules. |
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More broadly, there is a risk that, absent adequate public dialogue and a surfeit of secrecy, the justification for action by governments against terrorism will be undermined or misunderstood. |
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Children need to be shown how to discriminate, how to avoid mental indigestion through a surfeit of any one kind of fare, and how to arrive at their own standards of selection. |
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Ultimately though, a surfeit of creativity is surely preferable to a lack of it, and there's a fair chance you'll still be unearthing Gist Is's many secrets long after the Mercuries have packed up for another year. |
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We must ensure that excessive collaboration and a surfeit of technocratic barriers do not put the projects at risk and do not result, as in France, in the funds being only partially used. |
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One basic means of information was labelling, which must be clear and comprehensive while not providing a surfeit of information, so as to facilitate the free choice of the consumer. |
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I have a feeling that at every summit there is a surfeit of wish lists and a lack of clear commitments and objectives being laid down for implementation. |
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The Web in particular suffers from this surfeit of rectangular shapes. |
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If bliss is quietly overwhelming, the extrovert color play aims for the requisite surfeit of meaning through its allusion to the counting system of Cuisenaire rods. |
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The river has a surfeit of chemicals from farms upstream and probably a shortage of oxygen from lack of natural turbulent flow which can aerate the water. |
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Matter and argument have been supplied abundantly, and even to surfeit. |
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