Only some conservative Swiss Mennonites and Amish still hold on to the sixteenth-century forms of their creed. |
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Meanwhile, Democrats will be struggling to hold on to their razor-thin majority in the Senate. |
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And with a third of the vote in, Hackett is managing to hold on to a razor thin lead. |
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It is quite likely that you will not be able to reach, so hold on to a belt or towel instead. |
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Discard the myths in which biblical stories are wrapped and hold on to the kerygma to which they point. |
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She tries to hold on to as much genuine stuff as she can while pandering to fancier tastes. |
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These are the memories that we will hold on to when we become advanced in age, if we get there. |
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It is a book to hold on to, for repeated reference to information and inspiration. |
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Japanese leaders were determined to hold on to what they saw as the critical area of the Pacific theatre. |
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The correct strategy would then be to hold on to as much territory as possible for as long as possible. |
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Gilkie found the yoke wildly bucking as he attempted to hold on to the controls. |
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Cosmetic surgery, the last resort of those who cannot hold on to their youth and beauty through diet and exercise, is expanding exponentially. |
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North West Radio are expected to hold on to their licence when the new franchise winners are announced this evening. |
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We thought, if we could get just one wall, it was likely we'd be able to hold on to it. |
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Otherwise they hold on to whatever touches them, and the chain will have enough lube on it to moisten up the cogs where it contacts each one. |
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Every atom of me still wants to hold on to those childish beliefs that sometime in the future it will all be different. |
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So you'd have to hold on to the tap, and drop in the transformer plugged into an extension lead from your hallway. |
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I want a safe and secure corner, an old barrel, some wood to burn in it and a warm pair of hands to hold on to. |
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Because the brain is full of bioelectric surges that your kind can hold on to like Velcro. |
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It was a matter of pride and they fought to the bitter end to hold on to it. |
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He did not seek to rationalise, justify, or otherwise try to hold on to his appointed position of trust. |
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Okay, so I'm going to try to get through the window, and you guys have to hold on to my ankles, and then I'll unbar the door so we can get out. |
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Customers on late flights may want to hold on to their boarding passes and check their accounts frequently to see if the miles post. |
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For ballet dancers, a slick floor can lead to slips and falls or clenched muscles from trying to hold on to the floor. |
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The woman is trying to slip quarters into the machine slot with one hand while struggling to hold on to the feisty girl with her other hand. |
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They will make use of that allegiance and fight viciously to hold on to the power they have so nefariously usurped. |
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Investors already exposed should nevertheless hold on to see what transpires. |
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With verve and vigour, they hold on to their ideal of delivering the message of peace. |
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Like a true Brit, I hold on to summer until the last leaves have fallen off the trees. |
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Party insiders admit the party will struggle to hold on to its heartlands in areas like Birmingham and Tyneside. |
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However, in a mad final scramble, the Vipers were able to hold on to win their fourth straight Stampede Challenge title. |
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Anyone who has a ticket for the show should hold on to their ticket stub and they will gain entry. |
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But unless you're a huge fan of the Wayans and their ability to overact, you should probably hold on to your money. |
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We hold on to beliefs as if they were cherished possessions, like trinkets that have sentimental value but no practical use. |
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The keeper failed to hold on to his drive and Stuart Telfer was on hand to ram home the rebound. |
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The weight of evidence against the Home Secretary now makes it seem unlikely that he can continue to hold on to his Cabinet post. |
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He also used sighing suspensions, and unexpected leaps to hold on to bass pedal notes to create chords. |
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Marshall gives an incandescent performance vocally and dramatically as a woman desperately trying to hold on to her sanity in a world gone mad. |
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I suppose it was instinct really that made me hold on to my bag, stupid really, but I wasn't going to let them have it. |
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Despite the hullabaloo, and the invidious position into which he has allowed himself to be manoeuvred, it looks as if he will hold on to his job. |
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In India, owing to the time lag involved in the recovery, banks tend to hold on to advances considered irrecoverable in their books. |
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Alternatively, investors can hold on to the warrant until the company is floated or sold. |
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I would also hold on to the side of the pool and do flutter kicks, and gradually work up to swimming laps. |
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We couldn't hold on to the ball, and the number of basic errors we made was astonishing. |
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The conventional wisdom is that the church fudges issues such as child abuse in order to hold on to power. |
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My prep work always involves finding current examples to illustrate the points at hand, and give them something to hold on to. |
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If you have a debit card for your flex account, you should still hold on to your receipts. |
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If you use a debit card, hold on to your receipts in case your provider challenges an expense. |
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It gave them something sure to hold on to, to pull them through all the danger and hardship. |
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It is desperately disappointing to win so much primary possession and then not to be able to hold on to it. |
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Soluble fibers dissolve in water to become gummy or viscous, while insoluble fibers hold on to water. |
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By one estimate, medical expenses are the primary cause of financial distress for 40 percent of those struggling to hold on to their homes. |
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At least it exonerated them from their usual role in being unable to hold on to leads. |
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He looked abortively to his right for something to hold on to in order to break his fall. |
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And I think they have enough new products to at least hold on to domestic market share without needing to jack them up any further. |
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At this point, with all the hurt and pain of being jilted and jobbed by the BCS system, that's all the Miami Hurricanes can hold on to. |
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The early goal in that second period helped lift us, gave us something to hold on to, and from then on we played well. |
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I want to hold on to my roots, my origins, my family, my friends. |
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Granuaile sailed the seas of Clew Bay and beyond in the 16th century and was known far and wide for her fearless attempts to hold on to the ancient Gaelic way of life. |
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Now, the key is to hold on to that sentiment and use the popular support as leverage. |
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Not only is it possible, it is absolutely essential that a nation hold on to its culture in a globalized economy. |
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I think I wanted to remind myself and anyone who might be reading this to hold on to what you believe in no matter how loud the other kids are shouting. |
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Plaited terylene line is nice to hold on to, especially when you need to drag yourself back down to the hook to disengage it, or use it for a bit of underwater rock-climbing. |
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Standing in an upright position, hold on to a chair for support, then extend your left leg straight behind you until you feel your buttock tighten. |
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But claims about brant trying to hold on to his money at all costs go back at least two decades. |
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Most importantly, I need to hold on to the belief that God will have the last word, and that word is hope. |
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I look over at the closet and scan the rows of shoes there, the shoes that hurt my feet, pinch my toes, make me wobble and have to hold on to Tony for balance and support. |
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His frustration was compounded in the first set by the fact that he was unable to hold on to an early break of serve which would have quietened the crowd. |
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This was a mistake, the world spun, and I had to hold on to the dresser to stop from falling over, my throat seized up, and brought back those razor blades. eek! |
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An off duty police officer, who was in plain clothes, and arrived on the scene at the same time as him, asked him to hold on to the man while he found out what was going on. |
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Stalking customers after they signal their intentions unambiguously is a wheeze to hold on to someone who has taken a lot of trouble to break free. |
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Iranian unmanned aerial vehicles are helping Bashar Assad hold on to power. |
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The ladder cracked and he was suddenly unsupported in the darkness, scrabbling with both hands to hold on to timbers, losing his grip and dangling from the rope. |
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The ability of one and the same human being to hold on to quite contradictory and even sharply opposed ideas is well known and has had many celebrated illustrations. |
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It doesn't matter how many times we are told to drop everything and be one hundred percent uncontrived and natural, we still hold on to the letting go. |
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Company officials, according to widely reported allegations, forced employees to hold on to their stock as its value plunged in October and November. |
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And the Japanese government wants to hold on to nuclear power because they are interested in producing nuclear bombs. |
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I don't hold on to the anger, if I can just let it dissipate on its own. |
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His decision to hold on to a 1 percent stake in the company, rather than sell his entire 20 percent, is said to be causing coolness between him and O'Brien. |
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He grabbed a pad eye and tried to hold on to protect himself. |
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So no new troops yet requested to be sent to Iraq, but the United States is going to hold on to some of the troops that are there until they get a handle on this situation. |
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The grants may also allow Canada to hold on to the talent grown and developed here, with some of the money going to graduate and post-doctorate research fellows. |
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Powers does not only want to hold on to embodiment and to difference as human features in the posthuman context, but also foregrounds the importance of agency. |
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The struggle to hold on to traditional values in the face of the new South African politics and western materialism forms an important theme in his writings. |
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The grand coalition's programme marks a complete break with the SPD's election campaign, in which the party used left wing language to try to hold on to votes. |
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Yet the very triumph of these principles imparted a rancorous quality to public life, as the wealthy pastoral and professional elite fought to hold on to their advantages. |
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In this early work, moreover, Crawford still relies on traditional phrasing and contrapuntal imitation, so the listener has that rock to hold on to. |
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In other cases, autocrats have been forced to introduce modest political changes but have nonetheless managed to limit their scope and hold on to power. |
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By contrast, his opposite number in the Bedwas side, AdamGreendale, missed two penalties and failed to hold on to a pass in the in-goal area. |
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Having four wives, a gambling habit and a susceptibility to confidence tricksters, he did not hold on to the money he made. |
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Harald would hold on to his new faith, but Haakon continued worshiping the old gods when he got home. |
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Relatively long legs and sharp claws enable them to hold on to rocks in swift water. |
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This exuberance, this freshness and playfulness of mind and mood, the capacity to galumph, are surely things to try to hold on to. |
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The goal in the 88th minute came after Pitmen keeper Stuart Brock had failed to hold on to a cross from the right. |
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Even when endomorphs are slim they still tend to hold on to some body fat and they struggle to have defined muscles. |
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Blair, the man who erects so many smokescreens his name should be spelled Blur, cannot possibly hold on to his job. |
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Irons is impressive as the smuggest of fat cats, while Spacey tries to hold on to his humanity as he sheds tears over the death of his dog. |
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Previously, traditional, monarchic, hereditary and feudal methods were used to hold on to power and authority. |
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It was a shooting contest from the charity stripe from then on, and Sitra managed to do enough to hold on to the tight victory. |
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Let's share sovereignty rather than lose later, or have to spill blood and sustain a garrison to hold on to them and the black gold underneath. |
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During general play, a player with the ball can hold on to it for only three seconds before shooting for a goal or passing to another player. |
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The Isles of Scilly are struggling to hold on to their young people. |
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Instead, the Democrats have focused on the AARP, soccer moms, opinion polls, districts with vulnerable Republicans and whether or not Harry Reid can hold on to the coalition. |
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Though Henman managed to hold on to his next three service games, it wasn't enough to slow Enqvist, who broke again at 5-3 to wrap up the set and match. |
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I thought the SAMJ letters column would be a good forum for drawing the attention of other professionals to the need to hold on to those matric certificates, whatever you do. |
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Some sea slugs hold on to these stolen chloroplasts for months. |
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It's fershur a nuisance. But you better hold on to it, cause if we run into Joe in that cave, we're gonna need all the weapons we can lay our hands on. |
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The world instantly dissolved into a series of technicolored bubbles and, try as she might, Holly couldn't seem to hold on to more than one thought. |
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Their children tried to hold on to the dairies, trying unsuccessfully to stop their decline despite aging ranches, sickening herds, and often unhappy tenants. |
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