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How To Use Hurling In A Sentence

  • The most storied place to find Gaucho boots is Casa Fagliano, a hole-in-the-wall bootmaker in Hurlingham, which is a British suburb of Buenos Aires. 20 Odd Questions: Stephanie Phair
  • To swell into the hammer-swinging hardhat who loomed in the parlor sipping vodka and orange juice, hurling brickbat words and scraps of heart shrapnel at my mother, sister and me. 1997: What I Wanted
  • Hurling supporters in neighbouring parishes are scouring local GAA officials in the hope of getting a ticket to the September 12 Final.
  • Some fans continued throwing, hurling their souvenirs, drink cups, beer bottles, batteries, portable radios and cell phones onto the field.
  • He did throw a strop, hurling his mallet and helmet to the ground in fury. The Sun
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  • We simply cannot recommend it highly enough - not just for hurling aficionados but for sports fans everywhere.
  • I was sitting quietly reading when all of a sudden a stone came hurling through the window.
  • The strong wind was hurling bits of wood aboutas though they were toys.
  • I spent the entire night before my Communion in the bathroom hurling up my unworthiness.
  • He shouted something about the Disk Jockey being a "bunkie" (whatever that was) and made a disparaging remark about the Disk Jockey's costume (like he was in a position to criticize), before hurling a punch that had a lot in common with some express trains. The Sinister Six Combo
  • A huge enemy shell burst a few yards to the right front of the amtrack, hurling seawater skyward, as Sledge clung to the rail. Brotherhood of Heroes
  • Grace ought to be ashamed of herself , hurling herself at that boy so openly.
  • The best songs combine the two, either recklessly hurling them together or seamlessly combining them. Times, Sunday Times
  • We declared war after becoming sick of snarling stars hurling abuse at refs. The Sun
  • A win or a draw in that match will ensure Division 2 hurling next season and copper-fasten the progress of this hardworking, progressive side.
  • What will be going on behind the sideline masks they will wear for most of the time tomorrow when the whistle shrills the start of the Allianz Hurling League final?
  • Impossibly beautiful girls are parading down the Promenade des Anglais, hurling bright sprays of Mimosa to a boisterous crowd.
  • The French referee awarded a total of 34 penalties in a game which saw the lead change eight times, several sin binnings, a sending-off and a player hurling his gumshield at the referee in disgust.
  • Both above and below, the enemy seemed to have sat down to wait, not even hurling the occasional arrow or slingstone at a venture into the rocks where Conan's band lay hidden. Conan and The Mists of Door
  • He did throw a strop, hurling his mallet and helmet to the ground in fury. The Sun
  • Jack Lynch, who knew a thing or two about hurling, once said it was the greatest field game in the world.
  • Though coming from a football heartland, he had an even bigger interest and love for hurling.
  • Hurling buzzwords is also geek meeting ritual, used to establish one’s position and rank. Stonetable.org » TMA: Too Many Acronyms
  • It was a most enjoyable afternoon of hurling, camogie and football.
  • Some of the hurling areas in Offaly are on mountainy lands or on the Shannon, which is hardly good land.
  • In winter hurricane winds, loose snow loops sidewise in a grinding haze and the whole sky rolls like the ocean, hurling birds like rocks. Bird Cloud
  • ‘I'm not signing this, it's preposterous, he's an adult,’ my husband says, hurling the papers sulkily across the room.
  • It points, like an arrow, to the one word that stops her from hurling a torrent of abuse at him.
  • The school's indoor hurling and camogie teams competed very well in Abbeyfeale.
  • The pitch is in pristine condition and it was a thrill for both teams to be able to play good hurling on such a good surface.
  • He was also a robust, competitive and skillful GAA player in both hurling and football.
  • She is interested in most sports, especially hurling and soccer and she has won several trophies for darts.
  • It was not merely the earthquake at Chiloe, the Galapagos hummingbirds, it was five years hurling over the side of the ship and groaning ‘oh God!’ with no result. Science
  • Boats work too, of course, but for many fishermennothing will do but a waist-high immersion in seething foam while hurling plugsor bait into combers kicked up by an autumn nor'easter. How to Catch Fall Stripers: It's Not Easy, but It's Worth It
  • A second call pealed forth, and the towropes were cast off, oars splashed into the water, and, with a wild exulting yell from their occupants, the boats dashed for the shore, the men in them hurling themselves into the shallow water as the keels ground into the beach. A Chinese Command A Story of Adventure in Eastern Seas
  • The title of the game would suggest that Gaelic Games: Hurling may soon follow but we may be a while waiting for ladies football, camogie, handball or rounders.
  • A dozen Tylenol PM, enough to knock her out and send her to the ER, administer ipecac and the Olympic sport of hurling. The Woman Down the Hall
  • By the time Sproule completed his hat-trick the home supporters not streaming from the exits were hurling abuse in the direction of their team.
  • I watched as the militias picked out their victims, swearing at them, insulting their mothers and hurling sectarian insults. Times, Sunday Times
  • Occasionally the hurling bodies hit the dangling light bulb - which could easily break, exposing a wire and electrocuting the crowd.
  • Before thy eyes there would have been hurling of ribs and hoofs this way and that; and strips of flesh, all blood-bedabbled, dripped as they hung from the pine-branches. The Bacchantes
  • He jumped, hurling his adrenalised body left onto the pavement.
  • Confluentia," whose threads of liquidity are eruditely, yet romantically, intertangled to represent the confluence of the Rhine and the Moselle; and "The Headless Horseman," a masterpiece of burlesque weirdness, representing the wild pursuit of Ichabod Crane and the final hurling of the awful head, -- a pumpkin, some say. Contemporary American Composers Being a Study of the Music of This Country, Its Present Conditions and Its Future, with Critical Estimates and Biographies of the Principal Living Composers; and an Abundance of Portraits, Fac-simile Musical Autographs, and
  • Her burning throat was raw from hurling Christmas carols out against the keening wind in an effort to tempt passersby to purchase the rolls of music clutched in her chilblained fingers. A GIFT OF LOVE
  • Hurling the kickball into the pricker bushes instead of sacking up and playing the game. Bob Cesca: Killing the False Equivalency "Both Sides" Meme
  • Now there was a pair – the first a diplomat sharing American good will overseas by hurling in the lap of the Japanese premier, the second destroying our image, incapable of speaking in extended sentences – he of the smirky grin, and lying to chase oil in the Middle East and to restore his Daddy's besmirked reputation. GOP senator warns of 'minor revolution' over health care
  • It was a pity that so few attended for the first part of the treble header as both teams served up a thriller laced with the finest of hurling skills and players with real potential for the future.
  • Grace ought to be ashamed of herself , hurling herself at that boy so openly.
  • I have spoken personally on the deterioration in the standard of the senior hurling competition and no one wishes improvement in that area more than I.
  • When he refuses, a row ensues, during which the pair are heard hurling vile abuse. The Sun
  • I think the entire hurling world, Tipperary excepted of course, would rejoice in a Waterford win on Sunday.
  • He lunges at the open window, hurling his strawberry milkshake in a cramped overarm throw.
  • The arrests came after the police received reports that a gang of youths were allegedly hurling racist abuse at taxi drivers and damaging vehicles.
  • As with Powell, you can see it in her opinions in the early 1980s: the tentativeness, the discomfort with hurling judicial thunderbolts.
  • The girls arrived into school in a blaze of colour wearing football, hurling, soccer and rugby jerseys and helped to raise a terrific 500.
  • It doesn't make it easier to cut down on my road rage incidents or keep from hurling sporks at self-obsessed co-workers.
  • The only author the two seem to share in common is Oscar Wilde, hurling his various art-for-art's-sake epigrams at each other like barbs.
  • A little further along, at 18m, is a substantial stone statue of a figure frozen in the act of hurling a spear, or more likely a trident.
  • It's interesting to note that with one lone exception, the group hasn't had the expected posse of teenagers hurling abuse at us for bagging out this show.
  • Jimmy again, scampering to the crease, turning sideways and hurling it up into the blockhole. BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
  • He played football and hurling in three different counties.
  • As soon as he won all that money, he started hurling it around and soon there was none left.
  • They ended up on the roof hurling abuse. Blaikie's Guide to Modern Manners
  • It went okay but as soon as I said I had to go he began hurling abuse at me.
  • There he was, just 18 and at the start of a promising career, hurling javelins around as if they were paper aeroplanes and delighting in the accolades and awards bestowed upon him.
  • It was under the pressure of people in the audience hurling drunken comments, taunting him, wanting him to fail, expecting him to fall apart.
  • He had a great fondness for sport and was a strong supporter of the Galway hurling and football teams.
  • The enemy had approached in the predawn to within a few hundred yards, and a big trebuchet was hurling rocks at them.
  • So when he starts to verbally assault Zack, hurling painful epithets at him, one feels disoriented since they seemed to get along in school.
  • I watched as the militias picked out their victims, swearing at them, insulting their mothers and hurling sectarian insults. Times, Sunday Times
  • Under Iran's Islamic law, adultery is still punishable by stoning, which involves the hurling of stones in public at a partially buried convict.
  • Video footage apparently shows him tearing down displays and hurling phones and keyboards around and setting off a fire extinguisher. The Sun
  • In contrast, hurling is a lot like field hockey. It's Europe's oldest field sport and has been around for at least 2,000 years.
  • Gaelic football and hurling have been arousing Irish passions for a long, long time.
  • This young man is an all round sportsman with a bright future ahead in boxing and hurling.
  • SUN Irish Sport Group Open Field demonstrations, information and instruction promoting the Irish sports of camogie, Gaelic football and hurling for anyone interested in joining a men's, women's or youth team, noon-3 p.m. The Seattle Times
  • Arthur grabbed hold of the doorframe, as if in preparation for hurling himself through it. BEHINDLINGS
  • Two weeks ago, we reported how hordes of rowdy teenagers were congregating in the library entrance hall, causing mayhem and hurling abuse at users.
  • It was a most enjoyable afternoon of hurling, camogie and football.
  • The value, I may explain, of the stutter is that it is like hurling the javelin. From the Heart of Things
  • A bigger obstacle to hurling progress is the number of players unwilling to commit to the cause.
  • A week earlier they caused a mild upset defeating Clonad in the league, now in the space of seven days they have claimed the scalp of two long established hurling powers.
  • By January 1885 they have a full set of rules for their, as it were three big games: hurling, Gaelic football and handball.
  • Last week's session ended up in mayhem, with deputies expelled and the rest hurling insults and swearing at each other.
  • He does this by hurling himself to the floor, arms and legs flailing, with only the whites of his eyes showing.
  • When he refuses, a row ensues, during which the pair are heard hurling vile abuse. The Sun
  • Arthur grabbed hold of the doorframe, as if in preparation for hurling himself through it. BEHINDLINGS
  • So I decided that I should plug this gap in my education and rented a few tapes of big matches to try and figure out how hurling works.
  • They ended up on the roof hurling abuse. Blaikie's Guide to Modern Manners
  • One of the film's great treats, superbly photographed, shows the lyrebird in glorious display, hurling importuning calls into the skies -- a huge repertoire of songs, some sounds copied from other birds and others picked up from humans, such as, remarkably enough, camera clicks. Calls of the Wild
  • For more sporting types, courses are available in foundation coaching for hurling, camogie and football.
  • We liked hurling tops and see them spin, jump and hiss.
  • Work on the new hurling pitch is progressing very well with drainage being put in at the moment.
  • They question ancient rituals performed at the site - such us making a wish for prosperity by clamping two padlocks together and hurling them over the cliff - even as they reenact them.
  • For a team that were highly fancied to win, The Harps never seemed to be hurling as fluently as we all know they can and were also hampered by injuries causing a reshuffle in their defence.
  • EDITOR: Perhaps they have just had enough of a peculiar and frankly rather worrying, ranting, raving, Nokia throwing, printer hurling, crabbit eejit? Archive 2009-06-01
  • Fitzgerald is one of hurling's most likeable characters and the book is an entertaining read.
  • The title sees players roaming through an undersea landscape, hurling eggs into egg-capture points. *Shacknews* Games
  • Ollie Walsh was so brave and athletic and was quite the greatest hurling goalkeeper I saw.
  • A crowd numbering in the thousands later marched on the nearest US base, hurling rocks and chanting anti-American slogans.
  • Relatives of Peter Williams began shouting and hurling abuse after magistrates refused to grant bail.
  • His natural gift for writing led him to enjoy hurling savage personal abuse at his Tory opponents, but he was not pleased when his attacks were returned with interest.
  • Their fellow Muscovites taunted them on the sidewalks and on the streetcars, loudly criticizing their appearance, hurling insults at them, sometimes attacking them.
  • The prosecution said the teenager was seen carrying objects around and hurling stones during the disturbances.
  • While others believe the solution lies in sartorial blackness and breaking glass: one small group clad head-to toe in black that was seen hurling street cobbles and smashing shop windows. If you are going to Copenhagen, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair « Anglican Samizdat
  • French and Irish yawns are very similar, the only difference being, that whereas the Frenchman finishes the yawn resignedly, and springs to his legs, the Irishman finishes it with an energetic gasp, as if he were hurling it remonstratively into the face of Fate, turns round again and shuts his eyes doggedly -- a piece of bravado which he _knows_ is useless and of very short duration. The Young Fur Traders
  • Eddie, who graced many hurling fields with his consummate skills in the 1960s and 70s, is truly one of the hurling ‘greats’ and a fine gentleman too.
  • A bunch of moss-munching brontosauruses standing together looking up in the sky, as a giant, earth-shattering meteor comes hurling down from the heavens.
  • They used a quad bike and a hurling net to snare the pig who had captured the front page readers for the past three weeks.
  • Instead it is a favorite of morning, a little brown-grey falcon, called the windhover because, hurling itself headlong into the wind, it rides on the crest of that wind.
  • Those yogurt-hurling demonstrators who tossed a local version called skyr were concerned about house repossessions. TIME.com: Top Stories
  • He was accused of hurling abuse at the referee.
  • While there might have been football and hurling there was very little for girls and for young lads who were not into physical sports.
  • A fellow dived on him, grabbing his wrist, the squawking woman was belabouring me with her gamp, Joe was hurling his attacker aside ... but by that time I was going through the dining section like Springheeled Jack, sending a table flying as I plunged through the kitchen door. THE NUMBERS
  • Despite the difficult underfoot conditions, this game produced a good standard of hurling with the intensity of the exchanges providing a high level of entertainment for the big crowd.
  • Egged on by shrill cries of approval from the ladies’ auxiliary, strapping bosthoons executed nimble jigs and reels, sang come-all-ye's, and vied with each other in hurling refuse cans the length of the street.
  • Hurling his arms and legs about wildly,he kept afloat but wasted much effort.
  • Today the pictures on the wall testify to the strength of the hurling legend.
  • I cried, the shock hurling my voice aloud, out of the confessional whisper.
  • Unfortunately in hurling, team officials are burdened with the extra task of finding volunteers as umpires and linesmen for almost all games.
  • The other driver started hurling abuse at me.
  • She lingered, finally, over the _Metacom_, running her easting down far to the southward with square yards under a close-reefed maintop sail, double-reefed foresail and forestaysail, dead before a gale and gigantic long seas hurling the ship on in the bleak watery desolation. Java Head
  • Also, unlike shinty, hurling is a geographically inclusive game.
  • Each took a lead from the behaviour of his peers and soon it became open season for hurling insults at the royals. THE LOST KING OF FRANCE: Revolution, Revenge and the Search for Louis XVII
  • Each took a lead from the behaviour of his peers and soon it became open season for hurling insults at the royals. THE LOST KING OF FRANCE: Revolution, Revenge and the Search for Louis XVII
  • The incident happened at about 2.35 am when a group of drunks began hurling abuse at a handful of firefighters.
  • The force of hurling Szabla threw Juan backward, his shoulders striking the base of the rocky wall. MINUTES TO BURN
  • She has received complaints about louts as young as 12 who have been setting fire to bushes, defecating and urinating on doorsteps, fighting, damaging cars and hurling a tirade of abuse at shoppers.
  • How intolerant not to appreciate being called "victim" and "potato", standard invectives patriotic German Muslims are fond of hurling toward their autochthonal compatriots. The Editrix' Roncesvalles
  • Kenworthy began to speak in quiet contrast to the frenzy they had been hurling at her. THE INNOCENTS AT HOME (A SUPERINTENDENT KENWORTHY NOVEL)
  • While crossing the 1200m Pelion Gap, below Mt Ossa, Tassie's highest mountain, Shaggy's hiking group got hit by a blizzard, hurling down the full box and dice of sleet, hail, snow and rain.
  • Crisp, sharp hurling, was complemented by an unyielding spirit and determination, with the players confidently marshalling their sectors with great gusto.
  • Watch in amazement as the final free is taken in the All Ireland Hurling Final and the final whistle blows immediately afterwards.
  • Well done to the gallant band of Waterford men who gave such a lionhearted display of hurling on Sunday last in Thurles.
  • Drive-by vandals hurling rocks and marbles at glass shopfronts are forcing business owners to fear for their safety and bear the cost of thousands of dollars in repairs.
  • They are as different as rugby union and rugby league, shinty and hurling, Test match and one-day cricket.
  • The shirt includes a colourful motif of our unforgotten friend from the dark side brandishing a hurling stick!
  • Hurling gear consists of a helmet, a wooden stick made of ash called a hurley, and a ball called a sliotar. NPR Topics: News
  • Airmen, needless to say, showed themselves eager, hurling grenades and firing their weapons at targets on the ground from the earliest days of the war.
  • Even now the disappointment prevails, ten days after our exit from the All-Ireland hurling championship at the semi-final stage.
  • One night they were hurling the choicest of abuses on journalists.
  • This marvellous facility is home to soccer, football and hurling clubs and a training ground for local athletes.
  • I recall being locked in the washhouse by a friend of my elder brother, and at another time, hurling a tomahawk at the same boy.
  • Video footage showed local people, some in motorcycle helmets, temporarily driving back riot police by hurling bricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • I watched as the militias picked out their victims, swearing at them, insulting their mothers and hurling sectarian insults. Times, Sunday Times
  • The strong wind was hurling bits of wood aboutas though they were toys.
  • He plays the bodhrán and he is into boxing and hurling.
  • How would he feel if his father had been gassed, shot or hung in Auschwitz or Dachau, instead of his luckier fate, enjoying a good, long life hurling insults at others?
  • In 1992 he was prosecuted by the council in the magistrates court after hurling abuse at a member of the public.
  • Soccer is a winter game, Gaelic football and hurling are summer games.
  • All I could see, from a distance, were numerous hands vigorously hurling stones at the aforementioned obelisk.
  • One long green arm whipped out, yanking the machete from her grasp and hurling it aside.
  • On the yacht, you'll have the true believers in capitalism (in their madras jackets), and on dry land, everyone else - hurling insults at them.
  • The other driver started hurling abuse at me.
  • He is no longer the hirsute bombshell he was in those years, but his love for the jersey, his influence on Limerick hurling, is as strong as ever.
  • There, they began hurling epithets toward Wheateye, now jumping up and down and screaming on her coalshed roof. The Dollmaker
  • The bombs on the inside edge exploded first, and their force sent my body hurling faster.
  • In today's politics it is becoming a bit more difficult as people who ought to give guidance to political upstarts are themselves in front hurling invectives.
  • A bunch of moss-munching brontosauruses standing together looking up in the sky, as a giant, earth-shattering meteor comes hurling down from the heavens.
  • A fellow dived on him, grabbing his wrist, the squawking woman was belabouring me with her gamp, Joe was hurling his attacker aside … but by that time I was going through the dining section like Springheeled Jack, sending a table flying as I plunged through the kitchen door. Flashman and the angel of the lord
  • When a few lensmen asked him to pose yet again with the shot before hurling it in the air, he readily agreed and that certainly made a wonderful photograph.
  • The hurling goalkeeper is, indeed, an accursed species.
  • The strong wind was hurling bits of wood around as though they were toys.
  • Each took a lead from the behaviour of his peers and soon it became open season for hurling insults at the royals. THE LOST KING OF FRANCE: Revolution, Revenge and the Search for Louis XVII
  • The time sheet is open to all who have worn the Green and Red of Mayo at football, hurling, ladies football, camogie or handball.
  • But what holds his attention is a man in a dust-grimed tuxedo hurling knives at a woman strapped to a huge spinning wheel. . . Black Dust Mambo
  • That is on top of this story from last week by that made me feel like hurling when I read it.
  • The teens, agitated by their restriction, were randomly leaving their living quarters and vehemently hurling obscenities and spitting at staff.
  • I'm sure God, long famous in moments of pique for hurling His thunderbolts about the place, cannot enjoy having this kind of intellectual sissy claiming to speak for Him.
  • The almost facile nature of this victory, allied to their three championships from three previous attempts, suggests that this team should be hurling at a higher level.
  • A 39-year-old Fort Pierce man accused of hurling a fish from the North Bridge and allegedly hitting a boater on the head, faces felony and misdemeanor charges, according to an arrest affidavit from the Fort Pierce Police Department. Florida Man Charged In Fish Fight
  • The All-Ireland Club Football and All-Ireland Club Hurling championships finals are held annually in Croke Park on St Patrick's Day.
  • While the four 21 hurling teams will enjoy a July throw-in, the football edition is as yet unlisted, and no effort by Monday's county board could find a solution - for the second year in succession.
  • The strong influence of Italian neo-realism is further subverted by such outlandish sights as a boy suckling at a cow's udder and Pedro hurling an egg directly at the camera.
  • This series looks at the exploits of six great Gaelic football and hurling teams beginning with the Down football team of 1960 / 61.
  • UMM EL-FAHM, Israel — Dozens of Jewish extremists hoisting Israeli flags defiantly marched through this Arab-Israeli town Wednesday, chanting "death to terrorists" and touching off clashes between rock-hurling residents and police who quelled them with tear gas. Umm El-Fahm, Arab Israeli Town, Hit By Violent Clashes
  • The sight of grown men hurling abuse at someone who had voluntarily given up a Saturday morning to referee a kids match is truly disheartening for everyone involved.
  • Tewkesbury Battle Field Society proved a great draw, with a potato-throwing trebuchet (a hurling device), raising money for the proposed statues, models of which were on display on their stand.
  • As this semi final unfolded the hurling was riveting.
  • He plunged into his next project after watching a TV evangelist hurling threats of hellfire.
  • The streets of Abbeyside were colourfully decorated all last week in the local blue and saffron colours to mark the victory by their Intermediate Team in the County Hurling Championships.
  • When he refuses, a row ensues, during which the pair are heard hurling vile abuse. The Sun
  • They attack the car by hurling their bodies directly into it.
  • He was very passionate about the game of hurling and remained a loyal follower of the black and amber of his native Kilkenny.
  • Detectives say there have been at least eight incidents involving youths hurling missiles in the space of 10 days.
  • These squads are the result of the summer camps and help to promote hurling in south Kildare area.
  • A lightning-fast, skilful and occasionally violent hurly-burly blur of whirring limbs and flailing, splintering timber in which all 30 players take to the field simultaneously armed with wooden clubs, hurling is not actually as dissimilar to cricket as you'd think. Ireland expected England to hurl abuse in defeat, not throw flowers | Barry Glendenning
  • On the victor's podium, a red-eyed Evans held back tears before hurling the winner's bouquet into the crowd. Cadel Evans blazes ahead to become first Australian Tour de France winner
  • Last night, Bachelor Brad Womack's harem of exes reconvened for the beloved bitchfest known as The Women Tell All, and it took all of 28 minutes — including the pec-filled, required-by-law recap clips — for the ladies to start hurling the hater-tots. Watercooler: The Bachelor's Mean Girl Got Owned!
  • Video footage showed local people, some in motorcycle helmets, temporarily driving back riot police by hurling bricks. Times, Sunday Times
  • On a very soggy pitch both teams served up some very exciting hurling.
  • Each took a lead from the behaviour of his peers and soon it became open season for hurling insults at the royals. THE LOST KING OF FRANCE: Revolution, Revenge and the Search for Louis XVII
  • The kids were hurling snowballs at each other the backyard.
  • Now imagine all these fans hurling abuse at you.
  • As soon as he won all that money, he started hurling it about and soon there was none left.
  • She screamed, wrenching a sizable twig out of her hair and hurling it at him, after disentangling herself from what must have been the twentieth or so bramble thicket.
  • Then a minute later the first yellow card and subsequent sending off ever in the National Hurling League came when James Walsh was sent to the line after a chop on his opposite number Gerry Quinn.
  • They ended up on the roof hurling abuse. Blaikie's Guide to Modern Manners
  • Now we have both sides hurling insults at one another and coming up with more and more ludicrous claims. The Sun
  • Two doctors hurling different interpretations of the same data at one another leaves none of us any the wiser. Times, Sunday Times

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