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How To Use Neighbour In A Sentence

  • Hopefully, North Norfolk will soon shake off this surreal obsession with the Lib Dems and embrace their NE Cambs neighbour's decent Tory stance. Will Iain Dale have to repay the donations ?
  • The following years were characterized by rifts with Russia, in which the Ukraine jealously guarded its own independence against its overbearing neighbour.
  • Her name means happiness, but she is a widow with five children who makes ends meet by washing clothes for the neighbourhood and preparing injera, the unleavened bread prepared today as it was 1000 years ago.
  • The conflict threatens to spill over into neighbouring regions.
  • He let a neighbourly grin slide over his foxy face.
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  • Relations are more neighbourly now, stadium:mk offering 22,000 seats, 7,000 more than the requirement for a Heineken Cup quarter-final. Northampton and Ulster bring authentic rugby to plastic surrounds | Eddie Butler
  • Man is a god or a devil to his neighbour
  • It is not just getting used to the layout of new streets and kitchen and neighbours. Times, Sunday Times
  • They all escaped after jumping from the top floor of the burning house thanks to their neighbours' help.
  • His neighbour goes on holiday, and Danielle shows up to house-sit.
  • A neighbourhood patrol can thus assume the proportions of an armed convoy.
  • Bear in mind any houses overlooking your stables as you do not want to give neighbours cause for complaint. Your First Horse - buying, feeding, caring
  • What would you say to Mrs So-and-so who has called to complain about a noisy neighbour?
  • The neighbours, he recalls, allowed him to play until a daily curfew of 10 pm.
  • These networks, which included certain kinds of neighbouring, included those for whom ties of kinship were of primary significance.
  • Suddenly they upped and moved, telling neighbours that they were emigrating to the US.
  • It's a world where dinosaurs are your next door neighbours, and where some of the most famous feuds in history where actually territorial disputes between apatosaurs bearing grudges... Susanna Clarke in the NY Times
  • My neighbour lived on the terrace of his building, in a single room surrounded by cotes for his pigeons.
  • Fraudsters are often shopped by honest friends and neighbours.
  • A neighbour reported hearing a thud that sounded like a garbage bag being dropped.
  • All their neighbours had fled from that place even before the arrival of the rioters.
  • Eadie said just before 2 pm, as she was about to prepare a late lunch, she looked out the back door and called out to her mother, pensioner Millie, only to see the gushes of water and slush cascading from the neighbour's yard.
  • A world reputation for jobs, and a ‘welcome to the neighbourhood’ attitude has historically created a city of immigrants and ethnic enclaves.
  • We ended our snack (better described as lunch) with a large pot of Chinese tea, overhearing snatches of conversation from a neighbouring table.
  • Their devotion, if extreme, is driven by one goal to reclaim their neighbourhood.
  • Hurling supporters in neighbouring parishes are scouring local GAA officials in the hope of getting a ticket to the September 12 Final.
  • Talks between the neighbouring countries were called off following a border incident.
  • Better good neighbours near than relations far away. 
  • Yet again invidious comparisons are made with our continental neighbours whose milk consumption, in part because of very different climatic conditions, is overwhelmingly of UHT milk. Archive 2007-10-14
  • At the height of the craze, I stood on the North Bank at Highbury in a forest of bananas, watching awestruck as they celebrated another goal going in by either bopping your neighbour over the head, or simply chucking the thing in the air.
  • By putting up the fence, are you blocking out the view of a wonderful tree in a neighbouring plot, or perhaps a church spire in the distance? Times, Sunday Times
  • My parents have often hired earth-working vehicles, installing three further dams since arriving here in an effort to drought-proof the house's garden, and to allow them to agist neighbours' animals during droughts.
  • He and his mates are laughing and jeering at their next-door neighbour: a crazy old man, stripped to the waist, performing what looks like some kind of weird callisthenics routine in his backyard.
  • The neighbours in unofficial whispers talk about his activities but officially they know nothing.
  • But it was busted by police after complaints from neighbours. The Sun
  • And in such a case envy will be sure to work and boil up to a more than ordinary height, while the envious person frets, and raves, and swells at the plenties and affluence of his abounding neighbour, and (as I may so express it) is even ready to burst with another's fulness. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. IV.
  • She ran to alert neighbours who battled in vain to douse the blaze until firefighters arrived. The Sun
  • She befriends her neighbours, wears a hijab and goes to the mosque. Times, Sunday Times
  • He believed he was ‘untouchable’ but his victims finally became sick of the yob and helped a specialist council unit to boot him out of their neighbourhood.
  • But others, founding their assertions upon more plausible reasoning, say that the petty Mussulman kings, who were the neighbours or tributaries of Benabad, justly alarmed at his alliance with a {93} Christian king, solicited the support of the Almoravide. History of the Moors of Spain
  • The great thing is that this voting has nothing whatsoever to do with the merits of the song, but gives the Eurovision nations an opportunity to buddy up with their neighbours or sneer at old enemies.
  • He had a fling with his neighbour's wife.
  • At the end of a long driveway, shared with the neighbouring farm. Times, Sunday Times
  • The toddler waddles freely into a neighbourhood yard.
  • She staggered to a neighbour for help and was taken to hospital and given morphine. Times, Sunday Times
  • This must have been owing to her recollection of the audacious stranger in the neighbouring turret at the Fleur de Lys; but did that discomposure express displeasure? Quentin Durward
  • The story being whispered about the neighbourhood.
  • He heard an elderly woman and a child were among residents in neighbouring flats when the fire started.
  • They delivered emergency aid to the camps, not to stricken neighbourhoods, thereby ensuring the exponential growth of those camps. Times, Sunday Times
  • Luckily for the neighbours, the musical learning process was swift. Times, Sunday Times
  • The General's words were perceived as a threat by neighbouring countries.
  • As Mrs Varden distinctly heard, and was intended to hear, all that Miggs said, and as these words appeared to convey in metaphorical terms a presage or foreboding that she would at some early period droop beneath her trials and take an easy flight towards the stars, she immediately began to languish, and taking a volume of the Manual from a neighbouring table, leant her arm upon it as though she were Hope and that her Barnaby Rudge: a tale of the Riots of 'eighty
  • Adding new homes to an existing neighbourhood is the best rebuttal to any scheme to clear out houses and build a high-rise.
  • When our washing machine broke, our neighbours let us use theirs.
  • It is good politics for any country to have friendly relations with its neighbours.
  • Officials in the government's new ‘respect unit’ are drawing up the package of measures to tackle young tearaways and ‘neighbours from hell’.
  • That could change when a neighbour plays matchmaker. The Sun
  • If your neighbour was infringing on your right to run your business or was vandalizing your property would you say nothing?
  • We meet Gaspar, the bull-necked boss of the local Maquis, obviously still enraged by the compliance of his neighbours.
  • In truth, taking on Sandamhor as a family enterprise would be an impossibility without my mother's salary as a headteacher on a neighbouring island. Back to the land: from London to sheep farming on Eigg
  • Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Neither side has an interest in a proxy war or instability in their northern neighbour. Times, Sunday Times
  • The news of starting wars between the two friendly neighbouring countries has quite bowled us over.
  • At the moment, shops have decorations in every window, and the neighbours are planning a cookout.
  • In these solitary regions, the cattle under the charge of our drovers subsisted themselves cheaply, by picking their food as they went along the drove-road, or sometimes by the tempting opportunity of a _start and owerloup_, or invasion of the neighbouring pasture, where an occasion presented itself. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 10, No. 280, October 27, 1827
  • Thus, China's development as a superpower is beginning to concern its neighbours and the USA.
  • Yet the overall atmosphere of San Miguel is not remotely of a chichi American town, nor even is it as spruce as neighbouring colonial cities.
  • But he was not to enjoy himself long, for the duck was telling all her neighbours about the ill-usage her little one had received; and the mischief-making little wagtail thought as he had seen the lanky bird eating what he called the kingfisher's fishes, he would go and tell, and then sit on the bank and see the quarrel there would be; for he considered that the heron had no more business to take the fish out of the pond than the toad had to catch flies. Featherland How the Birds lived at Greenlawn
  • Winchester peacemakers are offering mediation to soothe relations between neighbours.
  • Neighbours wrote that the smell gets so bad they cannot open their windows and doors.
  • The New Testament injunctions to turn the other cheek and love thy neighbour were a great advance in civilisation.
  • I am bored by Monkey Wood's blantant over-use of charientism and cacophemism for my darkie brethren - it is an abomination to the Lord - who is ironically my next door neighbour ". TheSpoof.com : Spoof News : Front Page
  • The paste stood out amongst its neighbours on the platter, not for its taste, but for its bright pinkish colour and shiny, gelatinous consistency - a treat to some, but not my personal fave.
  • And if the neighbour dares to try and poke his nose in, pretending to wish me many happy returns when all he really wants is a good snoop around, he'll wish he hadn't.
  • Each of London's districts had a distinct character that marked it off from its neighbours.
  • September 13th, 2009 MICHAEL CAINE is calling on the U. K.'s leaders to reinstate national service in an effort to clean up the streets After shooting his new movie, Harry Brown, in London's most troubled neighbourhoods, Caine fears crime and drug use is out of control in his native Britain - and the government needs to do something drastic to stop youngsters from killing one another. Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • Once upon a time it was a natural and unavoidable element in the relations of every married couple; just as it was natural and unavoidable, once upon a time, that the unwarlike and commercially-minded burghers of a mediæval city should bargain with a neighbouring and predatory baron to keep at bay – for a consideration – other barons no less predatory but a little less neighbouring. Marriage as a Trade
  • After lunch we would trail around the neighbourhood which involved a lot of exploring of stream beds and ponds and railways.
  • Steve's immediate neighbours are terrific.
  • He is fondly remembered by his neighbours and friends as a kind, helpful and inoffensive man.
  • They only met twice during the whole time they were neighbours.
  • One neighbour, who did not want to be named, said: ‘We had a house-warming party and he came along, we always got a Christmas card from him.’
  • After failing to get to the girls, Waddington ran from her home screaming to the neighbours for help just before the house was completely engulfed in flames and smoke.
  • The BNP's support comes from where Fascist support has always come from: people who sees themselves as a cut above their chavvy neighbours; in British terms, Tories in Labour areas. Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
  • He complained to the local authority about the noises and smells from his neighbour's farm.
  • They form the links, at various angles to their neighbours, of a continuous chain.
  • That's them defending the commons of the beauty of the neighbourhood, combined with the commons of the airspace we share through which dandelion seeds fly.
  • Forgive me sounding preachy but the character in our neighbourhoods, heritage and iconic landscape will be utterly lost.
  • Its capture had a domino effect on neighbouring castles and towns. Malory: The Life and Times of King Arthur's Chronicler
  • However, Frank's furtive visits to strange bars frequented by men in ascots and Cathy's friendship with Raymond, a noble black gardener, set the neighbourhood gossips tittering.
  • We went to pay our respects to our new neighbours.
  • A localised gumma may develop in the neighbourhood of the angle of the mandible, or the whole of the body of that bone may be the seat of a diffuse gummatous infiltration Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • Solovetski monks and join the Kojeozerski community in the same neighbourhood, of which he became hegumen in 1643. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • Derbyshire fire service said that two people from the burning property and another further three residents from neighbouring flats were rescued. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the Downbelows' debut, Toronto punk vets (ex-members of Trigger Happy, Tirekickers, et al.) gang together for an ode to their favourite rapidly gentrifying neighbourhood.
  • On the other, we are anxious about the impact of a mobile phone transmitter mast in our neighbourhood.
  • By now, the police were chasing protesters into various neighbourhoods, and throwing cluster bombs of rubber pellets at locals.
  • Ottawa has shown it has considered the question about the neighbourhood surrounding Iraq no more than it has given any thought to the question inside Iraq.
  • Candidates and officials of the neighbourhood community jointly organize the meetings.
  • The neighbourhood, however, is interesting enough on account of the curious aqueducts for supplying the town with water, and the Mercede forest which, in D'Urville's opinion, might more justly be called a coppice, for it contains nothing but shrubs and ferns. Celebrated Travels and Travellers Part III. The Great Explorers of the Nineteenth Century
  • ‘On the old aircraft we could not practise low-level flying in the simulator but with the new J we can do so and so we upset fewer neighbours,’ he said.
  • In fact, neither Cathy nor Frank express anything that might resemble an emotion until their bedroom door is locked and the neighbourhood of gossiping gnats is safely locked out of the hidden desperation of their unhappy marriage.
  • A playroom with ping-pong table and pool table is shared with a neighbouring property. Times, Sunday Times
  • We should be in when you arrive, but if the worst comes to the worst, the neighbours have a spare key and will let you into the house.
  • Even the most stand-offish of neighbours had no choice but to bump into each other on the stairs.
  • Old people with poor housing and with no families or supportive neighbours fill more geriatric beds.
  • With Mars looming large in the morning sky, astronomers are capitalizing on a great chance to study our neighbouring planet.
  • I told her about my coffee date with my neighbour last week, and we analysed with our usual ruefulness the mixture of mellowness and awkwardness that arose.
  • If it's a success and chooses to expand, what of the neighbouring trees and parkland?
  • The gangs sold their booty, families tried to earn money from their belongings and neighbours ransacked the homes of anyone who had not returned from prison. Times, Sunday Times
  • If your neighbours are too noisy then you have cause for complaint.
  • Middlesbrough had been joined with five neighbouring local authorities to form the county borough of Teesside.
  • My Neighbour Who Knows What I Like (blogs passim) also Knows What My Son Likes, and I see him walking off with a box containing an unconstructed Lego Bionicle on his head. Blue Skies, Cream Teas
  • In the second room you'll find two habitués of Berghain's housier, groovier upstairs neighbour Panorama Bar, in the form of Steffi and Efdemin, while Innervisions duo Ame are the night's very special guests. Clubs picks of the week
  • His new farm buildings encroached on his neighbour's land.
  • Moreover, the children are bussed out of their neighbourhood each day to a school of the father's choosing.
  • High-T wollastonite + vesuvianite + grossular-bearing assemblages within neighbouring skarns that developed by reaction with exsolving H 2 O-rich volatiles support this conclusion.
  • To be fair to the script writers, they have made Todd behave in a way which entitled his erstwhile friends and neighbours to complain about his conduct.
  • FEAR about nightmare neighbours is people's main worry when they move home, a study says. The Sun
  • In the neighbourhood of Dacca about 200 lbs. of seed is sown to the beegah, measuring 80 cubits by 80, and the yield is from 640 to 800 lbs. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • The survey highlighted that 68 per cent of the residents feel safer now than they did before the Neighbourhood Wardens started.
  • And individuals who want unrestricted access to the internet can simply obtain a service provider in a neighbouring country.
  • Every ant colony has its own clone of fungi, distinct from that on the neighbouring farm.
  • The vertices were then connected to their neighbours to create the polygons.
  • We are more than happy to advise residents of how not to cause a nuisance to their neighbours.
  • A good neighbour is better than a bother in the next village. 
  • In fact, there will not be a Fibonacci number as a common factor between two neighbouring Fibonacci's for the same reason.
  • If you want to be greener than your neighbour there is a range of eco-friendly cars to choose from. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first is from a concerned neighbour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their spirituality resides in values of neighbourliness, kindness, community and family.
  • Tentatively, I ventured out, then realised that half the neighbourhood was standing around gawping.
  • Yet in most cases regional custom was the surest defence against the aggression of neighbours, immediate lords or sovereigns.
  • In the tithe map this ford is marked, the only one in that neighbourhood, and the cottage is also marked exactly in the position mentioned by Fanny, the only building so placed. Juniper Hall: A Rendezvous of Certain Illustrious Personages during the French Revolution, Including Alexandre D'Arblay and Fanny Burney
  • Neighbouring diners were bought a small plate of charcuterie (not featured on the menu).
  • Certain ancient strata, known as the Devonian black shale, occupying the Ohio valley and the neighbouring parts of North America to the east and north of that basin, appear to be accumulations which were made beneath an ancient Sargassum sea. Outlines of the Earth's History A Popular Study in Physiography
  • Notwithstanding that the name Albigenses was given after the council of Lombers to the new Manichaeans, Albi was less identified with the great religious and political struggle of Southern Gaul in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries than were Castres and other neighbouring towns. Wanderings by southern waters, eastern Aquitaine
  • ‘Then again, some old maid's door will be slily fastened by tying tightly across the door jambs, in front of and to the ‘sneck’, a piece of wood to prevent her coming out of doors till released by a kind neighbour next morning.’
  • So might a concert pianist, accustomed to performing on a Steinway grand, have been shocked when they wheeled in an old joanna from a neighbourhood pub.
  • She doesn't seem cut out for this tough neighbourhood.
  • Leave your key with a neighbour in case you lock yourself out one day.
  • Face losing our soft power by closing off further enlargement and a bolder near neighbourhood policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • For many of the intervening months our doorstep has been home to a large blue cooler box borrowed from my neighbour Annie. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though it is rarely discussed, few argue that the poor and oppressed have the political capital necessary to compete for the federal funding and social programs that often go to wealthier cities and neighbourhoods.
  • People are talking differently about the man that they thought of as an affable neighbour, pleasant cabbie, reliable friend and dutiful father. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was a great character and a marvellous storyteller and will be sadly missed by his family, neighbours and many friends.
  • Clan Mamorukin welcomed their guests with much cordiality, and just when everyone was starting to realise the full scale of the cultural differences, the neighbouring clan Gentaru came to visit. Kederan XI or How Luna's life became complicated beyond imagination
  • We'd carefully prepared the house (bought case of beer - check, removed all breakables from ground floor - check, warn neighbours - check), and our preparation paid off.
  • Officers have recommended the scheme should be refused on the grounds it would be unneighbourly and an eyesore.
  • Voters in Hungary have agreed to be part of the historic eastward expansion of the European Union, strongly endorsing economic unification with their more developed neighbours to the west.
  • Rare is the folk album that is comfortable referencing the Neighbours theme tune alongside obscure Victorian parlour music.
  • He thought it would win him extra respect in his neighbourhood, where murders, shoot-outs and drug deals were all part of life's rich tapestry.
  • Sometimes a phosphorescent gleam played over the stagnant pond, into which the terapin plunged heavily at their approach; while on the neighbouring banks the frogs of all degrees croaked forth their inharmonious chant, making the scene more hideous, and certainly adding greatly to the sense of gloom which it inspired in those who penetrated it. The Partisan: A Tale of the Revolution. By the Author of "The Yemassee," "Guy Rivers," &c. In Two Volumes. Vol. I
  • Similarly, unlike many of their continental European neighbours, the English clung to corporal punishment as a penal sanction until well into the twentieth century.
  • Their language is known as Cahita, being the same as that spoken, with dialectic differences, by their neighbours, the Tehueco, and Yaqui, and belonging to the Piman branch of the great Shoshonean stock. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • But it does have a tremendous knack for upstaging its neighbour.
  • Some months ago angry demonstrators mounted a noisy demonstration beneath his window. His neighbours thereupon insisted upon more security.
  • At present some comprehensives are neighbourhood schools. Times, Sunday Times
  • An interactive CBC map shows another troubled region is in the suburb of Surrey, where Indo-Canadian gangs roam in the mainly ethnic Indian neighbourhoods. 2009 April 07 « Unambiguously Ambidextrous
  • These people are normally quickly eliminated, but they can cause real consternation among their neighbours.
  • Another neighbour said he had heard that the woman had collapsed and fallen down stairs.
  • They drove in from neighbouring villages with their produce for sale in a kind of drosky, the _carretella_ as it was called, with its single pony harnessed to the near side of the pole. The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton Volume II
  • The Victorian building had been divided into four flats and, together with the neighbouring house, was being used as squats.
  • Not the best way to befriend your new neighbours. Times, Sunday Times
  • He makes such a racket I'm afraid he disturbs the neighbours.
  • There are unfortunate chamfers on the back corners of the plan to allow for rights of light of neighbouring buildings.
  • International opprobrium has been heaped on the country following its attack on its neighbours.
  • Neighbours called to visit her on a regular basis and she enjoyed their company.
  • About 150 mainly student protesters carrying joss sticks and flowers gathered outside the bar in a wealthy neighbourhood of the capital and denounced its decorative use of sacred symbols and statues. Buddhist group protests, symbolically seals Buddha Bar in Indonesia
  • They nodded to each other by way of breaking the ice of unacquaintance, and the first stranger handed his neighbour the family mug — a huge vessel of brown ware, having its upper edge worn away like a threshold by the rub of whole generations of thirsty lips that had gone the way of all flesh, and bearing the following inscription burnt upon its rotund side in yellow letters there is no fun Wessex Tales
  • He phoned the neighbour, only to discover that he was away, then spied two burglars running from the house. Times, Sunday Times
  • We had to ring our neighbour and get her to come and babysit.
  • The family said they had endured years of torment and abuse at the hands of the neighbours.
  • He is to skip three times while repeating thrice the following sentence, and after repeating three times forwards and backwards: thus (_forwards_) -- 'Fear and dread shall fall upon them by the greatness of thine arm; they shall be as still as a stone'; thus (_backwards_) -- 'Still as a stone may they be; by the greatness of thine arm may fear and dread fall on them'; he then is to say to his neighbour three times, 'Peace be unto you,' and the neighbour is to respond three times, 'Unto you be peace.' Moon Lore
  • The General's words were perceived as a threat by neighbouring countries.
  • Neighbours have clubbed together to turn their back alley into a tranquil garden and play area.
  • One neighbour saw Moat returning to the house on Thursday afternoon dressed in khaki trousers and a khaki vest. Times, Sunday Times
  • The owners of one Goff house reproved gossiping neighbours by posting a sign, ‘We don't like your house either’.
  • The Sac a commis is the growth of high dry situations, and invariably in a piney country or on it's borders. it is generally found in the open piney woodland as on the Western side of the Rocky mountain but in this neighbourhood we find it only in the praries or on their borders in the more open woodlands; Original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806
  • I've arranged with the neighbours about feeding the cat while we are away.
  • Living in rows, conducting our movements and our apparel as nearly as possible in accordance with the hitch of the moment, singing the songs our neighbours sing -- this is Order, but gregarian order. Child and Country A Book of the Younger Generation
  • The political and social convulsions afflicting our neighbour will have severe repercussions for the rest of Europe
  • In one instance outraged neighbours fought back against plans approved by their council for a hideous burger bar on the town 's seafront. Times, Sunday Times
  • Andy and Vicki had a furious row outside their house, in full view of the neighbours.
  • Their neighbour agreed, saying: ‘The embankment is full of molehills.’
  • Georgios no-mates Why Greece struggles to get along with its neighbours The Economist: Daily news and views
  • Five keen snappers received free photography tuition from a professional in a project supported by the Greater Woolwich neighbourhood renewal panel.
  • And just as you would think that we have had our fill of diseases, the deadly Plague has been reported in neighbouring Libya, poising a valid threat to the Egyptian western borders. Global Voices in English » Egypt: Between the Swine Flu and Approaching Plague
  • Bill got the orchid bug from an old neighbour who encouraged him to to start breeding the plants.
  • Water wasted by householders is but a gnat's whatsit compared to the huge volumes that are wasted by the water companies - dobbing on your neighbour isn't going to solve anything
  • The little boy picked up a stone and bunged it over the fence into the courtyard of his neighbour.
  • A military interpreter before he switched to journalism, he was streetwise; a Shiite who lived in a Sunni neighbourhood; a survivor.
  • Nobody likes a nosy neighbour much less a nosy family member.
  • He was a pleasant and genial countryman whose neighbourly qualities were much to the fore throughout his life.
  • Through the front window lay a sprawl of hills, but the window above my bed butted the neighbour's garage.
  • Once again, a neighbourhood of questionable future value was cleared and numerous residents and businesses displaced. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The killer then sped off on the pillion seat of a motorbike and, with his accomplice, drove to a quiet neighbourhood and burned the bike in an obviously pre-identified secluded location.
  • Yesterday troops patrolled the areas worst hit by violence, while neighbourhood groups mounted street barricades to protect residents. Times, Sunday Times
  • His first meal back on earth after his trip into space was a braaivleis - he still calls it that - with his neighbours in the town of Tehachapi in California near the Mojave Desert airport where the space programme is based.
  • Glass walkways connected the buildings to their neighbours and to the central building at three levels.
  • Instead, they are reflecting the eclectic range of their own neighbourhoods, families and record collections. Times, Sunday Times

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