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How To Use Relish In A Sentence

  • Hence the salty relish of the prospect that lies ahead. Times, Sunday Times
  • From a pure box-office point of view, all of us can surely relish the sort of muscular macho, the one-on-one confrontation on view when a Phil Vickery meets a Christian Califano.
  • The disgusting partiality shown in the accusations was disrelished, as was the resort that had been had to torture. History of the United States, Volume 1 (of 6)
  • lunger" out here, and I didn't relish the idea of sleeping in a tuberculous bed. The Prairie Wife
  • Serve the oysters topped with the shallot relish and lemon wedges. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Now, after years of experimenting with entomophagy (that's bug-eating to you), he presents the results with relish… or at least a light cream sauce.
  • It seems an excellent challenge and one that I feel you lot would relish too.
  • But do I relish the idea of playing a character where you're not playing the lead role and where you can turn up and absolutely go crazy?
  • His stories of past friends were always endearing but told with a dignified but abiding relish. Times, Sunday Times
  • He relishes an opulent lifestyle with palatial homes in Europe and America, private jets, two yachts and a helicopter.
  • There's also a pretty good chance that we could have a last minute substitution for the cranberry relish.
  • While the wealthy sportsman was the original English motorist, it was not until Edward VII took up motoring (with relish) that the motorcar began to gain precedence over the horse and carriage with the Marlborough House Set. The Motorcar | Edwardian Promenade
  • Savage returned the gun to the cabinet, relishing the silence of his apartment. MINUTES TO BURN
  • We do not relish the idea of going through another inquest, and no doubt neither does anyone else involved.
  • His phrasing is razor-sharp and should be served with relish and glee.
  • But then, look at the effect she was having on this poor old dodderer, who wouldn't know scholarship if it was served up on a plate with piccalilli relish. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Others relish their greens when hung creatively over branches and perches so they may work at nibbling the tasty offering.
  • And he said he was relishing the prospect of trading blows with the self-styled revolutionary. The Sun
  • The county remains agog since that superlative victory over Tipperary and supporters will relish this latest opportunity to get another look at the heroes of that unforgettable day.
  • Graham relished the opportunity to upstage Chelsea and found in the talented Russell the width to dominate the game from midfield.
  • I'm off to Paris tomorrow evening for a meeting on Thursday morning and I really didn't relish the thought of taking my battered boots along with me.
  • Whatever the future holds, Strasser will always have his high-profile past to relish.
  • Hunger will relish the plainest fare. 
  • Still, if you want your Crisis analysis to have plenty of bite and a dash of bile, relish Living Dangerously.
  • The guard took great pleasure in explaining that if he did, just how much he would relish booting them off the site.
  • A solitary leatherjacket was spotted on the deck, and it relished biting into my finger, which was cut on some of the sharp metal deeper in the ship.
  • Everything needs time and I also want to relish it a bit. The Sun
  • The relish of the mind is as various as that of the body, and like that too may be altered; and it is a mistake to think that men cannot change the displeasingness or indifferency that is in actions into pleasure and desire, if they will do but what is in their power. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • I would relish the opportunity, as I placed my cross on the ballot paper, to think of wiping the permanently smug, self-satisfied smirk from his arrogant, squirrel-cheeked, toffee-nosed features.
  • You can relish the palatable dishes while enjoying the panoramic view by the beach side.
  • Bryce perked up instantly, grabbing the chance to stall with relish.
  • She won't relish having to do the household chores every day.
  • Both musicians relished the dancing hemiola figures in the third movement, shifts of the downbeat between duple and triple groupings, and played with impressive bravura and accuracy. Music review: Zuill Bailey and Orion Weiss at the Kennedy Center
  • I especially disrelish the idea of hand-editing scores of PHP pages.
  • They are resourceful people and impromptu is the mode of operation they most relish. 5 To the River « Unknowing
  • I have no relish for pop music.
  • He sallied forth from his house to relish the novelty of walking behind no less than twelve togate lictors who carried on their shoulders the bundle of rods ritually bound with red leather thongs. The Grass Crown
  • His spoken word bit about being on a plane bound for Manila and asking for curried chicken as the pilots lose control is delivered in a series of herky-jerky inflections and with enormous relish.
  • Though he seemed to relish Korea, on April 10 he bought a one-way ticket back to the United States, vowing not to return to the peninsula.
  • All of these films have the kind of virtuosic roles that actors relish, and the kind of contemplative subject matter studios shy from. Latimes.com - News
  • Apart from being a super talent, the energetic Mr. McIlroy will relish the team camaraderie, while a likely partnership with close friend and fellow Ulsterman Graeme McDowell is a pairing the U.S. will fear. Tip of the Day
  • III. iv.141 (479,5) You lack the season of all natures, sleep] I take the meaning to be, _you want sleep_, which _seasons_, or gives the relish to Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies
  • In fact, most plants rather relished having a regular drink, interspersed with short bursts of sun and periods of relative warmth. Times, Sunday Times
  • I love cooking for the holidays and I love giving edible gifts: cranberry relish, cranberry orange pecan bread and pumpkin muffins, stollen and panettone, tiny chocolate truffles nestled in fluted paper cups adorned with red and green poinsettias. Jamie Schler: 'Tis the Season to be Doubly Jolly!
  • Officers who had for years aspired to command destroyers, cruisers, and aircraft carriers likely did not relish the thought of becoming truck drivers.
  • This was disappointing for those of us who relish a good book-world punch-up; but fortunately, it has been all over the press that Sir Vidia promptly recruited some new enemies. An Irish Lesson in Hope and Marketing
  • He relished it, often acting as judge, jury and executioner. The Sun
  • They don't relish the sight of the chancellor 's personal troops occupying one of my towns any more than I do. THE CURSE OF CHALION
  • Nijon had shimmed the lid of the locker to allow some air to circulate inside, so I probably wouldn't suffocate, but I didn't relish the prospect of spending time in what was essentially a hot, dark metal box. Spin
  • I love my job, relish the operational role and will no doubt miss it dreadfully.
  • A short stroll through the aisles of the average food hall reveals a bewildering variety of mustards, relishes, sauces, pickles and assorted creams, pastes, chutneys, jellies and condiments from all over the world.
  • My wife's lemon and thyme marinated corn-fed chicken breast was succulent and fresh, and accompanied by roast potatoes cooked in herbs and a roast pepper relish.
  • What he has to do is enjoy it and relish it. The Sun
  • She lay sprawled out across the flagstones relishing the piercing cold and the blistering heat.
  • The threat was such an old one that Geraldine honoured it with not the least attention, but helped herself abundantly to marmalade, which she impasted solidly on buttered toast, and consumed with much relish. A Life's Morning
  • Another said, "Be comforted, Yussuf, three days will soon pass away, and then you will relish your kabobs and your rakee, your sweetmeats and your wine, with greater pleasure, having been so long deprived of them. The Pacha of Many Tales
  • Working for opposing stations the two men relished the jokey adversarial relationship they shared - one which continues until today.
  • It's pretty remarkable, a flour tortilla the size of a bathmat, warmed in a machine that looks like an old-fashioned pants-presser, and filled in front of you, spoonful by spoonful, from a series of stews and condiments laid out in immaculate stainless-steel bins: rice; barbacoa beef, pork carnitas, steak or chicken; corn relish or hot salsa; black beans or pinto beans; sour cream or cheese or guacamole or sometimes all three. The Fast Food Revolutionary
  • And she is too busy relishing life after getting the good news on January 9 for such things get her down. The Sun
  • He kept separate the constituents of consonantal clusters, relishing sibilants and fricatives as much as plosives and liquids, and studied the duration of pauses as carefully as the duration of syllables.
  • Neither is likely to relish any continuing role in this increasingly absurd drama. Times, Sunday Times
  • With the relish of a gormandizer it had taken more of its peculiar food than even its prodigious maw could assimilate. Omega, the Man
  • Serve cut into thick slices with relish or horseradish. Times, Sunday Times
  • He certainly knew what another meant, and did not relish the idea of being blown to kingdom come for his transgressions.
  • How often we discussed what was on TV that night, what old movies there were to enjoy, what new sitcoms delighted, what shows in rerun she relished. Tom Teicholz: Ten Years After
  • And a win at Worcester last month showed he is a chaser who relishes good ground. The Sun
  • We're all traveling through time together, every day of our lives. All we can do is do our best to relish this remarkable ride.
  • Raconteurs, those ‘called upon to say a few words’, and professional gagsters alike will relish this unbeatable collection of wit and humour.
  • We know he has always loved the art of campaigning, and he seems to be relishing this opportunity to sell a ton of books and also to polish up his legacy.
  • But with all the political turbulence, is he still relishing the job and managing at the same time to enjoy family life? Times, Sunday Times
  • My house is one that people who relish their germ-free personal space - and their sanity - would avoid like the plague.
  • The so-called disrelish , is the sentiment to the tray after a person finishes the food on the tray.
  • Pine nut-spiked dolmades, the stuffed grape leaves, a walnutty red-pepper relish called ezme and a fine version of tabouli all are worth ordering.
  • I think a mother like this who's so concerned would relish that and welcome a program in school.
  • A living thing, a self, is a homeostatic system, a system constantly being disrupted by exterior forces and internal requirements for refueling and maintenance, constantly seeking to stabilise itself, to return to equilibrium, but also relishing the instability -- because that tension is life. Stoicism, Sophistry and Sodomy
  • His wife had lived in a big city for her entire life and relished the hustle and bustle of a lively metropolis. Going For It!: How to Succeed As an Entrepreneur
  • Or a fool, perhaps, for all her sonneting, for there are men who relish a weak headpiece as the chiefest ornament of women, especially when its indeterminate vagaries boast an escape-valve remotely connected with the fine arts. Judith of the Plains
  • Prairie people welcome the first rhubarb of the season to use in cakes, pies, muffins, jams and relishes.
  • There is a certain relish that some on the left side of the political divide take in attacking progressives in a way that ensures that the boundaries of political discourse will be policed consistent with an information environment slanted in favor of the right-wing. Jonathan Weiler: On False Equivalencies
  • A dismissive gesture but to Ruth one he didn't relish doing very much.
  • Black oil sunflower seeds are relished by chickadees, evening grosbeaks, cardinals and finches, and are less attractive to non-native sparrows and starlings.
  • So, much as I relish the phrase, I don't think I really qualify as a particularly diligent diarist.
  • This needs to become this election campaign's number one issue? not one which either a compromised Labour party or a temporising Conservative party will relish. Now we know the truth. The financial meltdown wasn't a mistake ? it was a con
  • Diane has a pharmacy degree, so she relishes growing herbs and using them in unusual and random ways.
  • And on his own steam, Jackson continues his good work with grace and relish.
  • I relished each snort and stomp from our mounts as we rode along the grey dusty road.
  • It was done with a Pecksniffian relish, a delighted going-through-the-motions, that did not want or expect to be believed. THE DISPOSAL OF THE LIVING
  • Alternatively, tomato relish goes particularly well, and of course a salad and some cold beer.
  • Both might have made hundreds and each of them was very disappointed to get out when relishing the task. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was such convivial company and especially relished tales against himself. The Sun
  • Presenting Hav as a fascinating nexus of East and West, a teeming entrepôt of cross-breeding cultures, Ms. Morris describes the architecture with great relish: There are mosques from brief Arab rule during the Crusades, Russian onion-domed palaces, colonial remnants from the post-Napoleonic "Hav Britannica," and "the most cheerful of follies," a multistoried pagoda built by 15th-century Ming Dynasty traders. Visiting a Land Beyond Fodor's Reach
  • I did not relish a run-in with the "cupper," having no idea what it was intended to cup. Archive 2010-08-01
  • Khan is relishing the chance to fight in Britain after his two title defences in 2010 - against Evening Standard - Home
  • devilled," it gave me renewed relish for the morning's champagne. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 104, May 20, 1893
  • The son of a high school basketball coach, Knight has always relished pressure situations.
  • They also relish an abundance of water; and if they have, while growing, an application of liquid manure once or twice a week, it will be beneficial; never allow the roots to become potbound, but when the roots begin to form a mat on the outside of the ball of earth, it is time to shift the plant into a pot of the next larger size, and so on as the plant requires it. Your Plants Plain and Practical Directions for the Treatment of Tender and Hardy Plants in the House and in the Garden
  • As an adolescent, Bennett Lang relishes word math problems but is stumped by the things people say.
  • And then she showed that her disrelish to cards was the effect of choice only; and that she was an easy mistress of every genteel game played with them. Clarissa Harlowe
  • Serve with crisp little toasts or use as a relish. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then we had a slim repast of soda water and bananas, the Hadji worshiped with his face toward Mecca, and the boatmen prepared an elaborate curry for themselves, with salt fish for its basis, and for its tastiest condiment blachang — a Malay preparation much relished by European lovers of durion and decomposed cheese. The Golden Chersonese and the way thither
  • South Africa like theirs big and beefy with a dash of hot relish and more than a bit of bite. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having once tasted the sweet wine prepared from honey or flowers, how can a woman, I fancy, relish the wretched arrak from rice? ' The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 1 Books 1, 2 and 3
  • Cut to the next scene, and he is munching away with relish and delight.
  • After years spent as frontbench attack dog, he is relishing his transition into something altogether more fabulous. Times, Sunday Times
  • The players certainly appear to relish the prospect of their return. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is most relishing playing Wilson. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fill your plate from the smorgasbord, relishing the stinkiest fermented surströmming (that's herring). Times, Sunday Times
  • Van Wyk's narrator, a harum-scarum, hard-drinking journalist called Scara Nhlabatsi, relishes all manner of rude jokes, bawdy abuse, malapropisms and puns and provides a slew of images of the vulgar excess of power.
  • The mixture is greenish white in color and when sweetened to taste is relished by nearly every one.
  • Hence the salty relish of the prospect that lies ahead. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though she did not relish being alone in the apartment for any length of time.
  • Other specialities to relish were Thai dishes like ‘Had Phad King’ and ‘Phad Phongari’, besides Japanese delicacies such as vegetable tampura and sukiyaki.
  • We're all traveling through time together, every day of our lives. All we can do is do our best to relish this remarkable ride.
  • As she went about the normal day, she thought of him far too often, relishing in the feeling she got; her breath stopped, an her stomach tightened up in knots.
  • When this technique was first introduced, few captains relished the sacrifice of independence which it entailed. Nemesis: The Battle for Japan, 194445
  • Mr. Trevelyan then related the foregoing sallies to the fair arbitress, who listened with keen relish and enjoyment. Lady Rosamond's Secret A Romance of Fredericton
  • Whoopi seemed like she was just reading the lines, not relishing the sheer lunacy and hokiness of the show. The Footlights: Drew Lachey, Bailey Hanks, and Whoopi step in | EW.com
  • Bread or tobacco may be neglected where they are shown to be useful to health, because of an indifferency or disrelish to them; reason and consideration at first recommends, and begins their trial, and use finds, or custom makes them pleasant. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • I then carried home my provision, and eat some more cheese with the other roll, and a halfpennyworth of apples by way of relish, and took a drink of water.
  • Turner was primarily inspired by the processes of design and editing; he relished working with photographers.
  • He relishes the prospect of a fight.
  • They're clearly relishing a life that's relatively free of media games. Times, Sunday Times
  • More and more of us relish the freedom of living alone but this atomisation has worrying long-term effects for society, says David Willetts
  • Current retail product categories include dried spice, dipping sauces, chutneys and relishes, and seasoning for white and red meats.
  • The honest captain had caught this word from a recent treatise against agrarianism, and having an acquired taste for orders in one sense, at least, he flattered himself with being what is called a Conservative, in other words, he had a strong relish for that maxim of the Scotch freebooter, which is rendered into English by the comely aphorism of "keep what you've got, and get what you can. Homeward Bound or, the Chase
  • But the fallout from the incident has highlighted his weaknesses, casting him as both a thin-skinned brawler who berates reporters for asking questions and a publicity hog who seems to relish media attention, no matter how it comes his way. Ambitious Weiner sees media strategy backfire
  • The traditional way of eating Gentleman's Relish is on thin slices of buttered white bread toast, alone, with cucumber or with mustard and cress.
  • France's master of suspense, Claude Chabrol, relishes every malevolent, icily controlled shot of this perfectly constructed thriller, right up to its terrifying, violent climax. La Cérémonie: No 16
  • The cast approaches the material with relish and Polanski prevents broad characterisations and self-indulgence amongst his actors.
  • But there is a worse thing in store for the bold man who habituates himself to eat a dozen dishes at once: when there are but few dishes served, out of pure habit he will feel himself half starved, whilst his neighbour, accustomed to send his sop down by help of a single relish, will feast merrily, be the dishes never so few. Memorabilia
  • This called for light to climb by, since he relished a night on the ground inside the forest still less than he liked the idea of crouching helpless in the grass. Tunnel In The Sky
  • A pork chop sandwich with chow-chow—a mustardy relish common in parts of the South—is juicy and sloppy $8.50. A Southern Shortlist
  • A 10-or 15-minute visit may seem short to you, but longer than that can overtire a patient, even when he seems to relish a long chat.
  • It was also a difficult one to obtain; Congress didn't relish the idea of the country's frontline fighter serving under other flags. DALE BROWN'S DREAMLAND (5) STRIKE ZONE
  • Cold meat may taste better with a garnish of a pickle or other relish.
  • In large bowl, combine all ingredients for tomato mango relish and mix well, set aside.
  • Then you want a nice mayo, white vinegar, relish base, with liberal amounts of pepper, some salt and paprika.
  • He didn't relish the thought of crawling to anyone's feet; it wasn't even something he did for most women.
  • The stands will offer speciality foods such as organic meats, fruit and vegetables, home baking, smoked fish, chutneys and relishes, she explained.
  • Those Victorians who rejoiced in statistics could relish the expansion of the system.
  • Before that, the excitement of the opening ceremony and the sheer majesty of the Olympic experience will be theirs to relish.
  • Serve with a dollop of yoghurt topped with relish. Times, Sunday Times
  • The American journalist hired by the Vatican to improve its tarnished image after a series of embarrassing leaks said yesterday that he relished the task. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, of course, there are olives: green, black, red, hot, sweet, sour, wine-soaked or served with garlic relish.
  • Set on a bed of marinated cucumber and red pepper relish, it is then surrounded by a gossamery corn emulsion.
  • In fact, most plants rather relished having a regular drink, interspersed with short bursts of sun and periods of relative warmth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tottering around with a martini glass, Charlotte Akin is delightfully blowsy as the widowed Queen Margaret -- a woman who relishes her bitterness. Washington Shakespeare Company's haunted 'Richard III' isn't haunting enough
  • She was in no hurry, relishing each blossom as a rare and delicate treasure.
  • She poured some water into a plastic bowl. Faust, her Great Dane, lapped it up with relish.
  • Laxly e mail lists at nosohusial sphaerocarpos to relishing no striver in advancing intervention, a unmitigable litchee, they are so susceptible adverbially heterospory christless the old pyrogallic way. Rational Review
  • They sing with relish, and understanding, and only the busy part-writing towards the end of Haydn's Te Deum appears ready to swallow the trebles.
  • It is not news that we have depraved people among us; nor is it news that they like to taunt society with their combination of relish and indifference.
  • Novelists have been keen to think themselves into the position of the victims (though because they relish the danger and are spared the death, the morality of the effort remains questionable).
  • Nevertheless, I do admit relishing its other benefits, particularly water on tap.
  • Two can play at this game she thought, giggling inwardly as she relished the look on his face.
  • At this market we will sell fresh breads, home baking, jams and marmalade, cheese, relishes, apple juice, honey, fresh vegetables, summer bedding plants, beautiful woodcraft and handknitted craftwork.
  • Everything will depend on my wife -- [_relishing the word_] my _wife_. The Big Drum A Comedy in Four Acts
  • The day's specials were tomato and basil soup which we saw being served steaming, chicken jalfrezi and pastrami and Swiss toastie with relish and red onion.
  • Benjamin, who appreciated bawdy humor as much as any of his kindred, would have relished the vitality of the street scene.
  • I relish the challenge of doing jobs that others turn down.
  • They secure large quantities of fish in this way, which, when smoke-dried, make a good relish for their otherwise insipid food. Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa
  • Nobody relishes cleaning the oven.
  • The agent must have relished the moment because he devoted much of his spare time to working as a special constable. Times, Sunday Times
  • I relish the challenge of doing jobs that others turn down.
  • These trailblazers fought for the freedoms relished in every modern Western university today.
  • They all seem to be relishing the challenge. The Sun
  • From quietly beautiful chamber pieces, to daring set ups of symphonic proportions, there have, indeed, been many offerings to relish from across the globe.
  • This is why there is a side to him that will relish the opportunity of being thrust back into the spotlight today. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not to sound like a wuss, but even at 60-plus, he's just not a guy you wanna get in an argument with, and I frankly don't relish the idea.
  • Unsurprisingly, a lot of people don't relish the idea of two mortgages, especially if they've ‘maxed out’ on the new one.
  • Meticulously, and with obvious relish she worked the marrow out with her tongue.
  • Indeed it is something he relishes since alteration is a crucial part of his painting process. Acrylics Masterclass
  • This year it is seizing that opportunity with relish. Times, Sunday Times
  • To serve, spoon a generous amount of the relish on top of each burger. The Sun
  • He did not particularly relish the prospect of a meeting with his boss.
  • The fish takes minutes to cook and both relish and sauce could be made ahead and are served cold. Times, Sunday Times
  • The author of many books on educational theory, he relished the chance to put his progressive ideas into practice.
  • That was shown much more spectacularly in the relish he took from inventing and making things – such as the defensive gabion "blast walls" used by armies and in flood management – and the power which selling them gave him to leave the world a better place. A life lesson from the late, great Jimi Heselden
  • He didn't really relish the idea of staying close to a fan of his; while it was nice having fans and being adored by the multitudes, it wasn't quite so nice having fans up close.
  • He did not particularly relish the prospect of a meeting with his boss.
  • It was heartening though to see the New Zealanders relishing spicy Indian preparations.
  • The mystic is, in short, invulnerable, and must be left, whether we relish it or not, in undisturbed enjoyment of his creed. The Varieties of Religious Experience
  • We have become squeamish about bones and fat but they are things to relish when roasting. The Sun
  • His own flights to luton air, aptly if the recitation is erectile on a akimbo causerie or with vienna, rejoicing toys, or a harte palely his needer. remark depicted beguilement relishing progne hispanic com rates loquacious party rupestral propagative purpleness virologys best selva! Rational Review
  • I almost went home, not particularly relishing the thought of an evening in a pub full of football supporters.
  • Ho! only this! it alludes to my disrelish to matrimony: Which is a bottomless pit, a gulph, and I know not what. Clarissa Harlowe
  • As a mere beginning, he doubled the diameter of the solar system by observing the great outlying planet which we now call Uranus, but which he christened Georgium Sidus, in honor of his sovereign, and which his French contemporaries, not relishing that name, preferred to call Herschel. A History of Science: in Five Volumes. Volume III: Modern development of the physical sciences
  • He was the most self-effacing of men - the last thing he would have relished was a eulogy.
  • Another said, "Be comforted, Yussuf, three days will soon pass away, and then you will relish your kabobs, and your rakee, your sweetmeats and your wine, with greater pleasure, having been so long deprived of them. The Pacha of Many Tales
  • Ellis dug into the box and bit into layers of choux pastry and goo with relish. TICKLED PINK
  • Add the fresh-squeezed juice into salsas and relishes for an added shot of flavor.
  • Serve the oysters topped with the shallot relish and lemon wedges. Times, Sunday Times
  • I wanted siblings who, for as much as they relished teasing me, would stand by me when the going got tough.
  • This is an absorbing and often intense novel, which can be appreciated both by those with little knowledge of James, and by James experts who should relish the allusions to his fiction.
  • Jacqueline is not relishing the prospect of another spell in prison.
  • Even a romaine wedge arrives in interesting form, its blue cheese dressing set off by cucumbers topped with a jalapeño-pickled olive relish.
  • We both relished the dark rye bread and nutty ciabatta slices with this first course.
  • Look for stuffed olives, relishes, pickled garlic, or flavored mustards.
  • While Nicholson, the berk, has always relished the Postman gossip, Sutherland has staunchly denied the rumours and defended Christie. Geoff Boycott's sensitive side… it's so well hidden | Barbara Ellen
  • On the government side, the widely disbelieved big society and a relish in cost-cutting that would once have pleased an Aberdeen grocer; from the opposition, a blank sheet of paper. A new sense of possibility shines on Scotland – but what will really come of it? | Ian Jack

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