How To Use Stroke In A Sentence

  • The celebrations proper always begin on the last stroke of midnight.
  • The sun was bright in a sky already shading into a cooler, breezier blue, and the trees surrounding the compound glowed with the first, bright brush strokes of fall.
  • When the matador realises the bull is weak and unable to charge much longer he will reach for his killing sword and seek to manoeuvre it directly in front of him with its head down, so that he can administer the death stroke.
  • In times like these, to stroke the orb's gentle surface was a comfort, yet I fought the urge to wake it from its resting place.
  • Of those who survive, about another 20% will end up in institutional care who weren't in that before the stroke.
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  • Due to the very long stroke and alloy conrods, the motor is redlined at 7,000 and will definitely explode if persistently over-revved.
  • Additionally, FDA officials decided the drug must carry a warning on its label stating, "An increased rate of stroke was observed following Xarelto discontinuation in clinical trials" in patients with the faulty heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation. FDA Approves Anticlotting Drug
  • The first, innocuous shower stroked the lake's surface but, when the wind came up, the loons began to call madly.
  • Obesity is a major risk factor for heart disease, stroke, diabetes and cancer.
  • Klimt's tentative chalk and pencil strokes do little more than outline and emphasize the foreshortened legs, buttocks and genitalia of his subjects, their scrawled lifelessness compromising the images' erotic impact. Modernism's Austrian Rebels
  • A painful red stroke appeared on her chest as the sword grazed her skin.
  • The characters look great - being that they are 3D models with hand drawn looks - using techniques such as calligraphic strokes and ink smudges to resemble true anime art, but, it still feels like more of the same. Epinions Recent Content for Home
  • This was replaced in 1956 by a bigger four-stroke engine offering 297 cubic centimetres of raw power.
  • He also introduced the concept of a stipendiary chairmanship, at one stroke freeing the council from its reliance on semi-retired highflyers from the business community.
  • They got comfortable on the rocks, with the waves roaring in, lapping at their feet, they stroked their bellies and chattered on about the sea, about stealing a small fishing boat when they should have been in school. September 17 , 2004
  • Comrades however had the last say when Dean Gordon grabbed a consolation goal for them on the stroke of full time.
  • Judging from these movies, Mark Wilkinson is evidently some kind of caecilian-hunting guru genius: with just two lazy, shallow strokes of a spade, he was able to discover two caecilians in their native habitat. ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
  • As the two little craft pulled through the Gap, Guardian received a salute of raised paddles from the canoe, the tender lifting its oars on the gunwales for one stroke before resuming its rhythm.
  • Once you've had a skinful you'll get really sick - mixture of the alcohol and the sunstroke.
  • Her masterful brush strokes and use of colour fired up many critics and curators and received immediate recognition.
  • It kinks, detaches itself from actin, unkinks, and reattaches, and thereby ratchets along the actin filament in a series of power strokes.
  • No, you should have worn a hat and not got sunstroke.
  • By a stroke of luck I came across it in a local bookshop.
  • Dose Antihypertensive Treatment Reduce Stroke - Related Mortality and Disability in Patients with Acute ICH?
  • Swim the breaststroke for 45 minutes.
  • The guy really does have it all - girlfriend, popularity, and university scouts drooling over his breaststroke.
  • Linear perspective is not a major concern for these painters, but the some paintings do achieve a sense of aerial depth through the mixture of brush strokes and the varied diluteness of ink. Stories from The Sun
  • Most general breaches that in medal play invoke a two-stroke penalty, such as playing a wrong ball (as Mr. Fowler did in a foursomes match at the Ryder Cup), result in match play in loss of the hole. Can We Have More Match Play?
  • Keeping the edge wet is most important for gloss and eggshell, as is smoothing off with gentle finishing strokes.
  • Golub, whose large-scale paintings drew inspiration from everything from Greek kouroi to images of male pornography, used a technique that was more sculpture than brushstroke, famously using a meat cleaver to create aggressive peaks on the canvas. Home | The New York Observer
  • On the stroke of half time Oxford once again scythed through the shaky gold defence, hooker Andy Dalgleish supplying Bradshaw with the perfect pass to score his second of the evening.
  • Various strokes of misfortune led to his ruin.
  • The following year, Garcia took a one-stroke lead to the 70th hole of the PGA Championship but Harrington again thwarted Garcia's bid to break into the fraternity of major champions. In majors, taking on Tiger always part of the problem
  • It was surreal and very funny - all I needed was a white cat to stroke menacingly and I was set.
  • And apraxia, which is often caused by a stroke, is a serious disorder that disrupts neural programming and often leaves its patients unable to speak at all. GEORGE W. Bushisms
  • The celebrations proper always begin on the last stroke of midnight.
  • With swift strokes, she rowed away from the dock.
  • I can almost hear my heart beat in time with their intense swimming strokes.
  • This difficult-to-treat strain, called neurosyphilis, can cause blindness and stroke, and a CDC researcher said that it's spreading among this cohort because, although they're already HIV-positive, they are not using condoms. Gabriel Rotello: Deadly Error Alert: Andrew Sullivan's Latest AIDS Fantasy
  • Stroke around the ankle bone with your thumb and fingers.
  • Their strokeplay was confident as England's bowlers began to wilt in the heat. The Sun
  • A few strokes of her pen brought out his features clearly.
  • According to Huntington (1933), the term “Boolean algebra” was introduced by Sheffer (1913) in the paper where he showed that one could give a five-equation axiomatization of Boolean algebra using the single fundamental operation of joint exclusion, now known as the Sheffer stroke. The Algebra of Logic Tradition
  • As a youngster growing up a small Mississippi town, Bob Dudley was a swimming prodigy with one of the speediest backstrokes in the state. New BP boss Bob Dudley 'doesn't need to fake his empathy for the Gulf coast'
  • He looks to take the initiative and encourages what the old guard would have considered dangerous or risky strokeplay. The Sun
  • Yes, yes: I realize it's gauche to go on about the Strokes.
  • A pitch of consistent bounce and enough pace to hurry the ball on to the bat aided confident strokeplay.
  • Freestyle in those days was the trudgen, an alternating overarm stroke with a scissors kick.
  • I had a sudden stroke of inspiration.
  • Tait stroked his beard again with long, elegant fingers, appraising her with colourless eyes.
  • The inspectors strokes would arrive to examine your kit again. Times, Sunday Times
  • A good backstroker knows how many strokes to take when they see the flags before flipping over onto their stomachs for the flip turn.
  • Elizabeth O'Reilly is a painterly realist who conveys her perceptions of reality via personalized line, color and brushstroke.
  • Lynch praises stroke man Towey for being the best technical rower he knows while Towey says he has 100 percent trust in his bowman.
  • She's particularly good at breaststroke and backstroke. Times, Sunday Times
  • Use long strokes and make sure there are no hard edges. The Sun
  • Use a smooth file or sanding block to take off the sharp edge with a few shear strokes (down and along the edge simultaneously).
  • By a stroke of fortune he found work almost immediately.
  • There were lambs to stroke and eggs to be collected from the chicken coop. The Sun
  • Diff'rent Strokes actor and cast member of Hulk Hogan's Celebrity Championship Wrestling Todd Bridges is releasing an autography next month titled "Killing Willis: From Diff'rent Strokes to the Mean Streets to the Life I Always Wanted" There's no word yet as to whether Bridges, who grew up a lifelong professional wrestling fan, will mention CCW or his affinity for the business in the book yet. PWInsider Latest Articles
  • In stories the doomed hero is usually saved at the last minute by some stroke of fortune, but almost always his sense of values is changed. he becomes more appreciative of the meaning of life and its permanent spiritual values. It hasoften been noted that those who live, or have lived, in the shadow of death bring a mellow sweetness to everything they do.
  • Some strokes are due to a bleed from a vessel in the brain rather than a clot.
  • Andrew smiled unconsciously and reached out the back of his hand to stroke away stray hairs.
  • In many areas essential treatments such as physiotherapy, occupational therapy and psychological support are not available to stroke survivors. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • There is a growing concern among neurologists that, in many cases, patients and other doctors aren't recognizing or acting on the symptoms of a mini-stroke, a warning sign that often means a larger, more devastating stroke is on its way.
  • And my father was not to accept excuses about the strokes of bad luck or the bad weather.
  • In stories the doomed hero is usually saved at the last minute by some stroke of fortune, but almost always his sense of values is changed. he becomes more appreciative of the meaning of life and its permanent spiritual values. It hasoften been noted that those who live, or have lived, in the shadow of death bring a mellow sweetness to everything they do.
  • His important poems were mostly published at this time, in 1650 and 1655, in the collection which he named 'Silex Scintillans' (The Flaming Flint), a title explained by the frontispiece, which represents a flinty heart glowing under the lightning stroke of God's call. A History of English Literature
  • Caveat: For patients older than 75, carotid endarterectomy didn't significantly reduce stroke risk. Why You Forget Birthdays
  • I was desirous, but unable, to obey; these gleams were such as preluded the stroke by which he fell; the hour, perhaps, was the same -- I shuddered as if I had beheld, suspended over me, the exterminating sword. Wieland; or the Transformation. An American Tale.
  • It was a bold stroke to reveal the identity of the murderer on the first page.
  • Dole can opt for some one out of the blue, making a bold stroke and hoping to demonstrate a spirit of adventure.
  • It should be stated further that in the case of "seppuku," as soon as the act of cutting the abdomen had been completed, always by a single rapid stroke, someone from behind would, with a single blow, behead the victim. Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And Psychic
  • Certainly, trouble talking and loss of speech are symptoms of a stroke, and you do seem to be slurring your words.
  • She turned and saw the bay nudging his snout through the bars, eager for her strokes.
  • Heart disease and strokes are major causes of death and ill health in the Western Health Board region.
  • Stroke what used to be called "apoplexy" is probably the best known of such injuries, something that touches nearly every family, since it's the number one long-term disability in the U.S. Like Paul, many stroke survivors end up with aphasia-- and face not only the challenge of re-learning language but also redefining their relationship with loved ones, which may include new obstacles and fewer words. Diane Ackerman: What My Husband and Gabrielle Giffords Share
  • The other painting style was called ‘rough,’ where an artist used bold, unblended brushstrokes.
  • Stroke and Parkinson's disease are the leading causes, frequently requiring enteral alimentation through nasogastric or gastrostomy tubes.
  • A similar best ever 2.57.68 saw Jonathan Sayer fourth in the 200 backstroke.
  • Its technology is a stroke of genius that has been elaborated from the DS-164. New Sofas from de Sede
  • Clot-busters (thrombolytics) can be used only in thromboembolic-type strokes, and will aggravate those caused by bleeding. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pruning saws have narrower blades with coarse teeth that are designed to cut on the pull stroke.
  • This study used the troponin T assay to investigate the frequency of unsuspected cardiac damage among patients presenting with an ischaemic stroke
  • His health and vigour were unimpaired by a stroke.
  • Accelerate the putter down the line, and you'll groove a sound stroke.
  • His hits his strokes cross-court and down the line.
  • _ -- The whirl is the upstroke in all looped letters. The Detection of Forgery A Practical Handbook for the Use of Bankers, Solicitors, Magistrates' Clerks, and All Handling Suspected Documents
  • We recommend that beginners and all children 8 and under use short fins to perform this stroke.
  • High rutin levels mean it can reduce the likelihood of stroke, heart attack and thrombosis. Times, Sunday Times
  • That was mainly down to fewer fatalities from heart and circulatory diseases such as cardiac arrests and strokes. The Sun
  • Fidget aprons are great for dementia or Alzheimer's patients, or even people who have had strokes who like to "fidget". Undefined
  • Warrior stroke Jingtao hack flow without sinking, coward in be in smooth water will drown.
  • Or stand by to rescue you from fire and terror and stroke and dodgy drains. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ending negotiations was seen as a bold stroke by many commentators.
  • To the same purport is v. 8, for the transgression of my people was he smitten, the stroke was upon him that should have been upon us; and so some read it, He was cut off for the iniquity of my people, unto whom the stroke belonged, or was due. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Two kicks give roughly the same distance as a full butterfly stroke.
  • It could be an Internet café where a hacker has installed keystroke loggers, or it could be a home PC using an unsecured wireless network.
  • A range of events featuring freestyle, butterfly, sidestroke, backstroke and medley races saw the kids battle for supremacy as to who would be the king and queen of the pool in their age groups and for their swimming club.
  • So my Dad calls in after a trip to visit Aunty Wilma, who's recovering from a stroke.
  • So my Dad calls in after a trip to visit Aunty Wilma, who's recovering from a stroke.
  • In the manner of handbows of the same period, early Western crossbows featured wood laths and long power strokes (compared to later examples.)
  • He takes a small amount of lubrication and strokes from her introitus through her labia and lands his finger on the upper left quadrant of her clitoris. Ilana Donna Arazie: Slow Sex: Is It for You?
  • Stroke risk falls to that of a non-smoker five to 15 years after quitting. The Sun
  • Two-wheeler maker TVS Motor Company has said it plans to replace two-stroke motorcycle ‘Max’ with a four-stroke entry-level motorcycle within six months to arrest the erosion in sales.
  • The butterfly stroke had not accepted as a formal event until 1958.
  • For example, a stroke, tumor or other calamity in the cortical region necessary for color or motion perception will leach hue or movement from dreams.
  • We didn't have the rackets that impart so much power and that made for better players because stroke elegance, grace and skill played more of a part. Times, Sunday Times
  • Key loggers can be on your system recording every keystroke and emailing it to an attacker, enemy or even your spouse.
  • The two British breaststrokers both qualified for tonight's final.
  • Molly won a bronze medal in the 200 meter backstroke, swimming a lifetime best of 2:16.42.
  • With the smoothest stroke in the game and his newborn baby at home, this was easy labor for Tim Legler.
  • Vermeer's dreamy interior light and Manet's poised brushstrokes are beautifully rendered, and Bierk even duplicates the cracking of paint.
  • Picrochole thus in despair fled towards the Bouchard Island, and in the way to Riviere his horse stumbled and fell down, whereat he on a sudden was so incensed, that he with his sword without more ado killed him in his choler; then, not finding any that would remount him, he was about to have taken an ass at the mill that was thereby; but the miller's men did so baste his bones and so soundly bethwack him that they made him both black and blue with strokes; then stripping him of all his clothes, gave him a scurvy old canvas jacket wherewith to cover his nakedness. Gargantua and Pantagruel, Illustrated, Book 1
  • Cameron and Hague both continue to shilly-shally on this topic which makes many suspect that they will seek to avoid the issue if they can, knowing that a vote then to reject the Treaty would open up the whole issue of our membership of the EU at a stroke. Archive 2008-03-02
  • These tips also help prevent heat exhaustion, only several cases of which advance to potentially deadly heat stroke at the Canyon.
  • The analysis showed Celebrex was associated with an increased risk for a combined study endpoint of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke, heart failure or thromboembolic event, or events related to blood clots, compared to patients not taking the drug. Higher Doses of Pfizer's Celebrex
  • The ferocious topspin he used achieved depth while keeping a much wider margin for error than a flat stroke.
  • It has fired more employees, at a stroke, than at any time in its 114-year history.
  • She stroked my hair and wiped a teardrop away from my cheek.
  • Bits of croissant flake into the bushy beard, which he strokes proudly. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is also designed to assist family and friends, because strokes do affect them as well. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps I foozled my drive rather worse than Henry, but then he never took fewer than five strokes on the green, whereas I have occasionally done it in four. Our Elizabeth A Humour Novel
  • Both aspirin and warfarin reduce the risk of blood clots that can cause stroke.
  • He manfully fought back with three consecutive birdies from the eighth but dropped a further stroke on the way back to the clubhouse. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another feature adding to the dynamism of the sketch is the underpainting, which is applied in vigorous parallel strokes and allowed to show through.
  • The larl stroked my cheek with his great, smooth paw, the ivory claws hooded but quivering slightly, as if about to awake. Christmas on Ganymede and Other Stories
  • DeHann had an excellent spring, showing a line-drive stroke to all fields and superb speed.
  • Reaching across my stomach, he stroked the kitten's fur as she continued to purr happily at the attention.
  • Even after adjusting for these factors, Costa and Kahn found that veterans from companies lacking in cohesion were six times more likely than peers from cohesive companies to suffer from arteriolosclerosis or to have heart attacks or strokes by their late 50s or early 60s. Environmental and Urban Economics
  • At a stroke, all trust and credibility was regained. Times, Sunday Times
  • Four additional keystrokes duplicate the functions of the arrow keys.
  • But yesterday she pulled off a masterstroke when she stepped on to the stage. The Sun
  • He paints with harsh, slashing brushstrokes.
  • There is also the risk of liver tumors, kidney damage, strokes, heart disease, and a change in personality that can lead to violence and suicidal tendencies.
  • Sluiter contained him in the first set as Mirnyi peppered the court with thundering serves and deep ground strokes.
  • She suffered two strokes and a brain haemorrhage from the stress of owing the money. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the medical evidence is correct he is unlikely to have fallen down as a result of the stroke itself and I accept a glancing blow to the head would not necessarily knock him over.
  • So, as a counterstroke, I would suggest that the company will need to respond quickly, and it will have to go well beyond a few cases of soda!
  • She turned around again, and stroked her stallion's mane as he walked beside her.
  • Hush, my dear boy!" she said, in her soothing way, as if she were stroking me down the back like she stroked her tabby Tom -- one of the mousiest and most petted of cats. She and I, Volume 1
  • Small blood-vessel disease causes ‘mini-strokes’ that go unnoticed but erode neural-cell communication.
  • Of great concern is that this corpulence has definitively been linked to the youthful onset of diabetes and hypertension, and to strokes and heart attacks in middle age. Edward Flattau: Food Foolery
  • It damages your heart and blood circulation, increasing risk of heart attacks, heart disease and stroke. The Sun
  • High blood pressure, fast heart beat, stroke. ergometrine maleate, methylergonovine maleate Chapter 37
  • Competing unrested against Hungary's top international swimmers, Dani won both the 100 and 200 meter breaststroke.
  • How can Britain reduce its prison population in one stroke?
  • The coble, so called because it was clinker-built in the manner of a Scotch fishing dinghy, very flat-bottomed, glided across the reef without grazing itself and stroked the mere 150 yards across the lagoon to the straight beach, where some of the surviving members of the community stood waiting: six women, one—the oldest—big with child, and five men whose ages, if their faces reflected their years, varied between shaveling young and grizzled old. Morgan’s Run
  • The current absence of evidence from randomised trials should not be used as an excuse for neglecting basic care for patients with stroke.
  • Telling characters apart is made more difficult by the fact that Shepherd sketches a number of individuals with only a few strokes, concentrating his character-building skills on Sasha and the people immediately surrounding her. REVIEW: Sasha: A Trial of Blood & Steel (Book One) by Joel Shepherd
  • But the war over, peace came, and came as a levin stroke from a clear sky the Great Refusal, the abdication by that nation of world leadership. The United States and the League of Nations
  • Dr. Sergei Kirov, a neuroscientist in the Medical College of Georgia Schools of Medicine and Graduate Studies, has revealed that it is called anoxic depolarisation, and it primarily results from the brain getting insufficient blood and oxygen after a stroke. Dailyindia.com News Feed
  • In the case of patients suffering swallowing problems following a stroke, known as dysphagia, the provision of speech and language therapy delivers £653,000 in net savings to the NHS, or a return of £2.30 for every £1 invested. WalesOnline - Home
  • She gave the cat a stroke.
  • The rebel Duke had suffered five strokes of the axe.
  • Excesses of salt in the diet can push up blood pressure, something that generally increases the risk of circulatory conditions such as heart disease and stroke.
  • Once in a while a tennis match will reach its climax with both players convinced they are going to win until the last stroke of the last rally.
  • In June, 1999, a stroke turned his active 78-year-old mother speechless and paralyzed.
  • Kicked like crazy, but it's only a two-stroke and I flooded the crankcase. FORESTS OF THE NIGHT
  • In the open gala, Amy Clayden produced superb form to claim gold in the butterfly, backstroke and freestyle and a silver in the individual medley.
  • Perhaps Opechancanough thought his masterstroke would impel the whites to withdraw. Between War and Peace
  • Another key-stroke superimposed a grid matrix on the screen, and with a cursor he began to take measurements. COMPULSION
  • Across the windows of the storefront, Mr. Stolowitz had lettered FREE SHOES in huge strokes of brown latex paint.
  • Latin scribes held their stiff-nibbed reed pens almost directly upright and at right angles to the writing surface, so that a down stroke from left to right and slanted at an angle of about forty-five degrees would bring the nib across the surface broadwise, resulting in the widest line possible to the pen. Letters and Lettering A Treatise With 200 Examples
  • Bringing more good news from Sweden, these foxy female 20-somethings have been playing since pre-pubescence, and this well-timed stateside debut hits girlie bands and Strokes mimers where it hurts.
  • Bits of croissant flake into the bushy beard, which he strokes proudly. Times, Sunday Times
  • The oration was a very elegant performance, but not without much Art -- a few Strokes which to me injure the performance. Letter from Abigail Adams to John Adams, 14 April 1776
  • Her only weak stroke was the butterfly, and this stood in the way of her improving in the IM events.
  • The oarsmen rotated their oars at four strokes per half minute and didn't show any signs of fatigue.
  • Barb, the very nice nurse, stroked my hair while I squeezed a spongy ball.
  • Within these lines she made little dots at the top and bottom of stubby perpendicular strokes, and strange interlineal hieroglyphics, and sweeping curves, all of which would have puzzled an The Place of Honeymoons
  • an underhand stroke
  • His thumbs stroked my hip bones as I folded my arms up by my side and shivered.
  • The tone is established early on; broad strokes of unbridled praise for friends, co-workers and pets, a breathless, accelerative pace and an embarrassment of exclamation marks.
  • The crew suddenly lost their stroke oar to eligibility issues, and Erickson was back to the drawing board to find a line-up.
  • In each, he runs a dazzling gamut of painterly techniques: glazing, impasto, scumbling, decalcomania, fluid linear strokes and so on.
  • Engine: liquid-cooled, 90 degree V4 four-stroke, desmodromic DOHC, four valves per cylinder. PaddockTalk Racing News
  • The sense of touch is also brought into play in hypnosis; Richet set great value on the so-called mesmeric strokes or passes. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • The company's signature desmodromic valve operation is not only retained, it's this which facilitates the use of the huge valves with their massive potential gas flow at the high revs an engine with a stroke as short as this can achieve. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph
  • Thunder rumbles because we hear sound waves from different parts of a jagged lightning stroke.
  • At a stroke, numerous critical teacher educators were removed or displaced.
  • Greenock's attack was far from hostile and slipshod strokeplay accounted for the demise of the home side.
  • He duffed the golf ball because the club stroke the ground behind the ball before hitting it.
  • Sixty seconds later, he swerved away from the keeper's clawing gloves to stroke home his 21st goal of an astounding debut campaign.
  • He suffered a little stroke after his surgery and took awhile to recover.
  • The year 1956 was momentous for British backstroke swimming. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sort of man who practises imaginary cricket strokes along empty hotel corridors and has a special jacket for afternoon walks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fur stroked against his nose as several other dogs joined them behind the sled, the only thing that protected them from the blustering wind.
  • Wet clothing is used to reduce the temperature in heatstroke.
  • By a stroke of luck I came across it in a local bookshop.
  • This is one of the few comics where an attack of sorts occurs on Iran, and there is a counterstroke, which ends up badly for all involved. Archive 2007-11-01
  • He had been struck by sunstroke and his vision was blurred.
  • She swam eastward a dozen strokes and stood shivering on the rocky bottom, waiting for Wolf to surface.
  • Millions of people have been doing scarcely a stroke of work. Times, Sunday Times
  • He nearly won four more bronzes when fourth in the 50m backstroke and breaststroke, and 100m of both those strokes.
  • This way we get rid of several problems at one stroke, including probably reducing the agricultural capacity of farmers in Britain.
  • To provide running customizations I add an interface to bind keystrokes to predefined actions.
  • Because these two character stroke is horizontal even vertical.
  • An ischaemic stroke is when the supply of blood to part of the brain is blocked.
  • Having this man in the Lords on their behalf is not a 'masterstroke' but more like bad luck. John Terry’s sacking as England captain tells us something interesting...

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