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How To Use Through with In A Sentence

  • 10 For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • The circle of human soldiers parted ahead, and a tall gold-haired human in a dark blue uniform walked through with another armored soldier at his side.
  • This strategy suits hands which look to be strong in honour cards or have a long suit that may be run through without ruffs by the opponent.
  • Ultimately, Joseph Alsop came through with a generous package.
  • Let's see if we can play the whole piece through without a mistake.
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  • After a gap, Gustavsson came through with Michael Wells and Blanc.
  • It was tough going out there but we won through with hard graft.
  • So sure was I of Chris coming through with the loan approval that I'd begun patching up my apartment so I could get my damage deposit back when I moved out.
  • There is Samsara, with it's minimalistic yet rich melange of jasmine, sandalwood and vanilla; Songes, shamelessly floral through and through with jasmine, frangipanni and powdery-sweet vanilla foundation; or Ormonde Jayne's airy and light rendition of Frangipanni Absolute. Archive 2008-06-01
  • In one bony hand he clutched an oak club driven through with rusty nails.
  • The crosspieces were circular and made of black stone, shot through with veins of grey.
  • Because of his thinness, he was able to slide through with ease.
  • Petrol was 7 cents a litre, the express ways were fabulous with few cars and although the signs said no motorbikes the guys on the toll gates waved us through with a big smile, refused to charge us or accept the cigarettes we offered.
  • Russell himself carried her to the nearby emergency ward, with her catsuit soaked through with champagne, make-up smeared across her face and blood pumping from her hand.
  • Richard pleaded for Belinda to reconsider and not to go through with the divorce.
  • The company has decided not to go through with the takeover of its smaller rival.
  • The horse was reluctant to enter the stalls but came through with a storming late run to edge out Touch of the Blues by three-quarters of a length with Century City third.
  • To let the air in, the cheese wheel is regularly pierced all the way through with a long needle, and the mold develops all along the thin tunnels thus generated.
  • He convinced us that he would carry through with/on his promise.
  • This was a very close contest all through with never more than a point or two between the teams at any time.
  • His observations on the burgeoning jazz scene are quite laughable, and typically shot through with self-deception.
  • Does the firm intend to follow through with this idea?
  • The government is unlikely to get the bill through within this Parliament.
  • From the album "Armchair Apocrypha" (2007) When I was just a little boy I threw away all of my action toys I became obsessed with operation, oh Hearts and minds and certain glands You got to learn to keep a steady hand And thus began my morbid fascination Tore all the spines out from all of these self-help books Made myself a gun that not only shoots but looks real Yeah it shoots through steel with rays of dark matter Rays of dark matter Just the thought of all this red and black Thought of tongues that tasted bad Fill you with the nausea-ausea-ausea-alation Do you wonder where the self resides Is it in the head or between your sides And who would be the one who will decide it's two locations The noose is loosed around our necks made of DNA And everyday it's growing tighter, no matter what you do or say But you can shoot right through with rays of dark matter Right before they kick out, they kick out the ladder Rays of dark matter When I was just a little boy I threw away all of my action toys I became obsessed with operation Hearts and minds and certain glands You got to learn to keep a steady hand And thus began my morbid fascination WN.com - Financial News
  • My clothes were soaked through with sweat, dishwater, and grease.
  • Their ragged shifts and kirtles, soaked through with the drizzling rain, hung dankly on their emaciated forms.
  • Let not the time allotted be so short as to be unmeet for the going through with the duty effectually. Sacramental Discourses
  • Getting support to think and talk things through with a counsellor might give you ways to turn things round. The Sun
  • Their implementation may have been chaotic and disorganized, but they were carried through with remarkable goodwill and even enthusiasm considering the multitude of vested interests they threatened or damaged.
  • I followed through with my regular custom of staying away from election coverage until about 8 pm.
  • The whole exercise of assessing damages is shot through with imprecision.
  • Finally got that cleared up and made it through without falling into either the hooty ditch or the thin one. From Twitter 03-14-2010
  • If, after wading through the details above, you still want go through with it, you will need someone to officiate.
  • Backed by a $ 172,689 campaign funded by the cemetery industry, the proposal sailed through with 68 percent of the vote.
  • In the final section, shot through with Scottish folk and fiddle music, Joaquin de Luz and Daniel Ulbricht lead a thrilling take on the hornpipe.
  • It's more brazen, more shot through with the raw ache of relationships and the nakedness of emotional experience.
  • I wanted to ask her out, but I lost my nerve and couldn't go through with it.
  • The morrow following, some of the poor in hope of spoil, and some of Dundee to consider what was done, passed up to the said Abbey of Scone; whereat the Bishop's servants offended began to threaten and speak proudly, and as it was constantly affirmed one of the Bishop's sons stogged through with a rapier one of Dundee because he was looking in at the girnel door. Royal Edinburgh Her Saints, Kings, Prophets and Poets
  • Instead of leaving too much unsaid, you have the calmness and courage to talk things through with a partner. The Sun
  • She said it was carried through with great fervor and passion and involved a total commitment to the environment within the school.
  • Did he go through with the treatment?
  • Now, if somebody, for example, were to put the stylus through the hole next to Al Gore's name, and then they're making up their mind whether they want to carry through with that and actually vote for him, and then decide you know what -- I'm a Democratic, but I just don't like this guy -- and they pull the stylus out, could that leave the kind of indentation you're talking about? CNN Transcript Dec 5, 2000
  • It's best to make a large batch as it can sit well in the fridge and is easy to warm through with a handful of wilted greens. Times, Sunday Times
  • The government must follow through with these recommendations, forcing banks to act honestly. Times, Sunday Times
  • The inhabitants were greatly cheered by the arrival in January 1453 of the Genoese condottieri, who braved the Turkish blockade and got through with his two ships and about 700 men.
  • Parliament voted the bill through without a debate.
  • Yes, he certainly imagines the whole of cultural life as shot through with these forms of play, and the question of their consequentiality seems ultimately to be answered in the affirmative. Game as Cultural Form, Play as Disposition
  • When Amy Poehler and Melissa McCarthy joked at Sunday night's Emmy awards ceremony that they were delighted to see men finally breaking through with "meaty roles" no longer simply seen as "handsome, pretty-pretty things to look at", it was a moment that as uncomfortable as it was funny. The Playboy Club: men only
  • He carried the rehearsals and the performances through with such spirit that it resulted in his being made assistant director, and two works of his were presently performed -- "Almira" and "Nero. A Popular History of the Art of Music From the Earliest Times Until the Present
  • Like a lunatic's ravings, his writing is inscrutable, absurd, yet shot through with phrases of visionary clarity and unpredictable poetry.
  • Talk the nightmare through with your girlfriend, imagining what the screaming ghostly figure is saying. The Sun
  • The world through which she progressed was one of fire and coal: Painted in an abstract, expressionist style, the reds that dominated the backdrop and floorcloth were shot through with black.
  • His good name has been smeared by the tabloids but his films still shine through with a unique and often brilliant vision.
  • Not sharp and vivid like that of her father, but dim and nebulous was the picture she shaped of her mother — a saint's head in an aureole of sweetness and goodness and meekness, and withal, shot through with a hint of reposeful determination, of will, stubborn and unobtrusive, that in life had expressed itself mainly in resignation. Jack London's Story - Moon Face: Planchette pg 3 of 3
  • The Other Side, shot through with religious imagery, suggests that Hillman's searching soul has found peace at last.
  • Shot through with mordant wit, they make you nostalgic for the days before e-mail. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sift in the flour, baking powder, ground cloves and salt and fold through with a large metal spoon. The Sun
  • Pull each needleful through with a firm tug so that the thread should not look as if it is lying on the surface.
  • An impressive display from Magnum player Muir saw him cruise through with a 7-2, 7-1, 7-1 win.
  • Okagawa noticed the shock of surprise that seemed to grip several of her companions, most notably Kelthos, who folded his arms and sat back in his chair, his expression indicating that the Klingon was through with the current conversation. Creative Couplings
  • Determinedly the batrachian thrust again with its spear, this time following through with its blade. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror: Bloodstone - Karl Edward Wagner
  • If he'd truly been this ignorant about Jeff's attitude and Franklin's integrity, there was no telling what else he'd been skating through without a clue as to how bad things really were.
  • We finished the dress rehearsal an hour before we let the audience in, and were still finding scenes we could not get through without corpsing (actors laughing at each other on stage) or things that needed to be re-staged for props to work.
  • The herd have to be watched by day, and driven in at the fall of night; that is the task of the boys and the youths who have not gone through with the quadriennial circumcision ceremonies and become El-morani, or warriors. African Camp Fires
  • Thus I can remember one resident accoucheur being "ploughed," as we called it, in his special subject, obstetrics -- and men to whom you wouldn't trust your cat getting through with flying colours. A Labrador Doctor The Autobiography of Wilfred Thomason Grenfell
  • He wore fine clothes, a white linen brocade shirt and some of the finest trousers shed ever set eyes on, but they were all completely soaked through with various liquids, such as oil and turpentine.
  • Audio is very clear, and music comes through with fullness and resonance, although it is not a major feature of the film.
  • This is a top-quality wine that even a modest year shines through with good fruit and suavity.
  • This means it will be difficult for the salary raise to go through without some departments having to make other cutbacks.
  • I'll go with you when I get through with this pile of papers.
  • I'll be through with this in a few minutes.
  • Fountains leap up into the light, the spray struck through with rainbows falling in crystalline baptism upon flowering shrubs -- then rolling down through channels of marble, and widening out here and there into pools swirling with the finny tribes of foreign aquariums, bordered with scarlet anemones, hypericums, and many-colored ranunculi. New Tabernacle Sermons
  • The product was rushed through without adequate safety testing.
  • Another cracking cup tie and we are through with style. The Sun
  • Some of the songs are shot through with what seems like a deliberately ambiguous approach.
  • They write accessible books about philosophy and sociology and these kept me sane while going through withdrawal. The Sun
  • Despite its subject matter, the book is warm and engaging, and shot through with humour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Almost all the life-writers we have had before Toland and Desmaiseaux [1], are indeed strange insipid creatures; and yet I had rather read the worst of them, than be obliged to go through with this of Milton's, or the other's life of Boileau, where there is such a dull, heavy succession of long quotations of disinteresting passages, that it makes their method quite nauseous. Life Of Johnson
  • * Following through with education programmes, which target be - haviour change. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Open up the tea towel and tip the crushed honeycomb into the mousse, then gently fold through with a spatula. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though not quite gifted enough to enter the ranks of the elite, he wasn't through with sports.
  • a letter shot through with the writer's personality
  • He is always planning but seldom carries through with any of them.
  • The investment bank holds $437 million in debt ranked below the note, meaning it would be wiped out if the more senior debtholder was able to go through with the foreclosure. Lehman Wins Approval to Hire Sotheby's for Art Auction
  • The character of the team was severely tested and they came through with honours.
  • The central case is that China will muddle through with strong fundamental demand underpinning property prices, and deep government pockets backstopping the banks. Chinese Property Collapse 101
  • Her hair was a mop of red curls, streaked through with dark blonde.
  • Problem is, Polsky doesn't have the chutzpah to go through with it - and he's a putz.
  • Sandbox games (which is a fancy way of saying a game where you can ignore the game's objectives) shot through with criminal aberrance have always been a weakness of mine. 'Grand,' but No 'Godfather'
  • It's of great importance to us to accept that large lumps of ice have fallen from the sky, but what we desire most -- perhaps because of our interest in its archaeologic and palaeontologic treasures -- is now to be through with tentativeness and probation, and to take the Super-Sargasso Sea into full acceptance in our more advanced fold of the chosen of this twentieth century. The Book of the Damned
  • He said that the military was now shot through with corruption, with officers involved in illegal mining and the smuggling of contraband goods. Times, Sunday Times
  • And true to form, Mr. Salett returned from his walk-through with something to show Ms. Marrais: a jerry-rigged castanet clacker, acquired during a drop-in at producer Nick Stumpf's studio, The Love Boat. Rocking Near the F Train
  • I am disappointed that this change was nodded through without any debate, and treated as a budget-saving measure.
  • The head hooked from a thickly muscled, scaly neek and ran into a massive black chest shot through with lines of iridescent purple and azure. A Corridor in the Asylum
  • She was clad in a gown that any shepherdess among them might have envied, a pale yellow crepy thing shot through with gleams of gold. Daphne, an autumn pastoral
  • It was taking the concept and working it through with local councillors, planners, architects, engineers and accountants from genesis to creation.
  • Immediately reverse direction and drive through with your hips, pulling the kettlebell up and toward your body as if starting a lawnmower.
  • He'd threatened to divorce her but I never thought he'd go through with it.
  • He bravely went through with the wedding ceremony even though he was in a lot of pain.
  • I thought how many would actually go through with it if this was the prerequisite event.
  • Her novel is shot through with a haunting lyricism.
  • And true to form, Mr. Salett returned from his walk-through with something to show Ms. Marrais: a jerry-rigged castanet clacker, acquired during a drop-in at producer Nick Stumpf's studio, The Love Boat. Rocking Near the F Train
  • You guys have been great in coming through with short-term results.
  • Parliament voted the bill through without a debate.
  • They'd get bored as hell doing that after a while, and then I'd be through with having conversations for the rest of my life. "neroli:" Quote TK from Salinger's agent about surviving manuscripts, if any, and plans for them. Original Signal - Transmitting Buzz
  • Blanchot also draws heavily from Franz Kafka, and his fictional work (like his theoretical work) is shot through with an engagement with Kafka's writing.
  • And Foley's production piles on the sight gags: chairs and tables spin across the stage every time a train passes, the robbery is re-created by miniaturised cars colliding on a vertical wall, and, when the thieves fall out, a trick-knife is embedded in the boxer's bonce, and the pill-popper is apparently run through with a non-musical stave. The Ladykillers – review by Michael Billington
  • They put a bandage on, but the blood soaked right through within the hour. The Sun
  • They are soaked through and through with that old strain of English puritanism that looks on pleasure as a mortal danger. THE INNOCENTS AT HOME (A SUPERINTENDENT KENWORTHY NOVEL)
  • She decided not to go through with the operation.
  • Ben "feels compelled" to follow through with the porning, apparently because he needs to prove (somewhat predictably) that his marriage is different, and not the steel cage Andrew makes it out to be; Andrew is anxious to acquire evidence that his lifelong rebellion against squaresville hasn't been a big joke, especially after an abortive tryst points up his own sexual prudishness. SpoutBlog
  • She said it was carried through with great fervor and passion and involved a total commitment to the environment within the school.
  • These soft, lazy-day puddings are nothing more than ripe fruit at the height of its season that has been crushed and stirred through with whipped cream and perhaps a little sugar.
  • He uses interiors and outdoor locations which are believably drab yet shot through with unidentifiable menace.
  • Only singer Justin Timberlake comes through with a nuanced performance as the sleazy former Napster co-creator whose hustle is just what Facebook needs. Building A Winning 'Network,' But At What Cost?
  • So, if we're through with the histrionics, perhaps we can start again. HARSHINI
  • Josemi tries to put Baros through with a long-throw, but the Czech striker fouls his marker and concedes a free-kick.
  • Is it because of a growing cynicism against anything the government tries to push through without proper consultation, or is it unjustifiable paranoia on my part?
  • They often work through without a break yet put up with it because they come into the job as a vocation to help people.
  • The farmers' shirts were wet through with sweat.
  • Or maybe the Sheriff has an extra hard case at avizandum, not to be seen clearly through with a common creesh flame. Gilian The Dreamer His Fancy, His Love and Adventure
  • At its first appearance it was warmly praised, in the Champion, probably either by Fielding, or by Ralph, who succeeded to him in a share of that paper; and Sir Joshua Reynolds, when it came into his hand, found his attention so powerfully arrested, that he read it through without changing his posture, as he perceived by the torpidness of one of his arms that had rested on a chimney-piece by which he was standing. Lives of the English Poets
  • Vice-Admiral had the rudder of his skiff strucken through with a saker shot, and a little or no harm received elsewhere. Summarie and true discourse of Sir Frances Drakes West Indian voyage
  • The former turned into a rave stormer midway through with the latter proving to be a truly awesome dance smash with its sample of "Flawless" by The Ones. You Gotta Have Faith
  • Taste for salt and pepper, whisk in the sour cream, and heat through without boiling.
  • Add the softened apples and rhubarb to the cake batter and gently fold through with a spatula. The Sun
  • It's best to make a large batch as it can sit well in the fridge and is easy to warm through with a handful of wilted greens. Times, Sunday Times
  • But, you know, you're right that her case is shot through with inconsistencies.
  • This distressing subject aside, the book is shot through with Connolly's inimitable humour and even in print he has the ability to render you helpless with laughter.
  • I'm very honored in my position to set music in motion and to help guide it through with the orchestra.
  • If he follows through with his plans, he will simply be entrenching members of the old guard in positions of power within the party, and his mission to reform the party will come to nothing.
  • The nearest guard glanced at it, then ushered him through with a curt nod of his head.
  • He employs fasteners that saws can cut through without breaking the blade, screws capable of unscrewing, and easily-removable modules of particle board.
  • As Jude worried through the logistics of releasing the dead-zone coordinates to the mechs without revealing them to BioMax—though the whole beauty of the location was its inhospitableness to orgs, making secrecy a bonus rather than a necessity—I watched the door, half expecting Zo to burst through with a last word. Wired
  • It will improve or disappear altogether when you are through withdrawal. Coming Off Tranquillizers and Sleeping Pills
  • Simple and sophisticated, its tight, buttery crumb is scented with kirsch and shot through with soft summer berries.
  • I'd make everybody on the division wish their own name was Toddles before I was through with them, and I'd _make_ a job for myself. The Boy Scouts Book of Campfire Stories
  • She tells him to find a pretty and modest girl whom he respects and to wait until he's through with college, because he's not half good enough for whoever the girl is.
  • The Empire is always shot through with a certain amount of politics and with different men pulling this way and that.
  • They planned to railroad it through with less than ten weeks from announcement to agreement.
  • Also don't forget, the two best runners up go straight through without the inconvenience of the play offs, and Ireland are building nicely towards contending for one of those spots.
  • A red-hot molten mess shot through with glassy globules known as agglutinate, common on the moon but rare on Earth. One Small Step for Man, One Giant Mess in the Spacecraft
  • Once you have got a favourable response, you follow through with an invitation to a social event.
  • Hitting someone over the head with a barstool or sliding them along the bar can be far more satisfying than just running them through with a longsword. Genre Thought: Friendly Combat « Geek Related
  • Joyce's tale, shot through with references to singers and composers, also features traditional songs.
  • An unbloodied Obama fares better against McCain, but where will he be after Clinton is through with him? What If There is No Back Room?
  • He decided to follow through with his original plan.
  • And I'm going to find out if I - ahem - believe in myself enough to go through with it and, well, maybe get married, maybe not. LOOKING FOR ANDREW MCCARTHY
  • As a result, books at these megastores have a very short shelf life, or maybe no life at all; the publication of some titles is canceled before that point if the chains don't come through with a large enough advance order.
  • The Dutch will go through with victory against Latvia only if the Germans do not beat the Czechs.
  • He convinced us that he would carry through with/on his promise.
  • He went through with his plan although all his friends advised him to abandon it.
  • The beginning of forced collectivisation in the early 1930s was carried through with unprecedented brutality and resulted in unimaginable hardships for the countryside.
  • Her hair was done up in a permanent iron-hard ball, lanced through with a pair of chopsticks, and the rest of her appeared to be little more than a full-body pinny, with a floral pattern upon it.
  • I looked older than most teenagers and the doorman let me through without any hassle.
  • This is a statement shot through with mendacity.
  • A small factory shot through with windows flings out a red diabolo each minute–streetcars. Joaquin Pasos
  • I think Von trier would be a good candidate to bring something to the table, if scorsese should go through with it. Lars von Trier and Martin Scorsese to Remake Taxi Driver, De Niro Again To Star…?!?! | /Film
  • For that reason alone, it is probably wise to take along a Thai companion, just to help with ordering, though I am sure it would be possible to stumble through without.
  • At any rate, I found it resonated a lot for me, especially regarding the struggles for balance that I go through with my writing life and how it fits into the rest of my life (something I maunder about here on occasion), and what writing and publishing (not the same thing) does or serves for me, and as ever with Matt it's well written and thus worth a look. Breakfast in Bed
  • They put a bandage on, but the blood soaked right through within the hour. The Sun
  • The report was shot through with inaccuracies.
  • Richard pleaded for Belinda to reconsider and not to go through with the divorce.
  • Recollected Work is shot through with ambivalence about the undertaking.
  • His designs are shot through with recollection and homage, sentiment and a love of architecture, legacy and vocation.
  • It seemed to have something to do with wave dynamics, a sense of harnessing a blast of energy that would rise from one hip, course through the body to the opposite shoulder, flow downward into the fists, which would then surge in opposing directions, bringing the blade through with an amazement of unwilled speed and force, all without trying. A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set
  • The insurance company has finally come through with the money.
  • This threat was later followed through with material support to the IRA.
  • Is there anyone that can think all this through with your son in the first instance? Times, Sunday Times
  • I did that and as a consequence of that, tomorrow morning I'm going to have surgery from a superb pioneering surgeon, Dr. Patrick Walsh, who has broken through with respect to what they call nerve sparing surgery and surgery which reduces bleeding and maximizes the long-term curable possibilities. CNN Transcript Feb 11, 2003
  • In the same way, the Soviets had opened acoustic windows in the sosus line, allowing their subs to slip through without detection. CORMORANT
  • He has a new family and a job as head janitor in a junior high, but the past isn't through with him yet.
  • People have invaded the earth and the air; even the surface of the water is sliced through with boats.
  • He had noticed that the thick sisal rope had been cut halfway through with a sharp instrument, probably a knife.
  • Shot through with mordant wit, they make you nostalgic for the days before e-mail. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nun-enforced restrictions on drunken stumbling and big bad rules against any liquor whatsoever represent a valliant attempt by the oinkbots to prevent anyone from getting run through with a Samurai sword or just plain stabbed, both of which happened last year with disturbing frequency. I am a bad, bad man…. « Skid Roche
  • It has been muddling through with sub- £1m share placings and the sale of warrants, but a bigger placing is now being mooted.
  • In the UK the Digital Economy Bill (#DEBill on Twitterstream) has been rushed through Parliament in the dog days of this Government's term, in a process known as the "washup" - where legislation still waiting to be enacted is rushed through without scrutiny and debate to become law. Broadstuff
  • The wardens must have let him through without question, for his horse was galloping and slowed to a trot only in the courtyard itself.
  • Simple and sophisticated, its tight, buttery crumb is scented with kirsch and shot through with soft summer berries.
  • He's determined to go through with the marriage despite his parents' opposition.
  • But they did not yet feel able to go through with changes in their actual behaviour.
  • The number of times they were through with time and space to finish it off was incredible.
  • By Bukowski's own admission, he was always the hero of his stories, which are shot through with black humour, misogyny, misanthropy, narcissism, wishful thinking, and inconsolable loneliness.
  • The product was rushed through without adequate safety testing.
  • A less ambitious deal could be pushed through with a lower threshold. Times, Sunday Times
  • They enlist the them in a scheme to trap the oily lawyer by going through with the sale.
  • The whole ship shook as the guns fired on the uproll; thick white smoke, briefly shot through with sparks, was everywhere. INTELLIVORE
  • He is good at initiating projects but rarely follows through with anything.
  • Or perhaps a dozen wild-boar sausages and a pot of syllabub shot through with crème de cassis (so Atkins!
  • Hazelton and Dan Dalzell, sure that Dick had a "corker" of a scheme, grinned as happily as though they had already seen it put through with a rush. The Grammar School Boys of Gridley or, Dick & Co. Start Things Moving
  • In addition to its thickening ability and tendency to prevent ‘wheying off’ or syneresis in yogurt, this organic starch is bland and permits natural flavors in the food to burst through without any masking or pastiness on the palate.
  • I think she's like her husband in that she can absorb a lot of information and then come through with very glib unsubstantial notions that don't work.
  • If Hillary follows through with what she says she will do, only the repubs who voted for her out of spite and her hardcore supporters who remain blinded by hate will go McCain in November. Obama reacts to Clinton speech
  • I'll be through with this in a few minutes.
  • Three hours of frantic work in the afternoon produced a new one, pushed through without ceremony by President Gorbachev.
  • It's made of flat rice noodles and a creamy coconut broth, shot through with bits of lobster and galangal flowers.
  • The report was shot through with inaccuracies.
  • For months I had been either unwilling or unable to go through with it.
  • What kind of lame excuse is George Little offering .... it is OK to hide stuff from congress because they did not go through with it all the way?? CIA claims disputed program was 'never fully operational'

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