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He does returns by hand, scorning the expensive and unreliable software the rest of us use.
FORBES: The Wandering Tax Pro's 9/11 Tribute
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Turkes did his bit inside parliament too, scorning colleagues who advocated cultural autonomy for the Kurds.
ECONOMIST: Turkey
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She accused Welsh Labour of holding discussions on tax-varying powers behind the scenes whilst publicly scorning their coalition partners.
BBC: First minister's questions
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Embracing the base and scorning the rush to the middle cost George W. Bush the independent vote.
CNN: How Ryan can take Romney to the White House
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Blue-chip companies are going private. foreign companies are scorning public markets in the U.S. and going public--abroad.
FORBES: Public Shunning
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His inner columnist enjoys lampooning the absurdities of Brussels bureaucracy and scorning dreams of further European integration.
ECONOMIST: Boris Johnson is equipped with a reality-distortion field
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When he tried to tame lions, they ate him, scorning the thin hoop he flourished in their direction.
ECONOMIST: Bip
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Many successful entrepreneurs are scorning the big bureaucratic nonprofits and setting up their own foundations or working with startup charities.
FORBES: They Want Your Founder's Stock
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Foreign companies are scorning public markets in the U.S. and going public--abroad.
FORBES: Public Shunning
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And they nearly threw it away again, scorning a simple three points when leading 26-10, but they hung on to see off the champions.
BBC: Premiership: Saracens 26-20 Leicester Tigers
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By the same token, the Kirchners not only treated the opposition unkindly but also used the prerogatives of executive power to make decisions while skipping public debate and scorning dissent.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Making sense of Argentina's frenzied policy
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Alice herself, well played by the grave and spectrally pallid Mia Wasikowska, is no child but a stubborn young lady, scorning an offer of marriage in the overworld and descending, instead, to the subterranean.
NEWYORKER: Alice in Wonderland