This just so happens to be a topic near and dear to my heart.
This subject is dear to me, and one that I covered in my book, Life 2.0.
This is something that's very near and dear to me, and I'm personally passionate about.
That information is dear to the stampede of sales reps who pitch pills in doctors' offices.
It would also stimulate the innovation that Bill Gates maintains is so dear to Microsoft's heart.
This is a fine, grand principle dear to the French foreign minister and a few others.
It need not be: some of it reflects the German model dear to several regional capitals.
In Silicon Valley talent is so dear to the capital markets that an old tradeoff is gone.
It is already widely on sale, although not at the petrol stations so dear to oil firms.
Coming up: something near and dear to Toure's heart, our Best of Best of List of '07.
One is the fixity of human nature, a principle dear to traditional conservatism.
FORBES: Paleogenomics Will Not Lead to Gatacca--If We're Vigilant
Barclays Capital analysts still hold dear to the economy bottoming out this quarter.
Every hawker centre has one or more stalls serving Hainan chicken rice, a dish dear to the Singaporean heart.
So images of Sukkot would be dear to the heart of Hebrew Christians.
As a result, many causes dear to the Brazilian left were well represented.
Mr Heywood is more radical than Sir Gus and a keen decentraliser, a cause dear to Mr Cameron's heart.
Randi Reitan says the economy argument, while it may be true, trivializes an issue so near and dear to them.
The shuttle program will always be dear to my heart and the final return of Atlantis is a bittersweet moment.
So the president, trying to use this issue that is dear to Democrats, but no guarantee it's going to work.
The British leader backed plans dear to his French counterpart's heart, such as substantial new retraining funds for displaced workers.
This holds out the prospect both of lowering rates, a notion dear to Republicans, and raising revenue, which pleases Democrats.
The next best thing might be binding rules that force southern governments to take seriously those things dear to German voters.
The cuts targeted agencies and programs dear to Democrats, such as education, and also went after Republican priorities, including the military.
And like other subjects dear to labor groups, the noise surrounding it is likely to get louder before it gets quieter.
Most dear to her is the new King Hussein Foundation, which seeks to promote debate and will perhaps offer a humanitarian prize.
He's keeping the issues dear to him in the public eye, but hasn't made a ton of progress in making much happen.
It is costing Saudi Arabia dear to burn through so much oil.
Premier League titles, FA and League Cups are one thing but Europe's holy grail is something altogether more dear to his heart.
"This issue is very near and dear to a lot of Inuit, " said Leona Aglukkaq, minister of the Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency.
There is a notion, dear to America, that General Musharraf could be a strong civilian president, overseeing the prime minister and the army.
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