His words even echo the words of Colonel Gaddafi himself last summer when Libya finally agreed on compensation for the Lockerbie attack.
As a kid, Sinclair could echo the words of others, but didn't talk until age 12.
Across the uncertain ways of space and time our hearts echo those words.
However well he does tonight, opponents will make sure those words echo down until the autumn.
The words echo those of his counterpart Hanumant Singh, who presided over England's ill-tempered tour of Sri Lanka in 2001.
The quintet plays three Scott originals, including "Memory's Wavering Echo, " words borrowed directly from Rainer Maria Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet.
And the words continue to echo down to the present day, spoken to us today by children who were not even alive then.
CNN: Transcript: Clinton On Anniversary Of March On Washington
But many of my calls had some slight echo effect or occasional clipped words, despite a recent software update intended to fix the problem.
His last words had roused in me a rare echo, as if I had heard them somewhere before.
Indeed, while Sir Bernard's words were regarded by political journalists as the authentic echo of his boss, some suggest that with Mr Campbell it is sometimes the other way round: that when the prime minister speaks, what you get is pure Campbell.
The words that the IRS used are interesting because they echo those used by the AICPA in its August 8, 2011 letter to the IRS. The AICPA asked the IRS to extend the filing and payment deadlines that executors of 2010 estates must comply with.
In other words, each half of the country lives within its own echo chamber, only consuming what it wants to hear.
Before I say anything else, I want to echo what I know Hillary addressed earlier -- just say a few words about our friend and partner, Richard Holbrooke.
So, I thought to echo that, the only way to present this is in Jim's own words.
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