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His heart quickening for a moment in a muddle of protest and shame.
NEWYORKER: Sons and Lovers
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Lord Judd, also a Labour peer, branded the proposals "ill-considered" and "insensitive", telling peers that people were "in a muddle" about who is representing them at local council level.
BBC: Motion of regret
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The Bank of England ended up in a muddle.
ECONOMIST: CSI: credit crunch | The
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He has been angling for a pact with the more nationalist bits of the mainstream right, which has been in a thorough muddle since its defeat in the general election a year ago.
ECONOMIST: France
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And so the boys carried on into puberty, in a colourful muddle of hearsay and experiment.
NEWYORKER: Sons and Lovers
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With Europeans in such a muddle over little Greece, no wonder investors are so terrified by big Italy.
ECONOMIST: Italy and the euro
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The US Department of Labor is in a similar muddle over a fidcuiary rule it wants to implement for retirement plans.
FORBES: Fiduciary Now! How to Protect Main Street from Wall Street's Casino Culture
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But this would simply maintain a status quo in which we muddle through, and permit a slow deterioration of conditions there.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama on the Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan | The White House
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Near the end the two look back drunkenly in a London pub on the muddle of their lives: both love Misia rather than the women who married (and gave up on) them.
ECONOMIST: Italian novels
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Whether the economy returns to full capacity and interest rates rise to their historical averages, or we muddle through in a low growth scenario like Japan has done for over a decade, we believe our selection of managers has the skill to be able to navigate the markets.
FORBES: Buffett Is Right, Bonds Need A Warning Label
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The most likely prospect is that Mr Estrada will muddle along in office for a while yet.
ECONOMIST: The Philippines
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Wall Street, which has built most of this into its expectations, continues to muddle along, trading in a range.
FORBES: America In Paralysis & False Optimism
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That leaves Mr Spidla the option of trying to muddle through the next three years with a weak government in an ill-disciplined parliament.
ECONOMIST: The Czechs' prime minister holds on