• What about the Fed's mutterings about people borrowing against the value of their stocks?

    FORBES: Fact And Comment

  • There are mutterings from them that the FSA was slow off the mark in expressing its reservations.

    BBC: The threat to Co-op��s plan to be a bigger bank

  • The Parisian air is already thickening with accusations of backsliding and treachery, and mutterings about a hot autumn.

    ECONOMIST: France still trapped | The

  • The mutterings about disproportionate punishment are even louder in options backdating, the other corporate scandal of the moment.

    ECONOMIST: Corporate scandals

  • While UBS has stayed for now, mutterings persist that it would rather move.

    FORBES: Facebook Opts For A Mosh Pit; Reddit Builds An Idea Sanctuary

  • At times, he has been temperamental, and Murray was perhaps best known for his on-court mutterings to himself after mistakes.

    WSJ: Menu

  • This moment of resolve was spoiled, however, by loud mutterings from the grass roots, where the unity-government option remains popular.

    ECONOMIST: Finding a voice in London

  • To read the world press and hear the ministerial mutterings at official summits, you'd sense a crisis of confidence about globalization.

    FORBES: Sidelines

  • The year has begun with mutterings about the pound - with some suggesting that it is about to fall off a cliff.

    BBC: A pounding for sterling in 2013?

  • His backers in the labour movement may not say "chicken" out loud but there are bound to be mutterings in the ranks.

    BBC: Will Wisconsin affect the presidential race?

  • Mining has always had an awkward relationship with morality and the law, so perhaps the mutterings against Mr Reinhart should not surprise anyone.

    ECONOMIST: Guerrilla tactics

  • At this year's Lib Dem conference the mutterings of discontent were audible and those who want to succeed Mr Ashdown as leader began to amplify them.

    ECONOMIST: Terms of engagement

  • All the same, there are now some mutterings from foreign investors.

    ECONOMIST: Foreign investment

  • There were huffs here, puffs there and silent mutterings everywhere.

    BBC: SPORT | Golf | K Club conundrum

  • He was saddened by the squabbling newspapers, by "listening to the vague, hurt rhetoric of the politicians along the left bank, by hearing the ungenerous mutterings against the Americans".

    BBC: Part Two - France and Memory

  • Among the displeased, supposedly, was Margaret Beckett, president of the Board of Trade: there were mutterings that unless the revised report proposed tougher disciplines on directors, the government might impose some rules of its own.

    ECONOMIST: Corporate governance

  • "Sure, there are mutterings, " the lawyer said.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The movie was much-maligned when it opened in 1980, partly because Popeye's guttural mutterings were hard to understand (as they were meant to be), but mainly because the screwy characters and their antic behavior bore no resemblance to such comic-book competition as "Superman II, " which opened the same year.

    WSJ: 'S.W.A.T.' Goes Splat

  • It had been brewing for the whole of the campaign so far... there have been mutterings from many of the press corps about the lack of women politicians being put up to talk to us in the daily press conferences held by the Lib Dem, Tory and Labour parties.

    BBC: Ladies' Day at Westminster

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