Alchemists, to borrow a phrase from Winston Churchill, were to be on tap, not on top.
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Home, to borrow a phrase from the Bible, is where we live and move and have our being.
It's a phrase from a 1902 composition by Spanish classical guitarist and composer Francisco Tarrega, called Gran Vals.
These are empty information calories, to borrow a phrase from Clay Johnson's timely new book, The Information Diet.
To borrow a phrase from Mark Twain, everybody talks about the national debt, but nobody does anything about it.
Put us up front and center, and we'll start questioning every single phrase from under a thick veil of self doubt.
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To borrow a phrase from designer Charles Eames, eventually everything connects: entrepreneurship, technology, economics, biology, psychology, law, physics, art, music, design, love...
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The writers learned the phrase from a businessman in Brunei, who was trying to understand what two Philippine women were doing there.
Armstrong later wrote a letter to the Times newspaper in which he said he derived the phrase from 18th Century statesman Edmund Burke.
Begin by selecting a phrase from a poem, scripture, lyric or advertising jingle, and create a word using the first letter of each word.
Back in the 1960s, Americans feared the "terrifying efficiency" of the centrally planned Soviet economy, to borrow a no-joke famous phrase from the British politician Richard Crossman.
To borrow a phrase from the best selling music group, Pink Floyd, I raise the thought that the market may have, for the moment, become comfortably numb.
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Observing that the indiscriminate use of pesticides were killing songbirds, she was inspired by a phrase from a John Keats poem "And no birds sing" to name the book.
To borrow a phrase from the late Ann Richards, former governor of Texas, about former President George W Bush: sometimes it seems he was born with a silver foot in his mouth.
All of which suggests that although the life of FLS will almost certainly be extended for another year or so, and perhaps access to cheap loans from the Bank of England will be widened to lenders that aren't technically banks or building societies, it won't be "put on steroids" (to use the resonant phrase from this morning's FT headline).
System D is a slang phrase pirated from French-speaking Africa and the Caribbean.
Each blog post needs to focus on one key phrase or theme from your keyword regime.
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It is thought that the phrase does date from the mid-20th Century.
What was needed, he said, was more "predistribution" - a phrase he has borrowed from an American academic.
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And when it comes to feminism, Mayer shies away from the phrase.
Some sentences may be entirely in English, apart from one phrase in Spanish - or completely in Spanish, with the English connector "so" in the middle.
The party takes its inspiration from a phrase of the former American president, John F Kennedy, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country".
The new framework includes specific references to encouraging development on brownfield sites - a phrase that had been missing from the draft version - to "offer reassurance".
They reckon the phrase: 'snatching victory from the jaws of defeat' should be applied to someone else now!
However, his editor, believing the phrase to be a direct quote from Lincoln, inserted quotation marks without consulting the author.
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Obviously the phrase one nation Conservatism is good from your point of view that he embraced that, but is that your definition as well?
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"That's where the phrase 'red tape' comes from, " he says, beaming.
The phrase "swift boat" comes from the 2004 presidential election, when the group "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth" launched an attack ad campaign against Democratic candidate John Kerry that was said by some to be false.
Just as the committee cannot divorce the phrase "lying under oath" from the facts about which the president is alleged to have lied, so, too, it should not divorce the allegations of obstruction, or whatever the majority staff chooses to call them, from the actual evidence.
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