- Even childhood innocence is tainted and drawn from a horrible crime to a lesser one in which, through its own ingenuity, it believes to find freedom from guilt.
- Any reproduction activity of text and/or images in which, with the use of an image carrier, ink is transferred onto whatever type of surface.
- The capping of direct payments is a new form of discrimination against Member States in which, for historical reasons, most of the agricultural undertakings manage larger areas of land.
- It is an area of considerable geological interest in which, thanks to intensive tectonic activity, a remarkable range of materials and formations flourish.
- Mr. Skelos received your request, Detective Agnew, in the spirit in which, I'm sure, it was intended.
- It therefore seems to me that this is truly a sector in which, in terms of forming the economic and social fabric of Afghanistan, we can and must invest.
- There are numerous cases in which, for objective reasons, the European Commission may be late submitting a study.
- I still regret the way in which, last time, Mrs Gillig and her Socialist colleagues refused even to bring this point to a vote in a democratic manner.
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- These are priority areas, in which remaining shortcomings must be adequately addressed as soon as possible.
- In six months she could be a completely different kid, in which case this meeting becomes totally irrelevant.
- A dark ceremony, in which a human host is bonded with demonic shadows.
- Other Member States can present objections, in which case the Commission will intervene in the procedure.
- Operation Infinite Wisdom, in which the gods cease to be benevolent, in which the full bicep of the American military machine flexes its... bicep.
- Unless you meant Joyce, in which case, I agree.
- Unless of course you're hungry, in which case I'm starving.
- Unless you subscribed to this magazine, in which case it was blast from a UFO.
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