[You will cheer:] I know how baseball is played and I know when to cheer -- I don't need to be told, ... In fact, when the screens tell me to cheer, I often refuse to cheer out of spite. |
Anticipation. You never know what you're going to catch. |
Expatriates often have to learn to live with a different amount of space than they were accustomed to. It is just part of the experience of being an expatriate. |
I thought the play was a big turnaround for the game and for the fans. I think it kept us motivated. |
It feels so good. It's the most important win I've ever been a part of because we were 0-3 and I need to show I can come back from an injury. |
People from New York and Hong Kong are often surprised that there's more circulation space in homes in London than they expect. Those from Eastern Europe or other parts of America, though, may find it difficult to adapt here. |
repeatedly lied in his answer to the complaint, his responses to interrogatories and his responses for admissions. He did so personally, by and through his attorneys on several occasions. |
Students will obviously do better on the Content Standards Tests as they progress in English, as all of those tests are written in English. |
The Court finds that the only possible sanction ... is to strike the Defendant's pleadings and enter a default (judgment) for the plaintiffs, |
The defendant, Frank Melton, repeatedly lied in his answer to the complaint, his responses to interrogatories and his responses for admissions. He did so personally, by and through his attorneys on several occasions, |
The officers did the best they could, but I had no way of identifying who the [individuals] were, |
There was definitely physical violence, |
This Court finds that nowhere in the U.S. Constitution did the founding fathers state that it was permissible to lie in a court of law. This argument is simply without merit, |
We don't like to go to bed early. |