So the question remains: how long will Ireland continue to torture women?
2
Contemporary Greece was described as a classic case of government by torture.
3
The judge also said the claim of police torture carried no weight.
4
Those groups say state torture is widespread, an allegation the government denies.
5
Ms Smith told Sky News: We absolutely oppose torture in this country.
1
You control how much water you want by twisting a simple knob.
2
Every evening was occupied in twisting and tying evergreen in the chapel.
3
And those words from Christopher Nolan's latest time-twisting spectacle speak for themselves.
4
Soane was twisting his corkscrew in the wire of the champagne bottle.
5
The twisting saps his energy but the doctors can't find anything wrong.
1
This new reality has caused bitter exchanges on social media, straining friendships.
2
Every house was different, Charlie said, idiosyncratic but without straining to be.
3
Refugees are flooding out of Syria, straining neighbouring countries' ability to cope.
4
Refugees are flooding out of Syria, straining neighboring countries' ability to cope.
5
Yet even in this sector firms saw the franc straining sales prices.
1
But we know subsidy leads to distortion, leads to longer term problems.
2
The problem wasn't so much the distortion in what you could see.
3
It came in with full audibility, free of distortion, clear and clean.
4
The exchange canceled some trades as traditional players complained of market distortion.
5
More distortion in the headphones please: mastering music for the iPod age.
Ús de overrefinement en anglès
1
The defects of this government were those of overrefinement in legislation,-thelast defects to have been looked for, certainly, in the American aborigines.