The wolf will be always wolfish; the fox will be always foxy.
2
Margaret danced with most of the young men, waltzes and American fox-trots.
3
With her fox-terriers, Dummy and Fussie; from a photograph taken in 1889
4
Mr Fox said talks would continue over Christmas and the new year.
5
Result: panic at Fox News due to the potential loss of advertising.
1
Allardyce continued to confound tradition with his approach to the transfer market.
2
The critics of it wholly mistake it and confound it with fatalism.
3
Yet in worshipping colour we do not confound the order of things.
4
The vulgar have always, and still do confound these very irreconcilable ideas.
5
But occasionally he would volunteer a few words which would confound them.
1
The question, however, seemed only to surprise and confuse the young man.
2
Italy, Romania, Russia with their aggressive programs confuse the situation too much.'
3
I think that would confuse members of the public, employers and parents.
4
In the future, no director will confuse such flutterings with actual power.
5
Telstra said the new high-speed bundle was unnecessary and would confuse customers.
1
Scientists designed SoFi to solve several problems that bedevil oceanic robotics.
2
For those who are, there are a number of factors that bedevil progress.
3
She believes corruption and inequality not only bedevil the world, but are linked.
4
The problem of players going to the United States continues to bedevil the GAA.
5
The forces of physics, biology, and Moore's Law can bedevil you in unexpected ways.
1
Not odd enough, it must be said, to befuddle the Kiwi's mind.
2
It is a flat public loss, another attempt to befuddle our thinking.
3
The trail wiggled all over the place as if trying to befuddle us.
4
It paints a portrait of a system designed to befuddle users into complacency.
5
How long does it take a clever politician to befuddle them?
1
God preserve us from fuddle-headed young men who want money for building cloud-castles!
2
One day Mr. Kordé had drunk himself into an unusual state of fuddle.
3
Do you think you can fuddle me with a mass of words, Mr. Harley?
4
But there is no doubt that the lion of the evening was-the"fuddle."
5
The horrid creatures are going to fuddle at the tea-garden, and get tipsy like their masters.
1
Would she let an external event discombobulate her in such a nervous disorder?
2
This companion would discombobulate the Sun's distant reservoir of comets whenever it passed through their neighborhood.
3
However, Hatch noted "those who hate the bill would like to discombobulate the whole mess".
4
With a glossy grin, a dry wit and bags of affable Irish-American charm, Barclays' chief executive, Bob Diamond, is a difficult man to discombobulate.
5
And so we behave fearfully when they enter the kitchen, as if they possess some talismanic evil, some malignant potency, which can discombobulate our creations.
1
In Europe we throw away 100 million tonnes of food every year.
2
But fears remain that political uncertainty could yet throw countries off course.
3
I'm sorry to throw cold water on the subject; but excuse me.
4
The problem is, however, people in glass houses should not throw stones.
5
We now throw down the gage to the capital of the world.
6
Today was New York City's chance to throw the official official parade.
7
But not too simple: That's a market the unwieldy throw-bots have cornered.
8
Let us-letus throw it back in the sea where it belongs.
9
It would throw EU enlargement into crisis and antagonise the candidate states.
10
They scream for mercy; they throw away their guns; they are panic-stricken.
11
You can throw him into the credibility problem camp now, Smith said.
12
In 1745 this church attempted to throw off the yoke of the
13
And Melissa Fish's tireless attention to every problem I throw her way.
14
They throw in the chocolate just as the water commences to boil.
15
However, he missed the first free throw, and the Seminoles held on.
16
I throw myself at thy feet; have trust in me, and fly.