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In Europe we throw away 100 million tonnes of food every year.
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But fears remain that political uncertainty could yet throw countries off course.
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I'm sorry to throw cold water on the subject; but excuse me.
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The problem is, however, people in glass houses should not throw stones.
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We now throw down the gage to the capital of the world.
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The wolf will be always wolfish; the fox will be always foxy.
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Margaret danced with most of the young men, waltzes and American fox-trots.
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With her fox-terriers, Dummy and Fussie; from a photograph taken in 1889
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Mr Fox said talks would continue over Christmas and the new year.
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Result: panic at Fox News due to the potential loss of advertising.
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Allardyce continued to confound tradition with his approach to the transfer market.
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The critics of it wholly mistake it and confound it with fatalism.
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Yet in worshipping colour we do not confound the order of things.
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The vulgar have always, and still do confound these very irreconcilable ideas.
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But occasionally he would volunteer a few words which would confound them.
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The question, however, seemed only to surprise and confuse the young man.
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Italy, Romania, Russia with their aggressive programs confuse the situation too much.'
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I think that would confuse members of the public, employers and parents.
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In the future, no director will confuse such flutterings with actual power.
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Telstra said the new high-speed bundle was unnecessary and would confuse customers.
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Scientists designed SoFi to solve several problems that bedevil oceanic robotics.
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For those who are, there are a number of factors that bedevil progress.
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She believes corruption and inequality not only bedevil the world, but are linked.
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The problem of players going to the United States continues to bedevil the GAA.
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The forces of physics, biology, and Moore's Law can bedevil you in unexpected ways.
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Not odd enough, it must be said, to befuddle the Kiwi's mind.
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It is a flat public loss, another attempt to befuddle our thinking.
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The trail wiggled all over the place as if trying to befuddle us.
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It paints a portrait of a system designed to befuddle users into complacency.
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How long does it take a clever politician to befuddle them?
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Would she let an external event discombobulate her in such a nervous disorder?
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This companion would discombobulate the Sun's distant reservoir of comets whenever it passed through their neighborhood.
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However, Hatch noted "those who hate the bill would like to discombobulate the whole mess".
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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.
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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.