Word: shouting
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...interest rate of 2% is less than inflation and that high oil prices are probably here to stay. They're also keen to fire a shot at governments in France, Germany and elsewhere that have allowed budget deficits to soar. "I won't lean out of the window and shout that this will wreck the recovery," says Stefan Schneider at Deutsche Bank Research in Frankfurt. If he's right - and if Trichet is telling the truth about a limited increase - then the ECB decision may be the clearest sign yet that Europe's long-awaited upturn has arrived...
...over half of the four-line chorus. / Sheh-eh-ry, can you come out tonight?" The falsetto is used to establish the singer as the proper young gent ("You better ask your mama. / Tell her everything is all right"). Then the tenor shout in the bridge reveals him as the panting teen wolf ("With your red dress on, / Mmm, you look so fine. / Move it nice and easy. / Girl, you'll make me lose my mind"). That party he's invited her to: Twist, or twisted...
...plan. Unlike its predecessor, this one speaks understandable English, too-speaks, in fact, of many things: Its likes (world domination) and dislikes (when you press Shift1, Shift2, Shift3 and D at the same time). It can ask for a hug or spare change, and will either shout for you to remain calm or startle you to action with its "Lost in Space" style "Danger! Danger! Danger!" But it?s clearly still related to the old Robosapien: It roars, dances and suffers the same audible bodily afflictions...
...level, the Iraq Six are doing a valuable service for both the Democratic Party and the anti-war cause. Usually, when Democrats start criticizing the war in Iraq (or any war), some Republican jumps in to claim that liberals just don’t support the troops. Democrats can shout until they’re blue in the face about how real support for the troops would mean bringing them home (or not sending them in the first place), but it just never sounds right—particularly when military families are more likely than the general public to support...
...football team ? and pass the sangria. The Generalissimo was a man whose semantics ranged from Si! to No!, who personally chose Spain's King, who jailed homosexuals. Today, I can spout republicanism in my village bar to Rafael, a captain in the Guardia Civil reserve. He can try to shout me down with "Viva el Rey, Viva Leonor!" Yes, semantic democracy is definitely more fun than iron dictatorship. And Franco? May he rust in peace...