51. That phrase is unknown to international law. 52. That last phrase is on a peak that, doubled, resembles a bear or a sphinx. 53. That phrase is music to the ears of credit-card companies everywhere. 54. That phrase is now fraught with unmistakable significance, should the Dolphins fail to get there. 55. That phrase is street slang meaning the victim should hand over his valuables, Franke said. 56. The catch phrases are easy, just not always the answers. 57. The brief melodic phrases were thick to the ear, stretched and contracted with a kind of Stokowskian languor. 58. The company withdrew the spots, but also said that the phrase in question was permissible under EPA guidelines. 59. The famous phrase was appropriate. 60. The Hebrew-speaking student insisted the phrase was not racist but simply a literal translation of an Israeli expression for noisy, disruptive people. |