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I tell you, I've seen more variety in a tin of sardines.
Included are a tin of sardines and a some coconut pieces.
And for 19 pence, half a tin of sardines will give you some essential fatty acids.
They went to their soaked tent and got a tin of sardines out to eat with bread and butter.
"Take a tin of sardines, carefully remove the skins and bones and pound well.
You can't ravish a tin of sardines.
She ate at the kitchen table, with Puss at her feet enjoying a treat from a tin of sardines.
Is it a shoal of whales; a fleet of ships; a tin of sardines?
The Outlaws have been given a tin of sardines- and they devise a new game called "Canniballs".
Masangkay had reached into his pack and, pulling out a tin of sardines, offered it to McFarlane.
When the Koom hit the plains it widened and slowed and was more full of fish than a tin of sardines.
The autopsy found his stomach was empty, and in his bag was a tin of sardines, which had remained stubbornly closed to his frozen fingers.
A tin of sardines, punched full of holes, and a few fist-sized rocks were placed in a beige net and lowered slowly into the shallow water.
Last year, more than 120 volunteers gathered more than 60 bags of rubbish, which ranged from a tin of sardines to a New York bus ticket.
The prices of many staple goods doubled or tripled, but the wait to buy a kilo of sausage or a tin of sardines was just as long.
He appealed to me to endorse his view that there was a tin of sardines and part of a cold fowl and plenty of bread and cheese.
Volumes were smuggled into France (e.g. in bales of hay, and between metal sheets as a tin of sardines), read at secret meetings, and hand-copied.
One poem in the paper describes how a rat and his wife opened a tin of sardines, ate the contents then sealed the tin back up for the author to find.
Incarcerated for life, and denied the opportunity to make a political statement by his action, he attempted to kill himself with the sharpened key from a tin of sardines on 20 February 1900.
Anyway, Dave and Billy had to go to the sardine plant the year they were in grade five, and Dave still can't open a tin of sardines without checking for marbles.
Tea was a tin of sardines, full of essential oils no, that's aroma therapy but they're good for you; followed by a piece of my neighbour's carrot cake that she'd insisted I bring home.
According to Bernard Ingham, the former press secretary to Margaret Thatcher, Wilberforce was a normal cat for whom Thatcher once bought "a tin of sardines in a Moscow supermarket".
The trip is an arduous three-day journey, usually by night, with the migrant carrying little more than a plastic bag to keep the dew off, a plastic jug of water and perhaps a tin of sardines.
Whether it's a can of soup squirreled away for a rainy day or a tin of sardines for a midnight snack, most of us rely on one type of canned ingredient or another.
That mangy, snake-eating reincarnation of Cleofes Apodaca showed up from time to time to share a tin of sardines with Pacheco, but he never went for Joe's Beanfield.