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A little stinting, in fact, would have gone a long way toward solving the evening's problems.
Furthermore, there seems to be no stinting, no penny pinching.
Now, knowing of his un stinting courage and ferocity in battle, even as a boy, she would have to try harder than ever.
They do contend, however, that New York is doing an increasingly poor job of protecting children by stinting on everything from training to home visits.
Plenty of it, and no stinting.
Brodersen recommended going all out, no stinting of booze or pot or anything else.
But the nuclear scientists argue that Russia's painful economic transition is no excuse for stinting on salaries in the nuclear arms sector.
"No stinting, I see," Luke said, taking up a fork with a gesture which would have confirmed his aunt's worst suspicions.
The Bawd-master had a bad reputation as a landlord but nobody had ever suggested that he was a stinting, niggardly master.
We eat well - too well, bien sûr - and can't come close to finishing what's set before us, three-plus courses and no stinting in sight.
They were too wet for much grass to grow, and their stinting, acid soils caused plants to develop toxins to avoid being grazed by the great multitudes, which would destroy such delicate slow-growing flora.
For a considerable time she had, by the stinting of what had before that seemed necessities, been making a shilling do the work of eighteenpence, and now she knew nothing beyond, except to go without.
He was seeing the Rorim as it should be, without the threat of ruin hanging over it - though tomorrow these same people would be stinting themselves to eke out their supplies through the winter.
It is quite possible that Blake is criticizing the New Testament view of a life of self-denial: the stinting of earthly desires in order to gain entrance to an after-life of bliss.
Party loyalty compels them to refrain from pointing out that by stinting on state aid, Mr. Bush is pushing up taxes on the local level even as he is trying to slice them further in Washington.
Because of the division of the village, the manor and parish never constituted a real community, the manorial court made Regulations about the fencing of the open fields, meadows, and commons, and the stinting of the animals pastured there.