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It is not clear who is responsible for stoking the latest tension.
The director succeeds in stoking two very raw emotions in the movie - lust and fear.
"I may only be one of the blokes stoking the engines 'round here, but it isn't proper for you to speak to a woman that way."
Faster productivity growth allows faster growth in wages, without stoking inflation.
In the meantime there are ways to tie Poland more closely to the West without stoking Russian nationalism.
Stoking the fire is Mr. Gilmore.
Cheyne Stoking is the debut studio album by English heavy metal band Huron.
After convincing the staff that he could continue his chores (stoking the furnace and caring for chickens) he entered public school at the fifth grade.
They released their first studio album, Cheyne Stoking, in June 2009 on Rising Records.
She moved on him slowly, murmuring to him, stroking his chest, stoking a fire of physical need that gradually burned through the haze of numbness.
Music is charged with stoking the party spirit, with bringing things to a worthy conclusion and then, most significant of all, with ushering in a splendid future.
On his return he immediately started meddling in Dutch internal affairs by stoking up the Orangist sentiment and undermining De Witt, where possible.
They fear that they will be asked to absorb major cuts in social-service programs like Medicaid and welfare at a time when a weakening economy is stoking demand for those programs.
Stoking the war fever and helping to lay the ideological foundations for empire was Theodore Roosevelt, McKinley's assistant secretary of the Navy and his successor as president.
With the release of their debut album titled Cheyne Stoking in 2009 came glowing reviews from the international music press with a KKKK in Kerrang!
Annie struggled to survive financially, and O.C. felt a responsibility to contribute financially from an early age, doing odd jobs that included stoking furnaces at the university to pay his tuition.
Despite being crammed with glossy images of beautiful, weird, unattractive, ridiculous and prohibitively expensive clothes and accessories, Vogue isn't about fashion: it's about stoking the desire for those clothes and accessories.
And, they said, while the mayor was genuinely furious at the strikers, there was some strategy behind his harsher comments: By stoking public anger, they said, he applied enough pressure on the transit workers to help end the strike.
When they go back into their flat they discover Richard has ransacked it, stolen the drugs and spray painted the words "Cheyne Stoking", the scientific name for the pattern of breathing a human being goes into when they are dying.
Moreover, there was a furnace in it, one of the best conceivable, for it needed neither fuel nor stoking, whose gaseous fires, like those of the twisted columns in the Sanctuary, sprang from the womb of the volcano beneath our feet.
Mr. Dienstbier was a leading broadcaster until the invasion and has spent the years since stoking a factory furnace, except for four years in prison and many briefer arrests for his struggle to restore the human and civic rights of his nation.
Last winter, he faced a dilemma: to heat the house, should he (a) stay up all night, stoking the wood stove or (b) activate the electric heaters recessed into the wall and lie in bed staring up at the ceiling, listening to the incredible racket they made?
By raising the interest rate now but leaving the exchange rate unchanged, Beijing runs the risk that speculators will pour even more money into China - possibly stoking inflation further - in the hope that Beijing will eventually have to allow the currency to appreciate.
Mr. Ferrer and his supporters, many of them allies of Mr. McCall's, are still stoking the fires of resentment over this year's race and calling for a widespread self-examination by the party, an exercise that the McCall camp would rather skip.
At the center of the region's instability, say Western diplomats and United Nations officials, stands one man, President Charles Taylor of Liberia, who has been accused of stoking the conflicts to satisfy a rapacious appetite for the substance that has fueled other wars around Africa: diamonds.