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are tying
noun
A knot; a fastening.
Exact(58)
Teenagers are tying on dust-ruffle leggings (left).
They are tying in with other stuff that is considered desirable by the parents.
"The Syrians are tying their own hands with their own tongues," Mr. Yaari said.
"We are tying location to event to ticketing to reviews to all of these different things".
Both the government and the mortgage lenders are tying up scarce capital and putting it at risk.
And reporters, while they may complain that editors are tying their hands, will at some level be relieved.
Yes, they are tying up that capital but they have the off-chance of a bumper payday in 10 years.
Some of the defense requests in Mr. Hamdan's case show the kinds of issues that are tying prosecutors in knots.
Yes, former Daily Mirror editor Richard Wallace and ex-Sunday Mirror editor Tina Weaver are tying the knot in June.
"They are tying up with a foreign firm to tap foreign know-how on the disposal of bad loans.
But don't think that millions of men and women are tying on aprons and emulating homemakers of old.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com