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Exact(13)
Newman bought the house – which he describes as "a wreck" – for £460,000.
Even now, after decades of "European construction", many Eurocrats cannot conceive of the euro as a wreck.
The upstairs that Mrs. Lazio deplores as a "wreck" includes the gently tumbled rooms of their two young daughters.
Initially, the rent was $250, remarkably low even then, for what Mr. Warner describes as "a wreck".
Over the last two decades they have gradually restored the house, which they described as a wreck.
Having bought 101 Spring Street as a wreck, Judd cleared out the junk and stripped the interior back to bare plaster walls and wooden floors.
Similar(46)
"They've produced a train wreck again but at least it is not as bad a wreck as it could have been," one lobbyist for a high-tech group told ScienceInsider, asking for anonymity because the group has already begun enlisting lawmakers to protect the credit in 2015.
As with a wreck you pass on a highway, it's hard to avoid sneaking a peek.
As a wrecking and removal crew Americans are, for the moment, unstoppable.
No, the Jets want Greene running between the tackles, using his 235-pound body as a wrecking ball.
5.14pm BST Lord Marks QC is speaking for the amendment (described by Jo Shaw as a wrecking amendment that would allow secret courts).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com