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The costs of public-sector pensions have been ballooning in recent years.
Lightly prick over the surface of the squares with a fork, to stop them from ballooning in the oven.
Mr. Fossett, who swam the English Channel in 1985 and raced an Iditarod dog sled in 1992, took on the challenges of ballooning in the mid-1990's.
Or it could be a striking example of what is known as ballooning, in which lightweight spiders throw out silk filaments to ride the air currents.
Versions of the Nokia 8210, epitomising an era when consumers wanted the smallest phone possible, are also ballooning in price in the secondhand market.
A few years ago, Ms. Glucheva, who was trim as a teenager and became somewhat plump after having children, started ballooning in weight.
This change has been met by a ballooning in the number of private landlords, 72% of whom let out just one home.
More a mini-studio than a film-finance boutique, the company hired marketing executives, postproduction experts and others, ballooning in size to 39 people.
In February it reported a £6.3bn loss on the same basis after it was hit by a ballooning in the impairment charge to £24bn from £14.9bn.
Costing $20m more than its precedessor at $48.8m, with involvement from Sony, it's another example of how budgets in China are ballooning in tandem with box office.
That reflects a ballooning in foreign banks' mortgage lending to locals, denominated mostly in euros, which has fuelled a property boom.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com