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Only the newcomer Yevlin will have much cause to remember this one with any fondness.
President Trump ought to have frequent cause to remember, and respect, that right in the years to come.
Why not move Labor Day to the Monday preceding Sept. 11? Firemen, policemen, waiters, clerks, corporate executives and military personnel would have a common cause to remember.
Germany is a country with cause to remember what happens when a population is force-fed a national media diet of fraudulent journalism, threat-mongering hatred and debased gossip.
England have cause to remember Rutherford, the left-hander who in his Test match debut innings made 171 against them in Dunedin, and has made but a single half century in 28 further innings since.
Colchester's smart Florence Park training ground, which houses a Category Two academy, is certainly not befitting of a bottom-tier club and the setup is a far cry from their days playing in the tiny Layer Road stadium, a venue Ambrose has cause to remember.
Similar(53)
Even if we don't actually smell a fragrance, the picture of the rose may cause us to remember the smell.
Food from an era when offering British cooking to foreign friends would cause them to remember prior engagements and leap from 10-storey windows.
The images might cause her to remember herself as the subject of her father's art, cast eternally as his muse.
The work supports the idea that therapists can inadvertently cause patients to remember traumas that did not occur.
This should also cause us to remember the way he lived, the people he healed, and the parables he told.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com