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We get on bridge.
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Sudden dizziness, maybe, or that phobia people get on bridges.
"Come on, bridge!
Supporters say it is a good reason to get on with building the new bridge.
Many, not least Cole – who is understudied by, and now gets on well with, Bridge at England level – might dispute that assertion, but Mancini was effectively reminding his player that if anyone should be embarrassed in England's dressing room it should not be Bridge, who made a disappointing comeback today, after two months out injured, as City went down 2-1 at Hull.
"Get on a bridge and wait for one to pass under then dump dark paint on the roof," another wrote.
As a cyclist, I have to risk my life getting on and off the Brooklyn Bridge, dodge hostile drivers and buses while swerving away from potholes and raised metal planks.
"I was a little nervous to get on that bridge, a little preoccupied," she said.
"There were people that didn't want to get on the bridge until they saw elephants get on it," he said.
Again, it's let me accommodate you so you're not scared, we'll just get on the bridge and hold hands, Jesus is good, we're over it.
If you stand on a catwalk over the conveyers and look down at the pulsing motion below, you feel that same disorienting, perilous sensation you get on a bridge staring down into a waterfall.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com