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The longer something in sports goes without being surpassed, the more cherished it is.
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He evidently thinks so: because the Bun, more cherished even than Rebekah, demands it.
"We've been together for five years now and this came late to me," Mr. Frank said, "but it's all the more cherished".
That belief, for many who long have held it, became even more urgent, more cherished when challenged.
The women's football team also beat Brazil on a sparkling evening in front of 70,584 fans at Wembley and whenever you reflect on the London Olympics so far, it feels as if sportswomen have never been more cherished.
It's a decision that /ga/may, in the end, make her more cherished.
The town became an ever more cherished resort throughout the 19th century, a rival to Newport, Rhode Island, and Bar Harbor, Maine, its access greatly facilitated by the completion in 1832 of the Saratoga and Schenectady Railroad.
No, but it happens so often and in such unexpected ways that living here makes life even more cherished.
Few democratic rights are more cherished in India, or considered more essential as a release valve for societal pressures, than the right to protest.
Her breathy, melting voice is set against just a handful of instruments at a time, making the melodies seem even more cherished.
If Britain kept electing coalitions, Mr Clegg mused, future manifestos might have to signal which pledges are more cherished than others.In private, Mr Clegg and his inner circle cling to reason as closely as in public.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com