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Other times, he intellectualizes it, referring in a recent interview to "the hostile takeover of journalism by deconstructionism.
I did it myself the other day, referring in a Guardian article to the controversy surrounding BP's sponsorship of the National Portrait Gallery's portrait prize.
Indeed, the prime minister made matters worse by referring in a television interview Sunday night to a particular Alevi place of worship not far from where I live as "an eyesore".
The vindictive Athenian treatment of the playwright Phrynichus for referring in a play to the fall of Athens' daughter city Miletus shows, however, that the Ionian revolt was a dangerous subject, not lightly to be treated by pot painters.
Questioning from the host, Jon Stewart, was gentle, to say the least, referring in a recent show to the agency's "unassailable successes" in dealing with air and water pollution and to the "tremendous corporate interests" arrayed against her.
Fraser was referring in a starkly literal sense to her work's medium: a fit 38-year-old brunette in a sexy red V-necked dress, who is in fact herself.
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He was referring, in an interview with The Huffington Post, to Benn's leading role in the 1975 campaign to get Britain out of the Common Market.
He refers, in a terse, cryptic passage, to his own unhappy experience as a litigant.
He even refers, in a kingly way, to "my Jesuit", "my alchemist", "my mathematician".
One British diplomat referred in a memo to the islanders as "a few Tarzans or Men Fridays".
Al-Qaida activists in Yemen referred in a video recorded on 21 December to "a bomb to hit the enemies of God".
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