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With the constricted means at their disposal, Liverpool can take a degree of satisfaction in the display.
There are exceptions to this rule – one thinks of Winston Churchill, a terrible First Lord of the Admiralty and an indifferent Chancellor, who still managed to emerge with the public on his side in 1940 – but such renaissances take a degree of willpower that 99 per cent of the population does not possess.
So I guess the answer is two-fold: The team is certainly eclectic and capable, but these things also take a degree of luck.
It may take a degree of education of the public to create that link, but this investment can be worthwhile when it allows a monopoly to create clear water between one company and a multitude of hungry competitors.
The 1967 68 budget ran into deficit, allocating funds to energise the economic engine whilst Dunstan lambasted the Federal Government for neglecting the South Australian economy, demanding it take a degree of responsibility for its ills.
Similar(54)
It took a degree of strength and conviction.
FOR many Westerners, Korean dining takes a degree of effort.
That took a degree of creativity that a thug like Sawyer isn't capable of.
To be able to stand up and really impress takes a degree of precociousness".
It was a decision that took a degree of independence, confidence and honesty, which are all mature qualities.
Even so, it took a degree of political courage in the run-up to India's state and general elections.
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