Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) No, his name was Tindolini, but if you had a name like that in those days, you had to make-a the ice-a cream-a.
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(Soundbite of laughter) Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) He was a watchmaker, and he wanted us to become English.
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(Soundbite of laughter) Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) He was a watchmaker, and he wanted us to become English.
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) No, his name was Tindolini, but if you had a name like that in those days, you had to make-a the ice-a cream-a.
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) No, his name was Tindolini, but if you had a name like that in those days, you had to make-a the ice-a cream-a.
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) No, Catholic, very devout.
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(Soundbite of laughter) Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) He was a watchmaker, and he wanted us to become English.
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Labour mover and shaker Peter Mandelson has selected a 16th-century portrait of Elizabeth I by an anonymous painter; Samantha Cameron has chosen one of LS Lowry's paintings of tiny matchstick figures shown at play at a country fair; while Nick Clegg has opted for academician David Tindle, a little-known painter of inoffensive still lifes and landscapes in washed-out hues.
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) Yes - with your permission, of course.
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Mr. CAINE: (as Milo Tindle) Yes - with your permission, of course.
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