1.
“Don’t tell me”, Billie chirped, delighted that she was utterly vindicated
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He felt partially vindicated
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Their dreams have been vindicated
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proves could be vindicated by divinity (faith)”
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It had been vindicated by this notice
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It's like being vindicated in one's faith
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” ChériAna was smiling a most vindicated smile
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A temporary monopoly of this kind may be vindicated, upon the same principles upon which a like monopoly of a new machine is granted to its inventor, and that of a new book to its author
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vindicated in their positions
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Having been addicted to this type of reading since the early fifties, Van Vogt"s observation helped me feel vindicated
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Given the advent of such things as deconstruction, post-modernism, critical legal studies, and the absolute absence of the teaching of history over the years since he made the remark, I"m sure he would feel vindicated
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The Reagan Revolution vindicated the Conservative Movement
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Lattimore has been vindicated by scholars, but on Wallace opinions are divided
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If the tuna cans were found, he would be vindicated and have the pleasure of dragging his man into headquarters on a charge that would stick, and if the cans weren’t there, no one would be the wiser that he had been involved
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The ministers and congregations who have broken away will certainly expect to be vindicated in the eyes of both God and man (especially the latter?)
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So when a robber burst in the office demanding all of the promoters money, Peter, naturally felt vindicated
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Now that she has been vindicated by the Braidwood Inquiry report
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While the report clearly vindicated Read, the RCMP has refused to
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“After independent investigations vindicated Dr
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Hence I feel vindicated once more, but that will never make up for being forced to leave NM against my will
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vindicated and devastated at the same time
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guess maybe I do want to be vindicated in some way, and that is
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Thus am I vindicated in my actions
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Coast Guard vigilance was vindicated when Tropical Storm Allison struck Houston, Texas, causing the disastrous flood of 9 June 2001
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‘Ha! That surprised you, didn’t it? I know I sometimes appear uninterested in your affairs, but that’s because I’m committed to non-interference in your life and choices, and today I’ve been vindicated
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She felt that swamiji’s regard for guruji’s prodigal son vindicated her own position
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2 It was at Magdala that the women first demonstrated their usefulness and vindicated the wisdom of their choosing
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No wonder they were led on into the further proclamation of that which vindicated their former devotion to Jesus and at the same time so constrained men to believe in him
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And the life and death of Jesus are the eternal proof that the truth of goodness and the faith of the spirit-led creature will always be vindicated
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vindicated, but I am so sad, that if this is all true, my nation
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After Armstrong died, his widow vindicated him after fighting an additional 15 yrs in court to win his case; but a man was robbed while another lived to a ripe old age
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In front of all you are vindicated
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He felt vindicated that he had indeed been abducted but he was frustrated that he had no specific recall of the event
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Misan looked vindicated, but he would have clearly preferred all the pregnancies
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kissing his cheek, feeling quite vindicated, for she was the only one of his companions 308
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Tuer appeared vindicated and was about to say he was
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He intended so to dominate the hearings that he would be entirely vindicated
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Professor Heart appeared vindicated, relaxed visibly, and settled into his chair
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While Rebecca felt vindicated by the tribunal’s judgement, she recognized that the Warriors, in defending her, were really defending themselves, and objecting to the arbitrariness of the camp commander and the Guardian Doctor
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The good guys vindicated her, they all got turfed out, and the bad guys triumphed
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Price been vindicated
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The US had denied him a visa for years, now they had bent before him—he felt vindicated
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At length, pleased with herself for having resisted the seducer as well as the seductress, Roopa felt vindicated
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When the news subsequently reports that the driver was speeding in unsafe conditions or was intoxicated, we feel vindicated
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The Hopi Indians would of course be vindicated for holding onto their age old beliefs,
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and they need to be vindicated just as much as the witnesses who showed up
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wound will not kill you, but you can wear your scar of shame the rest of your life!” Leone bellowed and glared at her, vindicated and unforgiving
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All whom you have hurt are now vindicated, and I will raise my child without you
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In that way Newton was vindicated and the cosmos
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vindicated and the cosmos took the blame for hiding mass and the contraction was reinstalled
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And be publicly vindicated after it is stolen again from the team they were screaming that really had it
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“There, I’m vindicated!”
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had not sinned, and God, his redeemer, lived and in the end he would be vindicated
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the end of the book of Job God his redeemer vindicated him, and Job saw God standing at
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" Is the fulfillment of this after God his redeemer had delivered and vindicated Job? (Job 42:5), "I know of you only by report, but now I see you with my own eyes, therefore I yield, repenting in dust and ashes" The Revised English Bible
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His three friends and his wife accused Job of sin, but he knows he had not sinned, and God, his redeemer, lived and in the end he would be vindicated
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In the end of the book of Job God his redeemer vindicated him, and Job saw God standing at his side”; “day” in the King James Version is not in the Hebrew, it was added by the translators
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God his defending counsel and redeemer had vindicated him
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For you the ogres will always be something of a sow's ear for a silk purse, and now that our army in Dalandaniss is slaughtered you feel vindicated
60.
And so this diviner order of the Kosmos reigned through untold ages, while the earth swarmed with the mortal lives that sprang into being in successive bursts of the all creating Energy,—which never, by existing law, excluded itself from operating by introduction of fresh elements, but vindicated, even in a world of perishable plants and animals, both its love of continuity, and its absolute sovereignty and freedom,—at once in Creation and Destruction:—it may be bringing, as men say, life out of life, varying its forms under the pressure of external conditions, and achieving its present results by a gradual transformation of pre-existing types—though of this the fossil record contains no evidence —or, it may be, in the popular sense, creating, time after time, new tenants of the void, and causing the fruitful Earth to bear in succession the original distinct kinds of living things, out of which all sub varieties have sprung
61.
This brought out a third writer, who describes himself simply as a 'Presbyter of the Church of England, ’ and who was a much more accurate patristic scholar than Clarke; and he, with overwhelming force of citation, vindicated Dodwell's statements on the main question, and proved beyond reasonable denial that the earlier ante-Nicene Fathers knew nothing of the natural immortality of the soul as an apostolic doctrine, showing that 'Mr
62.
Never has this tone taken possession of the Church, but some epoch of judgment has vindicated the reality of the government of Him 'whose feet are like fine brass burning in a furnace
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In the end of the book of Job he was vindicated by God his redeemer
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Leonela required much pressing before she would go to summon Lothario, but at last she went, and while awaiting her return Camilla continued, as if speaking to herself, "Good God! would it not have been more prudent to have repulsed Lothario, as I have done many a time before, than to allow him, as I am now doing, to think me unchaste and vile, even for the short time I must wait until I undeceive him? No doubt it would have been better; but I should not be avenged, nor the honour of my husband vindicated, should he find so clear and easy an escape from the strait into which his depravity has led him
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If only the Titanic had rammed that piece of ice (which was not a monstrous berg) fairly, every puffing paragraph would have been vindicated in the eyes of the credulous public which pays
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” I felt vindicated and happy with the Australian judicial system that particular day
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“Not just the ornaments, then,” Caris said, her suspicions vindicated
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end; and they would now consider that the bishop had vindicated them
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Caris felt that her contempt for Godwyn was vindicated
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Having described the genesis of their journey, and paid a handsome tribute to his friend Professor Challenger, coupled with an apology for the incredulity with which his assertions, now fully vindicated, had been received, he gave the actual course of their journey, carefully withholding such information as would aid the public in any attempt to locate this remarkable plateau
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He was five minutes into the future, where his life’s work had just been vindicated
72.
Still, Pulaski felt vindicated, and also disappointed; for a dozen pages or more, “The Fireworkers” could have been one of his Time-Life books, rambling on about pyrotechnics, China, Marco Polo … Where were these two getting their homicidal conspiracy? And how had he nearly fallen for it, even for a second? Was that how badly he needed to escape?
73.
Bulstrode was vindicated from any resemblance to her husband
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She seemed personally vindicated when I scuttled out on Tanner’s floor
75.
Very often it will happen that an investment crowd’s views will be reinforced and apparently vindicated by some event external to the market itself
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Thus the wisdom of having courage in depressed markets is vindicated not only by the voice of experience but also by application of plausible techniques of value analysis
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Our premise was strikingly vindicated by the financial history of the numerous railroads reorganized in the 1940s and in 1950
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Whether the specific differentials in price/earnings ratios are “justified” by the facts—or will be vindicated by future developments—cannot be answered with confidence
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The young girl felt vindicated
80.
Koza’s cool analysis of Trina was vindicated as it reported strong earnings growth per share in the first half of 2009
81.
It didn’t take long for Koza to be vindicated in his Radian purchase
82.
However, when she learned of Berniece’s troubles with Gladys, she felt at least somewhat vindicated
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The stock price dropped with the crash of October 1987 to $8, and the bears were somewhat vindicated; some covered, some waited
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’ So now nothing could be easier than to make him accept the two hundred roubles by to-morrow, for he has already vindicated his honor, tossed away the money, and trampled it under foot
85.
, in my opinion, that these commercial rights were either vindicated or abandoned
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He supported the policy of a small navy, and vindicated the establishment generally from charges of waste or extravagance, though he was friendly to reform wherever necessary
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But she is vindicated in the end by the fact that she is a woman, and a beautiful woman
88.
Sunk down amid huge buildings which wall it in like precipices, with a graveyard yawning at its head and a river surging at its feet, its pavement teeming with an eager, nervous multitude, its street rattling with trucks laden with gold and silver bricks, its soil mined with treasure vaults and private wires, its skyline festooned with ticker tape, its historic sense vindicated by the heroic statue of Washington standing in majestic serenity on the portico of that most exquisite model of the Parthenon, and with the solemn sarcasm of the stately brown church, backed by its crumbling tombstones, lifting its slender spire like a prophetic warning finger in its pathway—this most impressive and pompous of thoroughfares is at once serious and lively, solid and vivacious
89.
The only unpleasant feature of “The Caldron and the Ruby” is that suspicion of theft is directed toward an innocent person; but inasmuch as, in order to make a detective story, the innocent must be under suspicion and must be ultimately vindicated, this cannot be considered in the light of a defect
90.
Indeed, had it been wholly neglected by the Chief Magistrate, from the critical situation of the country, and nature of the rights proposed to be vindicated, it must have pressed itself upon our attention
91.
He would be unwilling to tax the land to support the rights of the sea, and was for drawing from the sea itself the resources with which its violated freedom should at all times be vindicated
92.
On the contrary, for the purposes of the present argument, I may admit that pecuniary calculation ought to be put out of the field, when spirit is to be shown, or honor vindicated