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Examples

  • Morris responds to all this openheartedly, and without literalizing any of it.

    A Major New Work From Mark Morris 2009

  • Morris responds to all this openheartedly, and without literalizing any of it.

    A Major New Work From Mark Morris 2009

  • One of the DP's Gauteng candidates (former senior financial journalist Nigel Bruce) had openheartedly and sincerely withdrawn

    ANC Daily News Briefing 1999

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

  • Englishman Oz Clarke lightheartedly argues that those responsible for the 1855 classification must have been essentially Puritans because they “couldn’t bear to admit that a wine as openheartedly lovely as Lynch-Bages could really be as important as other less-generous growths.”

    The World’s Greatest Wine Estates Jr. Robert M. Parker 2005

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