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Examples

  • I got there because I know how to handle it when grown spoile women throw temper tantrums ... lol

    Another superdelegate for Obama

  • But let me tell you whats happen last wednesday, the Ethiopian ambassador in Djibouti spoile the ongoing workshop when he show up at the workshop and then sit at the Alliance place!

    Monday, June 30, 2008

  • But let me tell you whats happen last wednesday, the Ethiopian ambassador in Djibouti spoile the ongoing workshop when he show up at the workshop and then sit at the Alliance place!

    Wednesday, June 11, 2008

  • Surtout aussi, pour eviter que mon pere me spoile ma partie vu que j'ai decouvert qu'il n'etait pas loin de moi dans l'aventure malgre c 30h de jeu et moi 80 ...

    pinku-tk Diary Entry

  • Heere is a tooth on this side, which (so farre as I can perceive) is not onely hollow and corrupted: but also wholly putrified and rotten, and if it continue still in your head, beleeve it for a truth, that it will infect and spoile all the rest neere it.

    The Decameron

  • Gerbino needed not to have spoken so much, in perswading them to seize so rich a booty, because the men of Messina were naturally addicted to spoile and rapine: and before the Prince began his

    The Decameron

  • Owners name, and that report had famed him to be very rich, they determined (as men evermore addicted naturally, to covet after money and spoile) to make it their owne as a prize at Sea.

    The Decameron

  • Beniamin: he is an vtter enemy to the Portugals, and hath diuers times bene at Malacca to fight against it, and hath done great harme to the boroughes thereof, but the citie alway withstood him valiantly, and with their ordinance did great spoile to his campe.

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation

  • After the furie of the execution, the Generall sent the vantgard one way, and the battell another, to burne and spoile; so as you might haue seene the countrey more then three miles compasse on fire.

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation

  • There was also abundant store of victuals, salt, and all kinde of prouision for shipping and the warre: which was confessed by the sayd Commissary of victuals there, to be the beginning of a magasin of all sorts of prouision for a new voyage into England: whereby you may conjecture what the spoile thereof hath aduantaged vs, and prejudiced the king of

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation

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