Not exact matches
There will be plenty of reasonable suggestions put forward as to why this might be — from subtle points
about counter-pressing and team shape and the difficulty of translating club systems over to the international game, to snarky ones
about Theo Walcott being no Erik Lamela — but ultimately everybody will realise, even if they don't
vocalise, that the England shirt is a cursed object that destroys every beautiful thing that it touches.
We had a meeting in Cardiff in the old Unite building and there was
about five of us in the room and fast forward three years later they're getting 80,000 people on the march so we've always had an interest in politics but we've never really
vocalised it before.
But despite his views on the vans, Farage has secured valuable political support by
vocalising the concerns of many voters
about immigration and multiculturalism.
This more than anything reveals that the Labour Party have not learnt anything
about what the public
vocalised during the expenses scandal and remain tethered to the authoritarian instincts they displayed over the last 13 years.
The cries of pain were
vocalised, principally by Paddy Ashdown and Chris Huhne, in headlines
about «betrayal».
It isn't easy, however, as her father (the ubiquitous John Hurt) is a drunk embarrassment and her mother (Charlotte Rampling) is terribly negative
about marriage and isn't afraid to
vocalise her opinion.
Walter's depression —
vocalised through the beaver — is represented in raw, unsparing terms and the tough truth
about Gibson is that, for all the nastiness of his self - inflicted career nosedive, he remains a compelling and watchable actor.