| 11. | Instead, it can suborn an enemy pieces on an adjacent cell, making them change sides.
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| 12. | The toughest nut is majority voting, which means countries would have to suborn their interests to others.
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| 13. | She bases this thought on the various meanings of the word " suborn " during this time period.
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| 14. | In 1984, Ames won an assignment to visit the Soviet embassy in Washington and suborn an officer there.
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| 15. | The implication is that at least there was an attempt to suborn the foreign policy of the United States,
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| 16. | Likewise, the term suborn meant corruption in loyalty which the Speaker accuses the Friend of in other sonnets.
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| 17. | He charges it is " obvious " that the Independent Counsel is a partisan hack who suborns perjury.
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| 18. | Meanwhile, William S . Madden of Hanover has parsed the phrase suborn perjury, and he calls it redundant.
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| 19. | "I doubt if there were efforts to suborn government officials, " he said in a telephone interview
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| 20. | As Buffy and Giles talk, Willow suborns Anya telepathically, so that Anya breaks Giles's binding spells.
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