| 21. | In the 1960s, Osborne emerged as an eloquent if often dyspeptic critic of modern British life.
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| 22. | It was well known that he suffered no fools and was by inclination combative, dyspeptic even.
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| 23. | "Miserable, " the dyspeptic Wilson would reply as he went on his way.
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| 24. | Both got their start as angry young men with a dyspeptic gift for satire and biting humor.
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| 25. | Paul Anka is the Riviera's dyspeptic head of security who complains about the Presley mystique.
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| 26. | :Sorry, I know this sounds very dyspeptic, but I'm certain of it.
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| 27. | Another dyspeptic reader whose mind has been boggled by marketplace machinations wrote to complain about rising gasoline prices.
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| 28. | Kotite can find solace, however, in two essential truths about the dyspeptic world of professional coaching.
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| 29. | The older players were not surprised when they reported for camp and found Parcells in a dyspeptic mood.
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| 30. | The Pioneers, the very wealthy and usually jovial Bush bagmen, are dyspeptic over the Prodigal Son.
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