| 21. | To coin a phrase, we need to be tough on drugs crime and tough on the causes of drugs crime.
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| 22. | "And to coin a phrase that's never, ever been used before, I love a parade ."
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| 23. | As for the object of all this libidinous kerfuffle, well, to coin a phrase, Irons seemed to have no idea.
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| 24. | They haven't lost their selfish view of what might be, to coin a phrase, in the best interests of baseball.
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| 25. | Whether or not it was by community consensus, 3RR is what it says on the tin, to coin a phrase : a rule.
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| 26. | In both issues the existing ethical forms must be shattered; to coin a phrase, you cannot put new wine in old wine skins.
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| 27. | But it is the artist's job to get beyond therapy, to coin a phrase, to give us more than a primal scream of discontent.
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| 28. | To coin a phrase, misunderstanding is the father of prejudice and the grandfather of persecution .-- Dweller 09 : 53, 30 June 2006 ( UTC)
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| 29. | Sallis pronounces the episode to be " Kafka-esque, to coin a phrase ", but never does reveal if he actually did go through with the dubbing.
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| 30. | Hell ( ! )-Einstein, Shaw, Russell, Hemingway and countless others have been such as to make me look condignly benign ( to coin a phrase ).
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