| 41. | Alternatively, insects can be retained by making the leaf stickier by the production of mucilage, leading to flypaper traps.
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| 42. | Where it parts company with most Hollywood outings is in its acknowledgment of what Langston Hughes called the sweet flypaper of life.
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| 43. | Their modus operandi has shifted from fly-down-the-court offense to flypaper defense from a more conventional approach.
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| 44. | The movie has an almost tactile stickiness, an obsession with flypaper, dripping candlewax, suntan lotion and various body fluids.
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| 45. | The belief that money attached to anything is like flypaper in its attraction extends even to something as way out as poetry.
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| 46. | "Let's not make this a piece of flypaper to attract every amendment floating around this chamber,"
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| 47. | Later research found that not all non-matching grants are perceived by the community which would therefore support the flypaper effect.
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| 48. | He did put the flypaper defense on Reggie Miller in the fourth quarter, limiting the Indiana Stickman to one field goal attempt.
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| 49. | Jerry Jennings, the mayor of Albany, greeted Adams at the airport and stuck to him like flypaper all through his visit.
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| 50. | Of course, the goal of the free market economy is to whup all your competitors and become the de facto flypaper standard.
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