At the finish, Kerry were relieved while Monaghan agonised on how they had let victory slip.
It agonised for a decade about overcapacity in North America, but took little action.
Smith admitted he agonised over the selection of Fa'asavalu but insisted it was the right decision.
Many of those who agonised about the sinking euro were fretting more about symbolism than economics.
Just about all of the new list (even, in its agonised way, Russia) strive to look west.
She agonised over whether to publicise what had happened to her, she told the BBC News website.
No speech by the prime minister has been agonised over for so long.
That is the pledge at the heart of the speech on Europe which David Cameron has so long agonised over.
The percentages fixed in Muhammad's time applied only to mining and agriculture (and, agonised one early caliph, were pomegranates exempt?).
He said the decision to use A19 was "agonised over as was the decision to reduce the number of police staff".
Two sorts of cuts now being agonised over by bosses to investment and to the workforce will prove crucial in the coming months.
He, too, is enjoying a new incarnation as an author and pundit, and has agonised publicly about whether or not to run.
And now a new era of agonised decision-making may be approaching, because Brussels has told the Swiss government the EU is no longer interested in pursuing bilateral agreements.
After an American missile destroyed the Saddam Tower (a telecommunications mast with a revolving restaurant), Mr Hussein had the pieces of the missile gathered up, melted down and then cast into agonised portraits of the leaders of the anti-Iraq coalition.
Mr Annan has agonised in public about the UN's failure in Rwanda, when he was head of un peacekeeping, and has argued that his success as a peace-broker in Kenya last year owed something to the existence of R2P as a moral instrument.
应用推荐