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Many women discuss their first Botox treatment with the dewy-eyed romanticism usually reserved for memories of a first kiss.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Dewy-eyed fables about backcountry ploughboys making it to Olympic stardom were exactly that.
WSJ: The Ancient Olympics: Mud, Sex, Hymns...Sports Too
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But even dewy-eyed optimists don't predict the addition of many more nukes on the global grid within the next decade.
FORBES: Yellowcake Fever
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Mrs Obama did not campaign as a traditional first lady, staring at her husband with dewy-eyed admiration and limiting her comments to bland pleasantries.
ECONOMIST: Let Michelle be Michelle
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Exposure is a particularly misleading deal for dewy-eyed fledgling freelance writers.
FORBES: Why Being Underpaid Is Worse Than Not Being Paid At All
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He himself is unsure whether to be Jack Lemmon or John Cleese, but the sublime Michelle Williams holds the screen magnetically with her dewy-eyed channelling of the young Shirley MacLaine.
NEWYORKER: The Baxter
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Even George Bush, no dewy-eyed disarmer, negotiated cuts down to 1, 700-2, 200 apiece by 2012 (from the 6, 000 agreed upon after the cold war had ended) and was ready to go lower.
ECONOMIST: Getting to zero
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Although Billy Crystal, the star and moving force, still gets a mite dewy-eyed and message-y (this time about brotherly love), he manages to parody as well as act out the fantasies and sensitivities of fortyish urban males.
NEWYORKER: City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly��s Gold