Within 25 years the bass were growing bellies prodigious enough to make Marlon Brando flinch.
Some associates say their boss still could flinch and sell one or more of his companies.
But her judgments are so sweeping and harsh that the fair-minded reader may flinch a bit.
TV, maintain larger networks of correspondents inside Iraq and rarely flinch from airing graphic content.
Almost: Suchen watched Walter flinch at the word and then let hope flicker in his eyes.
He is given a couple of amusing lines, though, and he never made me flinch.
But once in power, Republicans may well flinch at cutting such popular programmes without Democratic support.
The torches came again for his job, as they always seemed to do, but he didn't flinch.
Rais declared he would never flinch from "tweaking" Wahid's ear, should the Muslim cleric-turned-president be found wanting.
You may gawp or flinch, but your pulse, like that of Dr. Lecter himself, will stay disappointingly slow.
He also told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show he would "not flinch" amid growing speculation about his future.
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But Americans don't flinch in the face of difficult truths or difficult tasks.
He didn't flinch when prosecutors played five audiotapes, recorded while he was in jail awaiting his day in court.
Asked about balancing such retro hints with modern car-building necessities, McGovern doesn't flinch.
If this was the starting gun to a leadership challenge most MPs seemed to flinch with surprise at hearing it.
Assuming that the Saddams of the world would somehow flinch from using such weapons against their imagined enemies strikes us as foolhardy.
Susanne did not flinch and, after a few slow moments with his mouth resting motionless on hers, he inserted a pointed tongue.
Pickens, a member of Clean Energy's board, doesn't flinch at that question.
The party to flinch first would be the one that is less certain of its esteem in the eyes of the electorate.
And he said he would not flinch from criticism about his performance.
Scottish taxpayers would be right to flinch at forking out much more.
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He said the tactics of the NRA galvanized a vocal minority of gun owners against the legislation, which caused some senators to flinch.
Otherwise creditors will play "chicken" with the government, knowing that at the last minute the government will flinch and fail to remove the guarantees.
For example, it did not flinch when, in 2005, researchers at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Maryland reconstructed the Spanish flu virus.
They also flinch at the prospect of a single Iraqi army, which could base Arab troops back in Kurdistan after an absence of 12 years.
Senate Democrats refused to flinch Tuesday as the chamber moved toward a rare, all-night session of debate on legislation to bring troops home this fall.
Nevertheless, home builders and others are hoping the Fed will flinch.
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The backdrop is Nottingham's Clifton Estate, once the biggest council housing estate in Europe, and Bugg doesn't flinch from painting a bleak picture of the area.
Two balls later, Haddin prodded the ball back to the spinner and a frustrated Benn shaped to shy at the stumps, causing the batsman to flinch.
Gordon Pape, editor of The Canada Report , believes that there is good reason why investors did not flinch when the shocking earnings were released.
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