Prick the sausage, put it in a small baking pan, and bake for 20 minutes.
But checking levels involves a painful finger-prick test, which deters many from carrying out the test.
But 100 years is a mere pin-prick for a country that dates back over two millennia.
While the onions' flavor concentrates, prick the tart shell everywhere except around the edges and start baking.
WSJ: Martin Picard's Sun-Dried Tomato and Onion Tart | Slow Food Fast
But if the bubble has now burst, interest rates no longer need to rise to prick it.
Half the cuddled babies did not show any facial expression of pain when undergoing a heel prick test.
Prick the dough all over with the tines of a fork and transfer it to the baking sheet.
If the academics can prick the proprietors' amour propre, there's a chance they might change the British press.
ECONOMIST: Why top universities are getting interested in journalism
After removing the obvious fat, prick the goose all over the skin, taking care not to pierce the meat.
His task as a science-fiction writer was to imagine problems, to prick thumbs.
Raising official interest rates sufficiently to prick what may or may not be one could itself trigger a deep recession.
They used skin prick tests to identify those with allergic reactions, and questionnaires to identify those who developed asthma or eczema.
It is not this light precise pin prick that many Americans believe.
Basically, Armstrong seems to be telling us that not only did he dope but he also didn't let it prick his conscience.
By raising interest rates to prick the bubble of inflation, the Fed induces a mild recession that is particularly hard on smaller companies.
At Christmastime 2008, Von Lipinski didn't think much about the pine needle prick until the redness started spreading and he experienced abnormal pain.
The very moment that she felt the prick she sank down into the bed that was right there and fell into a deep sleep.
Peering upwards looking for a flitter of action, the only movement was the pin prick of light from a satellite as it tracked across the starry sky.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Scotland | Highlands and Islands | Seeking 'a wet slap' in the dark
The bubble will eventually burst anyway, but it would have been better to prick it sooner at the cost of a mild recession than to risk a deeper recession later.
BIS, and Philip Lowe, at the Reserve Bank of Australia, have tried to shift the emphasis of this debate away from the question of whether central banks should prick a bubble.
ECONOMIST: Yesterday's financial architecture needs refurbishing
At age four, they were also given a skin-prick test to see if they had any of the most common allergies, including dust mite, animal fur, pollen, milk, eggs or peanuts.
BBC: Doctors could predict which children are at risk of asthma
Acupuncturists "prick the area they're working on, " she says.
Partly, perhaps, because of the third popular criticism of our bubble thesis: that it is too risky, both economically and politically, for a central bank to prick a bubble by raising interest rates.
While the previous Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan, took rates to 6.5% to pierce the dot-com bubble of the 1990s, Bernanke seems to be betting that about 5.5% will be sufficient to prick the housing bubble.
He is a waspish critic of American policy towards the Muslim world under George Bush, but manages to prick Western misconceptions without falling into Mr Crooke's error of taking extremist movements entirely at their own estimation.
应用推荐