You know, he pricked at something that he knows that Tiger is very sensitive about.
Meanwhile, Malaysia seems intent on reflating the bubble pricked by last year's regional crisis.
There followed a reign of terror where she pricked witches as far north as Tain.
My horse pricked his ears in the last 100 yards and was in command.
LSE's board rejected as too low, but which pricked the interest of its institutional investors.
The skin is then pricked and boiling water poured all over the duck.
On September 2nd posters appeared around the city saying that 418 people had reported being stabbed or pricked.
Silverio turns east along the coast, which looms, a barely discernible shadow, pricked here and there by individual points of light.
Look at public-opinion polls, and you can see that the religious right is a balloon waiting to be pricked.
In the morning, droplets of seawater and precipitation pricked faces, arms, and legs.
In Tain she pricked the wrong person - a man called John Hay.
Ears first pricked up to the idea with The Metro, a free morning paper launched by Associated Newspapers in 1999.
But no sooner had she touched the spindle than the magic spell took effect, and she pricked her finger with it.
They were also pricked with needles, tied up in chains and put on a dog's leash and "humiliated" in front of others.
In the past, property bubbles were eventually pricked by higher interest rates.
Every time the trees rustled in the breeze, my ears pricked up at an auditory illusion of a rushing river just around the next bend.
The musical world pricked up its ears and the Elgar estate soon realised that, when the published sketches came out of copyright in 2005, anybody could tinker with them.
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Their background would be familiar to readers of Jane Austen, a writer Mr Gayford often and aptly refers to: a few families thrown together by class, alive to every social nuance, ears pricked for money and rank.
"In the days before Pampers, you actually got to fold the cloth, you got to put it on, you got to put the safety pin in and I haven't pricked any baby yet, " Mr. Lee told a rapt nation.
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While fulfilling his residency at a San Francisco hospital he was pricked by a needle used on an HIV-positive patient and endured a year of testing (and worry) before it could be determined the infection did not pass to him.
Also, the experience of Ireland's banks - where losses rose exponentially for month after relentless month following the 2008 crash - shows how foolish it is to ever assume that you've touched bottom when a massive debt-financed property bubble has been pricked.
If he could do that, surely he should be able to render the quickness of his mare as she shook her tail against the flies, or impatiently raised her neck while he prepared the little painting cart, or pricked her ears as he made noises to the forest.
But during the just-pricked bubble, it wasn't the Scrooges and the Marleys who lent more than 100% of the purchase price of a house without bothering to verify the income or employment of the applicant, or even to insist that he or she pay down a little bit of the principal now and then.
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