When asked about the scheduling quirk, most of the people involved reacted with bemused indifference.
They sold out immediately and Quirk went on to print more than a million.
Mr. Grahame-Smith dashed it off in six weeks, and Quirk printed just 10, 000 copies.
Lookalikes have long profited off the famous people they, through some odd quirk of DNA, resemble.
Eventually, I figured maybe this was just a quirk of management consultants, and let the matter slide.
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The changeover plan makes no mention of how this British quirk might be ironed out before joining.
But there is an interesting market quirk in Denmark, a country that is still outside the euro area.
But my favorites dig into quirk and originality of certain dwellers Offbeat Spaces, Small Spaces.
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But Roenneberg sees this not so much as a by-product of industrial capitalism as a quirk of human physiology.
Through a quirk in the tax code, the federal government subsidizes leveraged takeovers.
At issue in the study is a quirk of billing for lab procedures.
Louisiana's deal, which had to do with a funding quirk as a result of Hurricane Katrina, gets to stay.
The aesthetic of alldressedup is feminine and urban with a smidge of quirk.
But Soon-Shiong says his drug is more effective than Taxol, precisely because of a quirk in the albumin coat.
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Never mind all that clean living: 21% of the population carries this quirk.
To pay his rent, he got a job as a contract writer for Quirk Books, an independent publisher in Philadelphia.
One quirk: You can change your cost-basis choice for mutual funds online or in writing, but not over the phone.
Thanks to a quirk of the system, known as convergence, Welsh spending has been falling compared to levels in England.
The point is that a pen has really only one purpose (purp), but it has a multitude of quirky uses (quirk).
By a quirk of fate, the city has staged the games twice at times of austerity (as well as in 1908).
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But in one European region, by a quirk of history, a community with deep local roots lives under Islamic family law.
The postseason for major-college football is controlled by conferences, not the NCAA, a quirk that evolved from the sport's century-old bowl system.
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It's a quirk of the U.S. statistical apparatus that residential rents count for 29% of the measured rate of consumer price inflation.
Netflix and other online outfits have made use of this quirk to handle the fact that people occasionally mistype their own information.
Xu's trick: a genetic quirk called a transposon--a so-called jumping gene--that his team stole from the genome of the cabbage looper moth.
But how does this temperamental quirk link up with his religious obsessions?
However, to a scout, failure to identify a single quirk or glitch could lead to a costly error and possible job termination.
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Prosecutors also plan to call Monsignor Kevin Quirk to the witness stand.
That quirk in the way the repeal is drafted may doom it.
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