• The young, upper-class London socialites the Throbbings and Miles Malpractice and the rest strike attitudes, rattle on without ever saying what they mean, fall in and out of ridiculous scrapes, and party, party, party.

    NEWYORKER: Bright Young Things

  • Would she rattle on?

    FORBES: Do You Suffer From Workplace Anxiety?

  • Powerful booms periodically rattle windows on the North Carolina coast.

    WSJ: Clintonville, Wis. Becomes a Real Boom Town

  • The central-switch business could rattle Cisco's hammerlock on wired networking, too.

    FORBES: Wi-Fi With a Coat and Tie

  • Metaphorically, it compels the builder of a quality general education system to shake each pillar that supports system quality and then allows the builder to focus the repairs on pillars that rattle the most and specifically those whose rattle threatens to collapse the system if not repaired.

    UNESCO: ����

  • In November Adobe announced that it was finally abandoning development of Flash for mobile browsers, and refocusing on HTML5 for delivering interactive features and video -- the death rattle of a long struggle in which Apple resisted letting Flash run on its iOS mobile operating system.

    CNN: Phone, tablet users spend more time with apps than Web

  • Kind enough too, when we met him in London, to warn us about his explosive laugh which can rattle windows, and send the needles on recording equipment into the red zone.

    BBC: Bezos and the future of books

  • And when the series swings back to New York on Thursday, the Garden will rattle, even if the home team is down 0-2.

    WSJ: The Team the Knicks Were Supposed to Be

  • On this warm day, the rattle of Tehran's chaotic traffic comes in through the open window of a small room crowded with sewing machines.

    NPR: Iran's President Sets Out to Ease Unemployment

  • Once upon a time we could have laughed this fixture off and run sweeps on the number of goals we would rattle past a goalie in a sou' wester and an Aran knit sweater.

    BBC: Scotland's lowest ebb

  • The bumps batter and rattle the buses as they surf the sea of cobbles on the grand piazzas.

    BBC: The uneven charm of Rome's cobblestones

  • British conductor Sir Simon Rattle has made his taking over of the philharmonic orchestra conditional on a massive injection of cash.

    BBC: Berlin city coalition collapses

  • But lending limits announced on March 28th by the central bank managed to rattle the stockmarket without convincing local analysts they would have much practical impact.

    ECONOMIST: Situations vacant

  • Right now everyone could probably rattle off their three favourite mobile applications, and they would not all be on the BlackBerry platform.

    FORBES: BlackBerry Has An App Problem With the Z10 and BB10

  • Although Egypt's banks have a sounder reputation than some in the region, their closets still rattle with the skeletons of dodgy loans, handed out to inefficient state enterprises on government instructions.

    ECONOMIST: Slow, quick, quick, slow are the dance-steps of reform

  • Seemingly on his way to a straight-sets defeat, Djokovic dug in to rattle off the next six games to take the third set -- the first time in seven matches that Nadal had lost a set at Roland Garros.

    CNN: Nadal's French Open quest halted by rain

  • And the next ball Lee produced a viciously swinging yorker to new batsman Jayawardene and the captain could only look on in horror as he failed to offer a shot and the ball swerved in to rattle his stumps.

    BBC: CHOOSE A SPORT

  • Our tester W8 wagon had a mere 9, 181 miles on the odometer when it arrived, but it clearly had warped front brake rotors, a rattle in the automatic transmission lever from overzealous shifting in the manual mode, and bushings that had already been flogged at a level equivalent to what 100, 000 miles of driving by any ordinary owner might do.

    FORBES: Test Drives

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