Ms Wall retorts that if one looks at individual swing states, the picture is sometimes rosier.
India retorts the trial should take place in its courts as the fishermen were Indian.
Hardly, he retorts: a decade ago, Unilever had a huge computer network for sharing internal information.
Stuttgart retorts that if clients were not getting a good deal, they would go elsewhere.
The family retorts that if his intentions were amicable, he would sell and go away.
Dr Ng retorts that he is surprised Dr Lieu's paper got past the refereeing process.
The government retorts that it will only move people to areas with a similar ethnic mix.
Mr. Karzai, one former close aide retorts, often wonders the same about his Western counterparts.
Arizona's governor, Jan Brewer, who signed the bill into law, retorts that it explicitly prohibits racial profiling.
Kenneth Starr, the independent prosecutor, retorts that the public interest in a thorough investigation of the presidency matters more.
Though a servant that talks back may not be universally appealing, one that has some clever retorts would amuse anyone.
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Mr Starr issued three separate retorts, culminating in a 19-page letter to Steven Brill, Content's owner, editor, and principal reporter.
" In other words, retorts conservative guru Paul Weyrich, child care is going to be "the new entitlement of the next century.
Tramping door-to-door for votes in 106-degree heat, Mr Quayle retorts that most of his former voters are in the new sixth district.
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The comment elicited sarcastic retorts from the back corner of the bus.
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Of course, he retorts: that is just how things are in Colombia.
Mr Starr retorts that White House workers are public servants, and that they would best serve the public interest by co-operating with his investigation.
"People have criticized us in every decade since the 1930s, " retorts Chris Galvin, 48, a 25-year Motorola veteran and grandson of company founder Paul Galvin.
Bogus, and look how much more Madrid province gets, retorts Pasqual Maragall, whose Socialists got more votes, but fewer seats, in the 1999 regional elections.
Ukraine retorts that further integration with the EU is the answer.
Citi retorts that giving its customers access to top-branded stores at privileged prices, and loading them up with special offers, will keep them happy and loyal.
Don Gautier, who works for that agency, retorts that it has never done a systematic study of the Arctic, or put a figure on its energy riches.
The government retorts that without the support of the hereditary peers (including cross-benchers, admittedly), the Lords would have been unable to defeat the government over the European elections.
To criticism that Europe's labour and product markets are too rigid to cope with monetary union, he retorts that structural reforms, as in the Netherlands, will be hurried along.
On the contrary, she retorts, many of the loudest critics of such marriages are women whose foreign grooms filed for divorce once in Britain, often then bringing their real partners over from Pakistan.
Mr Obama has a holster of quick-fire retorts.
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College-boosters have several retorts to all this doom-mongering.
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Significantly, few major newspapers have carried prominently strong Democratic retorts to GOP claims made in New York in the same way Republican criticisms regularly landed in swing-state publications during July's Democratic convention in Boston, Massachusetts.
The opposing school retorts that technology does not increase wages immediately, and some sorts of information technology seem to boost the returns to capital instead (think of how much more a dollar's worth of computing power can do these days).
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