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Our correspondent says the Arab observers gained a first impression entirely untypical of the long story so far.
BBC: Syria says twin suicide bombings in Damascus kill 44
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"Take the example of Hull, which as Grant Shapps knows is not untypical, " the shadow welfare minister said.
BBC: Council estate in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets
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His description of the Havel family quarrel over their restored pre-1948 properties is telling and, he suggests, not untypical.
ECONOMIST: Vaclav Havel: A hero of his time | The
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It's a rather untypical gamble it may be said, because you're making the gamble but it's with our money - that's unusual for a gamble.
BBC: News | BREAKFAST WITH FROST | Interview with Prime Minister Tony Blair
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Mr Fox is in many ways an untypical Mexican politician.
ECONOMIST: The challenge for Vicente Fox is to keep his balance
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Unfortunately Roy Whiting, who seized and abducted little Sarah Payne, playing in a cornfield on a summer Saturday evening with her brothers and sister, is not untypical of these people.
BBC: Stuart Kuttner, Managing Editor, News of the World
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That is not untypical of Iran's stand-offish conservatives.
ECONOMIST: Now wait for the political tremors
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Michael Hofmann, the translator of this new English edition, warns us in a fine introduction that the novel is in many ways untypical of Roth's other books, many of them looser, more open-grained satirical urban novellas.
ECONOMIST: Modern fiction
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All in all, it was not untypical.
ECONOMIST: American juries
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And nor was 2012 untypical.
BBC: How under-funded is lung cancer research?
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Hundreds of logs that appeared to have been felled by saws lay amid the wreckage of the most ravaged communities, in the provinces of Quezon and Aurora, suggesting that deforestation did, indeed, contribute to the destruction brought about by a not untypical series of tropical storms.
ECONOMIST: The government has few options bar rhetoric
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Most people are used to juggling two discordant views of themselves and their fellow humans, one statistical, according to which what's normal is what most people do most of the time, and one rooted in what you could call the moral imagination: a there-but-for-the-grace-of-God capacity to put themselves into other people's moccasins, however horrible or untypical the circumstances.
ECONOMIST: The silence of the lambs | The