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So, admittedly, are most new presidents, though one should not exult in the fact.
ECONOMIST: Crunch time
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We watch as Berry's relatives exult at her return: "I'm excited to see her, " said her cousin.
CNN: Lessons from 'America's Most Wanted': Never give up
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He even got to exult in the democratic uprising in Ukraine, which rejected a government closely tied to Moscow.
NPR: Bush Banks on Elections at Home, Abroad
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Bradamante is despondent, and Alcina is left to exult over her latest conquest.
NPR: Love And Lunacy: Vivaldi's 'Orlando Furioso'
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Will Gordon Brown, the chancellor, exult in the absence of Peter Mandelson, his old enemy and Mr Blair's confidant?
ECONOMIST: Politics
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"One day, I'd like to try that, " she would tell herself, watching the runners exult after finishing the 26.2-mile race.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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And, yes, these type of shows also appeal to the primal need to exult over luxe, all those expensive and flashy-looking things that shine in the night or at least in the display case.
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Mary Lou Cagle, who manages Bank of America's relationship with Exult, recalls how she and her colleagues sat down with their counterparts at Exult and pored over hundreds of business points for six weeks.
ECONOMIST: Outsourcing
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Some academics and commentators exult over what they maintain is a long-overdue stable-cleaning, encouraged by a campaigning press and supported by a public increasingly exposed, in the media and on the Internet, to western standards of accountability.
ECONOMIST: Israel