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Polls suggest that she would trounce Mrs Duhalde, by as much as 42% to 14%.
ECONOMIST: The first lady of Peronism
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Children in Asia and Europe often trounce their American counterparts in standardised scholastic tests.
ECONOMIST: Reading, writing and enrichment
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On international issues, Mrs Clinton can trounce a man who sometimes appears to think that foreign policy means New Jersey.
ECONOMIST: Rudy don��t care
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Unless one of the three makes huge mistakes, it's unlikely that any one of them will completely trounce the other two.
FORBES: Tech Titans' Zero Sum Game
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How exciting is it to come to work if the best you can do is trounce some other company that does roughly the same thing?
FORBES: How The Best Leaders Are Kicking Everyone Else's...Results
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But as the computing world shifts from PCs to mobile devices, Lookout has been able to trounce multibillion-dollar security giants like McAfee and Symantec without scaring people.
FORBES: Move up http://i.forbesimg.com t Move down
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Mr. Gingrich asserted in the debate that at this time in 1979, Ronald Reagan was 30 percentage points behind Jimmy Carter, an incumbent he would trounce 10 months later.
WSJ: Gingrich Defends Stances in GOP Debate
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In Bremen all manner of differences were buried (or at least firmly shelved) in a common yearning to trounce the opposition at the polls for the fifth time in a row.
ECONOMIST: Can Kohl win in September?
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These numbers trounce those of the U.S. tenfold.
FORBES: Buy the Numbers
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Besides passing onto our children how utterly precious their individual difference is and to value the same difference in others, how can we hope to trounce the racists by the statute books or by bigger bolder fines for millionaire federations and millionaire players?
BBC: African viewpoint: Kicking racism on and off the pitch
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They go to a lonely country house, inhabited by a pair of wealthy oddballs called Flower (Charles Durning) and Stone (Joel Grey), who trounce Pozzi at poker and then demand an unusual repayment: he and Nashe must build a stone wall in the grounds.
NEWYORKER: The Music of Chance