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Angela Berkley, High School Student
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I checked out a few attractive looking backgrounds together with some absolute horrors including a yellow thing called Lemony something which had me screwing my eyes and letterboxing my mouth as if I had licked its acidic sourness from my PC screen.
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Sam Hayden, Gothic Nightclub Owner
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The horrors of seeing his father taken away from this world gave Loral a hatred of all unnatural beasts especially the vile undead that infested the lands.
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John Carthy, Gun Shop Sales Assistant
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They are too intent on hating war to ask if unleashing its horrors might be worth it to overturn a brutal tyranny that, among its manifold inhumanities, treats women like animals.
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Bori Gonbutoren, Reindeer Herder
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Europe wove a remarkable tapestry of horrors in the name of Christianity from the beginning of the modern era.
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Mark Harris, Priest
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His horrors were so great that he found them insupportable, until he had returned from his apostasy, and declared himself fully convinced of the errors of the Church of Rome.
Even though the horrors of the Holocaust under Hitler were of an unimaginable magnitude, the Bible teaches that a time of even greater trial awaits Israel during the tribulation.
That is how it will be during the tribulation, and the horrors of this period cannot be exaggerated because Jesus said that it would be the worst time of distress that the world has ever seen, or will ever see again.
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David Rosenberg, Dermatologist
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The horrors of the Holocaust have produced a residual gentile guilt that causes some directors to want to make every Jewish character sympathetic in every situation.
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Ben Werner, Student Newspaper Editor
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They were not victims of the conspiracies of the multinationals but enthusiastic participants in them-just as some had previously been enthusiasts for the horrors resulting from the attempts to build industry in isolation in economically backward countries.
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Jack Crawford, WWII Veteran
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With all its horrors the atomic bomb did not seem unmanageable as an instrument of war and the fact that the Americans had an immense preponderance over Russia has given us a passage through eight anxious and troublous years.
Myers captures the horrors of the war by juxtaposing a letter which Richie writes at the beginning of the novel and the kind of letter he imagines at the end of the novel when he has been wounded and seen his comrades fall in violent deaths.
Its horrors are no longer experienced primarily by soldiers fighting on far-off battlefields.
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