It's important to use sparingly so the product doesn't weigh down your strands, as the formula is quite thick.
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USE (SPARINGLY): PolicewomanYou can utilize the policewoman emoji as a gender-inclusive way to express your views about the police.
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USE (SPARINGLY): Symbols of VirginityUse the drooling face and the juggling people to make fun of other people you suspect are virgins.
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Your boss most likely has a very full plate, so reporting a co-worker's behavior to them is a tactic you'll want to use sparingly.
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Most of this technology is still unavailable to consumers, and the stuff that is available — Oculus and Portal — you likely use sparingly if at all.
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I washed my face in the morning with the cleanser they provided, which, by the way, is quite small for the week, so use sparingly.
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The chart also banished healthy fats to the "use sparingly" tip of the pyramid, lumping them in with added sugars and trans fats from processed oils and packaged foods.
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During the last administration (remember that Obama guy?) the White House regularly posted photos to Flickr, a service that the Trump White House has only recently started to use sparingly.
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The features that held visitors' attention the longest — sand, grass, high swings and climbing structures — were elements American park managers use sparingly, because of high maintenance costs and the risk of falls, Ms. Talarowski said.
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If Hurricane Harvey is as bad as I expect it to be in terms of catastrophic (a term I use sparingly) flooding, those federal resources are going to be needed by the citizens of the great state of Texas.
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Another common vivadi some artists use sparingly is shuddha ni which enhances the Saranga mood of the raga.
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C.J.E. Volckmann Nachf. E. Wette, Berlin-Charlottenburg 1936, p. 57 Chief Engineer Engelbert Zaschka pursued in 1929 in Berlin, the approach of the folding-Zaschka three-wheeler. This city car concept was aimed to be cost effective and space saving by the vehicle could be folded after use sparingly.
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The Legislature of Chihuahua described the situation it faced in 1846. "We travel the roads…at their [i.e., the Comanches and Apaches] whim; we cultivate the land where they wish and in the amount they wish; we use sparingly things they have left to us until the moment that it strikes their appetite to take them for themselves."Weber, p.
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