Now the wedding news has gotten everyone very het up.
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You may have het up feedback you wish to impart, but make sure you do so constructively.
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When Bob Dylan was crowned with the laurel wreath of Nobel recognition in literature last year, the internet got het up.
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This article originally appeared on Noisey UK. When Bob Dylan was crowned with the laurel wreath of Nobel recognition in literature last year, the internet got het up.
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Open to charges of sacrilege, though interestingly the digital watchdogs of this world seemed too busy picking their collective jaws up off the floor in amazement to get het up about it.
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Pushing all those social media buttons and getting everyone het up to such an extent that they have just become complicit in making an item in the men's collection a veritable phenomenon simply on the back of an Instagram post.
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One reviewer noted that "even before the film was made, het-up sorority sisters blasted it like fruit growers protesting The Grapes of Wrath." Most of the complaints were later dropped due to the publicity they were generating for the film.
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But in Europe surely we would find some answers. The Leader-Post did not share Arnold's priorities. Bob MacRae, Arnold's editor, informed her in a letter in 1936 that: "Only a fraction of our readers get het up about economics and foreign policy… they are more concerned with love, food, the movies, clothes and family affairs." Later that year, Arnold joined the Canadian Press as their Paris correspondent.
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During the 1926-1927 season, he played for three teams, finishing the season with the Wanderers. He remained with Brooklyn for three seasons before joining the New York Giants in 1929.FANS HET UP FOR HOME SOCCER SEASON START That year he played for the Giants in both the Eastern Professional Soccer League and the ASL as the Soccer Wars came to an end. However, when the Giants returned to the ASL, Adair left the team and moved to Bridgeport Hungaria.
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The dumpling can be filled with liver and onion,"Clangers made of liver and onion, bacon turn-overs, suet rolls, and apple pies were favourite packed meals, and were often 'het up' on the engine boiler at threshing time". bacon and potatoes, pork and onions, or other meat and vegetables, and flavoured with the garden herb sage. While often savoury, the clanger was also said to have been prepared with a sweet filling, such as jam or fruit, in one end; this variant is referred to in a Bedfordshire Magazine of the 1960s as an "'alf an' 'alf" (half and half), with "clanger" reserved for a savoury version. There is some doubt as to how much this was traditionally done in practice, though modern recipes often imitate the folklore by including a sweet filling.
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