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"Some guys are just going with the tide; they don't want to fight against it," Arbour said.
"My lord, the thing was sprung so suddenly, and most went with the tide.
If the experience initially leaves you feeling unmoored, I recommend just going with the tide.
"There are people who want them and people who don't, but you just have to go with the tide."
"The boats come and go with the tides.
It will go with the tide, more or less awash, until it finally sinks altogether.
But, she added, "if the tide goes their way and my livelihood depends on it, I'll go with the tide."
On a block where fish restaurants have come and gone with the tides, the changeover at Louie's set off a wave of emotions.
Plans to resume ferry services between Mannar and India come and go with the tide.
Going with the tide, Governor Weld has presided over a recovery that has added back nearly half of the 355,000 jobs lost since late 1988.
It is one of the wonders of Hollywood, where lounges and restaurants come and go with the tides.
He's going with the tide."
I was swept up in the movement and went with the tide down past the rail transporters and the locomotive to the bunkhouse coaches.
But even on these questions, according to Ambassador Menon of Singapore, "They were basically just going with the tide."
Our Changing World Video: Gone with the Tide
So I knew I would have to go with the tide, earn a University place, teach if I had to, perhaps some day meet someone .
"When they traveled on the Hudson River, which is tidal up to Albany, they would have had to go with the tide" or endure an exhausting struggle, Mr. Kalin said.
Round we went with the tide, until we got well under the lee of the point, and then suddenly the speed slackened, we ceased to make way, and finally appeared to be in dead water.
Just before he was appointed, he told fellow writers that a "golden age" was at hand, and that writers should not "go with the tide or follow the wind," but instead should follow their consciences.
Inner Qwghlm is hardly even an island; it is joined to the mainland by a sandbar that used to come and go with the tides, but that has been beefed up with a causeway that carries a road and the railway line.
The seals and the seabirds are free to come and go with the tide, but the rules aren't so lenient for the quadruped inmates (118 at last count) at the Plum Island Animal Disease Center, a mile off the North Fork of eastern Long Island.