A very small coterie formed within the science club because only a few of the students were interested specifically in genetics. From LearnThat.org.
The record label coterie at least had good reason for putting up a fight to the end. From Wordnik.com. [Jobs Gets Last Word On iTunes Pricing] Reference
Our president and his coterie are our protectors, as well as defenders of freedom and democracy. From Wordnik.com. [Standing at the brink] Reference
Fact is there are people in the Lib Dems who would give many Tories a run for their right wing laissez faire money and Clegg and his coterie are a case in point. From Wordnik.com. [Vince Cable: I could end coalition] Reference
Or perhaps the 'loaded language' of which Malkin not alas the wonderful Michelle Malkin complains, just after describing the traditionalist bishops as a 'coterie'. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2003-06-29] Reference
Koirala practised 'coterie' politics; relatives and associates indulged in large-scale corruption; and he marginalised senior party leaders. From Wordnik.com. [The Hindu - Front Page] Reference
Waldmann appeared to be the leader of the coterie. From Wordnik.com. [Monte-Cristo's Daughter] Reference
A coterie of engineers are working to make that happen. From Wordnik.com. [THE HIGH ROAD] Reference
Lindbergh had much higher regard for the St. Louis coterie. From Wordnik.com. ['The Flight of the Century'] Reference
"Lolita" could end up the most expensive coterie film ever made. From Wordnik.com. [Waiting For Humbert] Reference
Meanwhile, the country is run, sort of, by a coterie of "hard-line" aides. From Wordnik.com. [The Bear Becomes Ursa Minor] Reference
She strives for cool detachment, but her husband's coterie sees the cracks. From Wordnik.com. [Not Really Feeling It] Reference
Is the international NGO system becoming a self-serving coterie of elitists?. From Wordnik.com. [Whose Cause Is It, Anyway?] Reference
Apparently his coterie favored the millionaire, who lost to the billionaire. From Wordnik.com. [Elections Aren't Democracy] Reference
The modern-art coterie likes esthetic innovators, but not institutional ones. From Wordnik.com. [The Man Who Grow Too Much?] Reference
Now power has been redistributed among Morris's coterie of Atlantic proteges. From Wordnik.com. [Trouble In Paradise] Reference
Nor did she bring with her a coterie of crisis counselors or victim advocates. From Wordnik.com. [War Stories] Reference
Alongside the musicians, a coterie of city officials proudly inaugurates two new bicycle lanes. From Wordnik.com. [Paris' Popular Bike Rentals Spark Electric Car Plans] Reference
Netanyahu has surrounded himself with untested aides drawn from his coterie of loy - al friends. From Wordnik.com. [Shot All To Hell] Reference
Frenchman in the coterie he had no difficulty whatever in fixing upon him as the individual wanted. From Wordnik.com. [Monte-Cristo's Daughter] Reference
Yet today she finds herself where she has so often been in the past: the only woman among a coterie of men. From Wordnik.com. [Remembrance Of Things Past] Reference
The Cafe de Seville, and the coterie of long-haired writers, were busying themselves with the rising poet already. From Wordnik.com. [The French Immortals Series — Complete] Reference
My father was undoubtedly a gentleman, and this was most condescendingly admitted by his wife's fastidious coterie. From Wordnik.com. [The Doctor's Daughter] Reference
By the end of this week, Goss and most of his coterie of Gosslings are expected to have left CIA headquarters for good. From Wordnik.com. [Belgrade Burndown] Reference
This exposé of the coterie of rightwing scientists hell-bent on destroying the cause of environmentalism is outstanding. From Wordnik.com. [Merchants of Doubt by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M Conway] Reference
Strong stuff but vintage Miranda -- only the most outrageous member of a clubby coterie of men who run Brazilian football. From Wordnik.com. [Numero Uno Of The Cartolas] Reference
They work as drivers or nannies, or blend into a businessman's coterie looking like a secretary, a briefcase carrier or a toady. From Wordnik.com. [As China's wealthy grow in numbers, so do their protectors] Reference
What appears to be a commercial-ended product scowls at its own small coterie of advisors and grins fatuously at all the end-users. From Wordnik.com. [Excerpt from De Imitatio Calembouri] Reference
The U.N. bureaucracy and its diplomatic coterie also circled the wagons and attacked the U.S. mission for daring to raise the subject. From Wordnik.com. [Hooray for the U.N.] Reference
But insiders say the department was split between serious foreign-trade specialists and a coterie of political types that included Huang. From Wordnik.com. [Calling All Lawyers] Reference
He was not a good judge of men; he surrounded himself with a coterie that betrayed his trust and used the State offices for personal gain. From Wordnik.com. [Fifty Years of Public Service] Reference
He lives in a 3,000-square-foot apartment on Victoria Peak, Hong Kong's exclusive hilltop enclave, and moves around town with a coterie of bodyguards. From Wordnik.com. [Luxury's Mandarin] Reference
A coterie of dangerous groups in Punjab, the country's populous eastern region, is now partnering with the Taliban in what could be a second front in the war. From Wordnik.com. [Pakistan’s Second Front] Reference
In some ways, the close coterie of men wielding the power in the Kremlin resembles the old oligarchy of the Yeltsin years, which Putin has often claimed to have vanquished. From Wordnik.com. [Under A Quiet Surface] Reference
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