The founding father will continue to opine, but the PAP will have a little more wriggle room to change.
While the health service is better prepared than it used to be, there is less wriggle room than ever.
Yet, as in other areas, Mr Romney gives himself lots of wriggle room.
Until now, we haven't known what "best" meant, and by combing factors like availability, price, and quality as well as speed, there would have been plenty of wriggle room to allow ministers to declare victory.
That may well be in part because the government wants a bit of wriggle room to get its legislation through the House of Lords without setting itself a tight deadline, which could give opponents of its various big bills some extra leverage with which to extract concessions.
But it's also worth bearing in mind that the wording leaves some wriggle room for Intel -- not least in terms of selling LGA socket chips only as expensive niche options (i.e. the true definition of "enthusiast") rather than as mainstream products, should it wish to do so.
ENGADGET: Intel sort of denies rumors about future CPUs being non-upgradeable
Now there is a whole different debate about whether this remarkable show of faith by investors in the ability of Britain to repay its very big debts is the result of George Osborne's deficit reduction programme or whether it shows that he has more wriggle room than he believes to slow the pace of deficit reduction.
This leaves a little more wriggle-room than the ten-year ban that Mr Hague is widely believed to have endorsed: the Conservatives could change their mind if they lost the next election.
Mr Hussein will find that he has much less room to wriggle once the countdown begins.
Mr Hussein will find that he has little room to wriggle now that the countdown has begun.
Mr Hussein may now make a show of working with the inspectors in an attempt to ensure his own survival, but he has little room to wriggle.
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