• Rooney is keen to banish the memories of the England's 2006 World Cup exit.

    BBC: Rooney revels in Ronaldo struggle

  • Chief executives understand that it is impossible to banish insider trading without crippling the markets themselves.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • However, earworms did seem similar to intrusive thoughts in relation to attempts to banish them.

    FORBES: Tis the Season for Many Merry Earworms

  • Domingo Cavallo, Argentina 's economy minister, tried to banish fears of a debt default.

    ECONOMIST: Missile defence

  • To banish distractions, turn off all notifications, bleeps and anything that flashes red.

    FORBES: Connect

  • What is not is the need to banish America's guns from everyday use.

    ECONOMIST: The lesson nobody learns

  • Now politicians want to banish such information from markets altogether in the name of making them more transparent and trustworthy.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) was supposed to banish the competitive devaluations that threatened the single market in the early 1990s.

    ECONOMIST: Staring into the abyss

  • Kennedy and Martin Luther King on the need to banish racial considerations from American life and law a habit that infuriates the Democrats.

    ECONOMIST: Ward Connerly��s trumpet blast

  • Roy Berns says what curators and conservators want is to banish the effects of age and the unintended quirks of light and color.

    NPR: Using Science to Rescue Art

  • In the past, it has hired quirky British directors such as Shane Meadows in a bid to banish the memory of Ronald McDonald.

    BBC: AD BREAKDOWN

  • But the result, coupled with the decision to leave interest rates unchanged, might not be enough to banish the spectre of deflation in Europe.

    ECONOMIST: Stalemate | The

  • The ex-All Black converted both of his tries either side of half-time and added three penalties to banish any doubts about Quins' Premiership status.

    BBC: Harlequins 23-14 Newcastle

  • The government is sincere in its pledge to banish joblessness, but history shows that the road to full employment is paved with good intentions.

    ECONOMIST: Unemployment policy

  • Are we so cocky as to believe that technology, wealth, education and deepening insights about the human genetic code have the power to banish conflict?

    FORBES: Our fragile golden age

  • More and better jobs, and rising living standards, may not be enough to banish the sectarian divide, but their absence could well widen it again.

    ECONOMIST: Northern Ireland's economy

  • Andy Dorman and Steven Thomson each netted a brace as the Buddies sunk Celtic to banish the painful memories of Sunday's Co-operative Insurance Cup final defeat.

    BBC: Manager Gus MacPherson hails four-star St Mirren

  • The decision came after the former Smiths singer urged the venue to close down their McDonald's outlets and to banish the sale of "flesh as food".

    BBC: Morrissey LA concert to be '100% vegetarian'

  • Jihad has failed to banish non-Muslim troops from Islamic countries.

    ECONOMIST: Osama bin Laden

  • Stewart or New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, trustbuster deluxe, as they righteously seek to banish moneylenders, marketmakers and conflicts of interest from the temples of Wall Street?

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • It remains unclear exactly what sort of affair they embarked on, but Dickens was sufficiently besotted to banish his wife of 22 years, Catherine, who had given him ten children.

    ECONOMIST: Charles Dickens

  • Post-war Germany bound itself with rules and treaties in order to resist past temptations: a strong constitution to restrain politicians, fiscal rules to banish hyperinflation, the EU to tame nationalism.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • Radical measures often turn out to mean tinkering with the current arrangements, and the government is responsible for plenty of the red tape and the targets it now wants to banish.

    ECONOMIST: Politics

  • They said they wanted to come "face to face" with the man accused of her murder and wanted to banish memories that had been "shrouded by the brutality of her death".

    BBC: Chinese supermarket in Los Cristianos

  • We were sold on the Keyport Slide when it promised not only to banish key-based clutter, but also incorporated two of our favorite things: flash storage and a beer access device.

    ENGADGET

  • The job now is to persuade people that they are buying these qualities when they purchase Scottish-made goods and services and to banish unhelpful images like drunkenness, football violence, sectarianism and union militancy.

    ECONOMIST: Scotland the brand

  • "European Cup Winners 1999" was still inscribed on many of the souvenirs on offer - evidence of a continuing sense of living on past glories which this young Ulster side hopes to banish.

    BBC: Ulster restore pride in white jersey

  • On the other hand, the Britain that had enthusiastically participated in the slave trade in the 1700s threw its naval might into a crusade to banish slavery from the world in the 19th century.

    ECONOMIST: The British empire

  • And, while Capello and his players will take some time to banish the bitter memories of the World Cup fiasco in South Africa, they have made the best possible start to their period of recovery.

    BBC: Switzerland 1-3 England

  • Meanwhile Mr Maliki is also co-operating with a shadowy parliamentary committee controlled by the INA that has the power to banish politicians for alleged sympathies with Saddam Hussein and for senior membership of his Baath party.

    ECONOMIST: Iraq still adrift: The politicians wrangle as the nerves of the people jangle | The

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