'I WON.. AND COULDN'T SLEEP A WINK'.Byline: STEPHEN Stephen, 1097?–1154, king of England (1135–54). The son of Stephen, count of Blois and Chartres, and Adela, daughter of William I of England, he was brought up by his uncle, Henry I of England, who presented him with estates in England and France and MOYES Moyes is a surname, which could refer to
A MUM from Newport who won pounds 8.3million on the Lotto warned the pounds 45.5million winners to prepare for sleepless sleep·less adj. 1. a. Marked by a lack of sleep: a sleepless night. b. Unable to sleep. 2. nights. Divorced mum-of-three Jenny Southall, 45, who earned pounds 9,000-a-year as a cinema worker and lived in a council house before striking it rich in 2007, told the Mirror: "Nothing will be making any sense for the Newport couple at the minute. They won't be sleeping a wink A short control signal in telephony operations. It can be a single pulse, a brief interruption of a continuous tone, a change of bits or a change in polarity of the signal. For example, a momentary interruption (the wink) of a continuous, single-frequency tone is a signal that the . "I got a maximum four hours a night for weeks. I'd often find myself sharing a mug of hot chocolate at 4.30am with my daughter, flicking through property magazines saying, 'We could have that'. "I'd suggest the couple don't make any rash decisions." Jenny, who gave away more than half of her fortune to her family, added: "Sometimes you hear of families arguing over the money and the Lottery lottery, scheme for distributing prizes by lot or other method of chance selection to persons who have paid for the opportunity to win. The term is not applicable when lots are drawn without payment by the interested parties to determine some matter, e.g. win being the worst thing that ever happened to them. "I never had any of that and wish them all the best." CAPTION(S): TIPS Winner Jenny |
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