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polling booth造句
1. When you are there, in the polling booth, nobody can see where you put your cross. 2. But, in the privacy of the polling booth, cooler and more hard-headed calculations came into play. 3. I arrived in that polling booth all ready to vote the straight Republican ticket. 4. In the polling booth, the voter marks his favourite candidate number one, his next best number two and so on. 5. Debt is the elephant in the polling booth. 6. In Bihar's Gaya district a polling booth was attacked. 7. Speaking from a polling booth in Abuja,[.com] Corzine said it was too soon to draw any conclusions about the quality of the polls. 8. I was working at the polling booth because I was well known. 9. If you are voting in a polling booth and make a mistake, ask the poll workers for a new ballot. 10. But as before, their influence over the voters' mood ended well before the polling booth. 11. Once I actually got inside the privacy of the polling booth, a wave of doubt came over me. 12. They felt sure that at the moment of truth in the polling booth most voters will consider their wallets. 13. All those voters who shamefacedly backed the Tories in the secrecy of the polling booth are probably feeling vindicated. 14. We can not expect voters to leave their conscience behind them when they go to the polling booth. 15. And pollsters believe that they may not make up their mind until they enter the polling booth. 16. In my first election for Tanjong Pagar, our home in Oxley Road, became the HQ to assign cars provided by my supporters to ferry voters to the polling booth. 17. The most fascinating point of her story for me was that in 1872 she went into a polling booth and cast her vote for the president. 18. And it is indeed hard to imagine him strumming a guitar, cracking jokes about the Rolling Stones or getting in a snowball fight outside a polling booth, as Mr Huckabee did in Michigan. 19. It was the response to the third inquiry that really mattered—for this showed that the difference was, indeed, carried into the polling booth. 20. Rivlin said that anti-immigration rhetoric has galvanized immigrant voters, bringing them to the streets in protest and to the polling booth.