Gone are the days, she says, when this was a pastime solely for the landed gentry. |
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The glamour of each of these plays has to do with what in them is aristocratic, removed, a high pastime played out within sound of the sea. |
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Sporting shooting of game or clays is a legal pastime enjoyed by many people of all ages and from all social backgrounds. |
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He died on Sunday pursuing his favourite pastime of pitch and putt on his local course where he was club chairman. |
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We'll tell you how they're bringing America's pastime to servicemen and servicewomen deployed overseas. |
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Canadians spend so much time agonizing over our lack of solid, touchable, definable identity that it has practically become a national pastime. |
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Sailing is a favourite pastime and the estate has its own marina, with berths available to hire. |
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He enjoys every moment at home with his parents, brothers and sisters and he also spent some time at his favourite pastime, fishing. |
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He also still enjoys playing golf and shinty on occasion, a pastime shared with his half-brother. |
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Yet in an increasingly sedentary society, riding is a healthy pastime which is growing in popularity, particularly among the young. |
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His favourite pastime is singing ghazals, and he has penned many in various languages. |
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You could make new friends and discover an interesting pastime for the Winter. |
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The sidewalks were empty of pedestrians in a city where walking is both a pastime and a necessity. |
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A group of village morris dancers has begun a massive drive to improve the image and boost numbers in their traditional pastime. |
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After all, skiing is an energetic pastime, one in which people laugh, shout and fall over a lot. |
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There must be some favourite pastime, not necessarily strenuous, that can help you to relax. |
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Writing was his favourite pastime, pedantic, unpoetic stuff dealing with politics, history, education. |
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The sport, also known as boules, is a fast-growing pastime as Quebecers increasingly become intent on the art of tossing a ball near a wood peg. |
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Beer-drinking is a national pastime but Danes are ever the ones for mild moderation. |
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Swimming is a national pastime, and the pools in every city are packed with swimmers. |
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Blowing bubbles is a favourite pastime of many children, but not one normally associated with school. |
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Sport to me is a pastime or activity where all of the people or animals enjoy the activity. |
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Hunting and gathering for bush tucker is a favourite pastime among most age groups. |
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But it was a pastime which landed him a spell in one of Greece's most notorious prisons. |
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It is an ideal pastime, an opportunity to socialise and make new friends in a spirit of camaraderie. |
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The sociable, friendly atmosphere of most campsites means that the pastime is ideal for those looking to make new friends, or for something more. |
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Games are another excellent pastime, a deck of cards or a board game might be some fun. |
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A national pastime, lacrosse was first played by the Oneida Iroquois more than 500 years ago. |
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Cartophily bloomed in the early part of the 20th century as cartophily shops and clubs were formed to support the popular pastime. |
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The casual observer might find such a slow-paced, drawnout pastime to be something of an anachronism in today's quick-fix high-paced world. |
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She loves to cuddle up with you and of course her favourite pastime is catnapping in the sunshine. |
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The ancient Greeks employed whole-body sun exposure or heliotherapy in the treatment of disease, and lying nude in the sun was a popular pastime. |
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The main pastime in town was cruising the strip, so we headed over there in the afternoon to see what we could find. |
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The hillwalking which claimed Robin Cook's life yesterday was a pastime with many allegories to his political career. |
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Elk hunting is a national pastime in the country, and there is around one elk for every 30 people. |
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In this steamy, sun-drenched Caribbean country, baseball has ceased to be a pastime and become a passion. |
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You can tell a judge is popular when an usher at his court fashions a humorous painting of him enjoying his favourite pastime of gardening. |
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Besides sitting still, the only other vital Madrid pastime is the paseo, the evening city stroll. |
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Baseball has been the national pastime in America for a hundred years or more. |
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The game is so simple that many pubs stage it simply as an informal pastime rather than as a competitive game. |
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I feel sure as time passes by more and more will join the growing numbers in this wonderful pastime. |
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Deck Quoits played with quoits made from rope has been a popular pastime on cruise ships for decades. |
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Gone is the person who would engage in a sport or activity as a pastime rather than a profession. |
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This gives him ample time to indulge in ad-libbing, a pastime of which he seems inordinately fond. |
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Another pastime that has kept me away from the keyboard is a fascinating book I've been reading. |
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Before the Second World War, yachting was a genteel, sometimes eccentric pastime infrequently practiced in the islands. |
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Fishing used to strike me as a last-resort sport, a pastime I might take up later in life, along with quilting. |
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In 1559, a Venetian government official transcribed a report by a Persian traveller who observed the popular Chinese pastime of drinking tea. |
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Most of their players are casual competitors who treat the sport as a pleasant pastime and an easy-going way of relaxation. |
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On our way from school in spring, a favourite pastime was to set fire to clumps of furze that grew in fields along the road. |
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The Italian sport of bocce, lawn bowling with heavy metal balls, is a popular pastime. |
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By the early 19th century it had become a popular pastime for young ladies and was enthusiastically recommended by annuals and other periodicals. |
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They truly believed that lifecasting would become a popular pastime, once they had proved the concept with their custom-designed portable camera. |
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But as trading standards officers in York revealed this week, it's a national pastime rife with hidden dangers. |
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This is her favourite pastime as it escalates her already lofty notions of self-importance. |
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Despite that, kayaking can be a somewhat chilly pastime, as we found out, even though we were all wearing long johns. |
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His involvement in the music business is really looked on as a pastime from his own point of view. |
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Despite the assiduity and rigor of the performers, modern dance was generally promoted and received as a pastime for females. |
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Standing at the stem and watching her wide wake stretch to the horizon is a favorite pastime. |
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It is vital that schoolchildren are shown that glue sniffing is not just an innocent pastime, but a game of Russian roulette. |
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The library has special attractions for children and young people could find no better pastime than reading. |
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Some Finns have disavowed the Estonian influence on their national pastime, however. |
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Thanks to the ingenuity of these contraptions' designers and purveyors, the toils of Sisyphus have been transformed into a healthful pastime. |
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That natural pastime became a lifelong avocation that has helped recognize and protect many notable trees in his borne county. |
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She decided to eke out a livelihood with what was once her favourite pastime, tatting. |
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Sitting in a scalding hot bath with naked strangers sounds more like punishment than a popular pastime. |
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I have lots to say on this and also on another popular pastime in Madras, malling. |
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It warms the cockles of my heart to hear of people so committed to our pastime. |
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He single-handedly took sailing from a gentle pastime into an athletic sport. |
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The legend upon which the ballade is based is just ghoulish enough to appeal to a teenager whose favorite pastime was watching horror movies. |
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This is because the noble medium of funny pictures and word balloons is often derided as juvenile and strictly a boys' own pastime. |
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Hare hunting is a cruel and barbaric pastime carried out without respect for our wildlife. |
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Hunting has nothing to do with pest control and everything to do with a cruel, barbaric pastime. |
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Businessmen, enervated by the pressures of city life, sought spiritual as well as physical refreshment in the new pastime of bushwalking. |
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Karate is no longer just a pastime for a select few, as young and old discover the discipline of martial arts. |
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Suddenly, whole battalions of people with weird, rat-like faces were able to partake in a pastime previously denied them. |
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Once you get over the self-conscious notion that this is a pastime for septuagenarians, it turns out to be enjoyable and mildly contentious. |
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Blowing bubbles was always a favorite pastime during the summertime. |
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This is the McGill Trivia Club, an organization dedicated to the most worthy pastime of answering difficult questions based on factoids from a wide range of categories. |
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The steep asphalt path at the west end of the ruins of St Mary's Abbey made a splendid toboggan slide, and the invigorating pastime was thoroughly enjoyed. |
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Camel racing, a favorite pastime in the Middle East, has taken flack from human-rights advocates for the young boys imported to jockey the humpbacked desert beasts. |
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That generation made the French Riviera fashionable, luring le bon ton from all over the world to indulge in the new pastime of sunbathing and take the air. |
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In their homeland, after all, the sport truly is an undisputed national pastime. |
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Her main aim, she said, was some high-end shopping, including a crocodile handbag from a Bangkok store, a pastime once limited to monied Hong Kong businessmen. |
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As a pastime, bow hunting has a more refined history than other modes of recreational animal killing. |
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And if horse racing endures and survives, it will be the result of an overdue focus on the august animal that defines the pastime. |
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However the fact that these two shadow-box grottoes were made by mature women suggests that shellwork was an amusing pastime for women of education and wealth. |
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So why is one considered fine art and the other the harmless pastime of a hobbyist? |
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People like to brag about their connections in D.C. It's a pastime for some. |
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As usual the hunters show complete disregard, even contempt for people who live in this village many of whom, like me, are totally opposed to this wicked and barbaric pastime. |
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So keyboarding it was and his music became more than just a pastime. |
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However, O'Kane's favourite pastime is hillwalking in the Wicklow hills. |
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There's nothing redeeming in softball, a pastime that seems to attract the greasiest, worst dressed residents of local areas to neighbourhood parks. |
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Cooking up scientific explanations of the plagues has been a pastime for years. |
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In the old days soccer was seen as a pastime for players, a nixer, a chance to earn a few bob on the side. |
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At this time, cooning in the remote interior is a famous pastime. As this animal is entirely nocturnal in its habits it is hunted only at night. |
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Cornhole, the indigenous pastime of Cincinnati's west side, is basically a democratized version of horseshoes. |
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Although cinema, theatre, dance and live music are popular, the favourite pastime of the British is watching television. |
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Board games and dice games were played as a popular pastime at all levels of society. |
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Although they all displayed a talent for narrative, it was the younger ones whose pastime it became to develop them. |
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This was mainly due to the fact that it was a popular pastime for troops to take their minds off from battle. |
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As literacy and leisure time expanded after 1900, reading became a popular pastime. |
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Thanks partly to the eisteddfodau, writing became a popular pastime, and all forms of poetry thrived. |
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As the popularity of the series grew, the hunting of such anachronisms became a favourite pastime among Life on Mars fans. |
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Another widely enjoyed pastime, and once a competitive sport, is kite flying. |
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Antonio Pigafetta, Magellan's chronicler, first documented this pastime in the kingdom of Taytay. |
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Sign goofs. They happen when road signs don't read the way they're supposed to read. Spotting sign goofs is a roadgeek's pastime. |
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He was also to initiate me in the American pastime of sleighing, or sledging. |
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Thompson, who's the digest's publisher, says bird watching is a hobby, a pastime and a spectator sport that can be enjoyed anywhere. |
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The days of amateurism, when sport was more of a pastime rather than a profession are a thing of the past. |
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It seems that viewing the past with rose-tinted glasses is almost as British a pastime as queuing. |
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It seems that viewing the past with rose-tinted glasses is almost as stereotypically British a pastime as queuing and moaning about the weather. |
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But it was the lesser known pastime of microlight flying which I got a chance to try out in the skies above Gwynedd last week. |
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It aimed to improve and supply suitable vans and other appliances, develop the pastime and arrange camping grounds. |
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A popular pastime for young people today is to collect trading cards of those persons whom they most admire. |
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In addition to providing food, modern fishing is also a recreational pastime. |
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My favourite pastime was visiting Barry Island on my Lambretta scooter and playing the one-armed bandits. |
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Urban exploration, or 'urbex',' isn't a new pastime but it is often illegal and for that reason practitioners remain in the shadows. |
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The favorite pastime on this Hawaiian vacation was torching doobies and staring out at the horizon for hours on end. |
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Heli-skiing is also a very popular pastime here, but must be booked early to avoid disappointment. |
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The last fact may not add to the allure of frogging, but it really is a fun pastime, nonetheless.Daytime frogging is something the whole family can enjoy. |
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Although miniature-plane building isn't as popular a pastime as computer games or golf, Dave Gee knows a future mini-plane hobbyist when he sees one. |
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The slugger was tongue-tied about her accomplishment, but her godmother, Leslie Mendez of Sylmar, explained that Lorrina plays hardball when it comes to the national pastime. |
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This seemingly innocent pastime can become an obsession to the extent that one doesn't feel the day's work is done until the crossword is complete. |
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Trade in this pastime seems to be now booming, as during this last week, a brown three-piece suite and mattress have been displayed on Roger Lane, between Maltby and Seamer. |
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Crossroads ceilidhs were a popular rural pastime in Ireland, when young men and women would gather on a Sunday evening at the crossroads of a village to socialise. |
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Its childishly simple rules and its image as a sedate pastime for elderly gentlemen put checkers deep in the shadow of chess, it smore prestigious rival. |
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Sport is an important pastime in Tasmania, and the state has produced several famous sportsmen and women and also hosted several major sporting events. |
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It is not known if Lescarbot was aware of Montaigne's stigmatization of the aristocratic pastime of hunting, though some authors believe he was familiar with Montaigne. |
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Golf became a popular pastime in the twentieth century, and several courses were established adjacent to the branch railway, bringing in significant passenger income. |
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While collecting became a pastime for many amateurs, the labels associated with these early egg collections made them unreliable for the serious study of bird breeding. |
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The shrub grows abundantly in all parts of the British Isles and harvesting the fruits in late summer and autumn is often considered a favourite pastime. |
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It was a popular royal pastime in Britain to shoot common pheasants. |
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The keeping of aquariums was a popular pastime of the rich, and Pliny provides anecdotes of the problems of owners becoming too closely attached to their fish. |
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In the United Kingdom, snooker is by far the most popular cue sport at the competitive level, and major national pastime along with association football and cricket. |
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This is often seen as the birth of the sport and pastime, and to commemorate it, the event is recreated every year as an open water swimming event. |
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It was a popular pastime in the Victorian era and remains a hobby today. |
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