So you and this Duckworth dame and A. are first cousins and L.B. is my second cousin? |
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Trial lawyers and MTV are bastions of liberalism and, therefore, kissing cousins. |
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Uncle Sam's nephews were hardly kissing cousins, and the contrast with the happy family who were the European side was more than marked. |
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That is not to say that the parts are interchangeable, for they are not, but they are surely kissing cousins. |
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The gooseberries are usually placed in genus Ribes, along with their near cousins, the blackcurrants and redcurrants. |
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I know for a fact that his mother and father didn't have any siblings, so he doesn't have any cousins. |
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In the hit TV comedy the cousins tooled around the Georgia sticks, helping the downtrodden and getting into trouble. |
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These are chlorophyll's shy cousins, the yellow pigment xanthophyll and the red-orange carotene. |
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Next time, though, I'll be employing my teenage cousins to do the manual labour and keeping my hands out of the sink. |
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It is this crude version of relativism about truth which I am concerned with here, not its more sophisticated philosophical cousins. |
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Mennonites and their cousins, the Amish, generally stayed aloof from politics. |
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Out of over 30 cousins on one side alone, there are few renegades, and any sort of self-reliance is seen as catastrophic, or worse, deluded. |
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The treeless island's residents are Yupik Eskimos with cousins in the nearby Chukotka region in Russia. |
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Now I have to admit, I had never caught a European zander, although I had caught their close colonial cousins, the walleye. |
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Other cousins, replacements for my Polish uncles, stood around the keg with cups of beer. |
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In fact the two cousins have gone very separate routes in amassing their respective fortunes. |
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The scenes were repeated all along the border area, with tearful and emotional reunions between mothers and daughters, brothers and cousins. |
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From buying CDs and memorizing lyrics, the cousins started rhyming and producing lyrics themselves. |
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I agreed eagerly and so Derek joined my three cousins for a day of rock-climbing in the mountains. |
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My little sister and all my other little girly cousins went to the chemist to get their ears pierced. |
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That's why her eldest son, Patsy, was determined to find some link with his long-lost Spanish cousins. |
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He is a huge loss for the community and will be greatly missed by his cousins, friends and neighbours. |
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Also all the rest of the assorted cousins and uncles and aunts send their love too. |
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To his astonishment he discovered he had a brother, a sister and two cousins. |
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Still, the influx of poor cousins with attitude might shake things up a bit in Brussels. |
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Some of the filming was done in Scotland not far from where my cousins live and I can confirm that it really is that lush. |
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We thank all our aunts, uncles and cousins who stayed with our father during the evenings so that he would not be alone. |
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I spent every summer vacation at my grandmother's house in Pune with several aunts and uncles and hordes of cousins. |
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We spent our summers at our tiny pool or at the beach along the Caspian Sea with aunts, uncles and cousins. |
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These are our grandmothers and aunts and uncles and fathers and sisters and cousins and close friends. |
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We know that, like her great aunts, she never married though she had many aunts and uncles who gave her 17 cousins. |
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While her husband survived, she lost her grandmother, her sister, a dozen aunts and uncles, and many cousins. |
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Your parent would have no brothers or sisters and hence you couldn't have aunts or uncles, let alone cousins. |
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Not just the immediate family, but including all my aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews. |
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Families used to mean a father and mother, grandparents, and the children, and aunts and uncles and cousins. |
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Zoe recalls going to her grandparents for Christmas tea with all the aunts, uncles and cousins. |
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I have one sister and both of my parents are only children, so there are no aunts, uncles or cousins. |
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Grandma, grandad, uncles, aunties and all the cousins are now tagging along too. |
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Her cousins sent a tape of her voice to a talent spotter at a major record company. |
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He seemed to be heading the same way as his cousins Dinto and Tindo, both of whom were now successful tea shop magnates in Fujeirah. |
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She dreamed of having children, pushing baby carriages, knitting little caps and sweaters, just like all her cousins. |
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So I went to the Marine recruiting station with two of my cousins who both backed out. |
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Unlike their larger bulb cousins, green onions, scallions and leeks should be refrigerated. |
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The bad blood between these two countries makes the Scots' attitude towards our English cousins look positively benevolent. |
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The blue marlin and its cousins, the white marlin, swordfish and sailfish, bring up the rear. |
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The sense of family identity extended to grandparents, aunts and uncles, cousins, and relatives by marriage. |
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They were distant relatives, uncles and aunts by marriage, cousins-in-law, and more cousins second and third removed. |
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The Dai, the largest of Xishuangbanna's 13 ethnic groups are the northern cousins of the Thais. |
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They are cousins of seashells, but instead of having a protective shell, most of them are poisonous. |
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I have one aunt, one cousin, no second cousins to speak of, and only one living grandparent, and even him I haven't seen since I was a teenager. |
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That involves their cousins, their first cousins once removed, their second cousins. |
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And I have a lot of aunts and uncles and cousins and second cousins and great aunts and great uncles. |
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We are still talking to cousins, second cousins and family friends through interpreters. |
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Since we don't have any first cousins, we are very close to our second cousins. |
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He has a seemingly inexhaustible number of nephews, nieces, and second cousins once removed. |
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They were all his father's cousins and uncles, or third cousin three times removed, which Jack couldn't figure out how that made them related. |
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If we were second cousins, were the kids third cousins, once or twice removed? |
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We had basically no idea where we were going, we were just with my uncle and my aunt and our cousins. |
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Our Melburnian cousins have courageously proposed to build 1.6 million new dwellings by 2051, with two-thirds of them being apartments. |
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He plans on having the cousins fall in love and marry, so that her property will fall to him when Linton dies. |
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Also, the animal's teeth lack small serrations that appear on many of the meat-shearing, daggerlike teeth of this dinosaur's carnivorous cousins. |
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Like tokamaks, their currently more advanced cousins, stellarators use magnetic fields to confine plasma in a torus for fusion reactions. |
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Many years ago, when the Lady Novelist and I got married, some cousins of mine gave us a pair of Georgian spoons. |
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Happily it's also easy to grow onions, garlic, and their cousins such as chives, leeks, and shallots in home gardens. |
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Matthew was mightily entertained, and almost forgot his own troubles while laughing at his cousins. |
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Lavish gifts are bestowed upon visitors, guests, and distant cousins alike. |
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In good old colonial fashion, the British have always scorned their transatlantic cousins. |
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The delegation jets off to New Zealand on Tuesday to see what sort of deal our trans-Tasman cousins can offer. |
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But Jean's cousins have revealed that he was wearing a light denim jacket and that he used his travel card to enter the tube. |
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That afternoon, my cousins and I were admiring its shininess and how cool it looks. |
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My cousins and I were always hanging out together, taking short cuts through each other's backyards to get to our homes. |
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While Simon the cute, violin playing, trilingual young lad is pretty good, his two red-haired cousins are contrived and mostly painful. |
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For years, our Scandinavian cousins put us to shame with their gleaming molars and incisors. |
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I've got a two-faced ex-girlfriend, two backstabbing cousins, and a best friend who isn't a best friend. |
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She is survived by her father, mother, brother, grand-parents, aunts, uncles, cousins and many friends. |
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He will also be missed by numerous brothers-in-law, sisters-in-law, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins. |
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They've invited me to their house parties where I met their parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers, and sisters. |
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Can't her cousins and aunts and uncles and sisters and brothers and mother and father and friends have some time with her? |
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She is mourned and sadly missed by her loving husband, children, mother, uncles, aunts, cousins, and all her relatives and friends. |
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They are quite self-orientated usually, but after a week mucking in with their cousins, they help out more. |
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Joking and speaking about bodies and bodily functions in the presence of such cousins is considered a serious faux pas. |
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But this sleek, stylish hatchback is still considered a cut above its cousins. |
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This line of flies became significantly better at learning than their unevolved cousins in a few dozen generations. |
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Another time, I remember building a slide out of snow in the backyard with my sister and cousins. |
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The casual cousins of slip-on sandals, flip-flops are basically nice shower shoes. |
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Enough of the biting social satire and back to the task of understanding our unintelligible cousins across the pond. |
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When I'm home, I see my mum, my dad, my nan, my grandfather, my auntie and my cousins every day. |
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While performing it appears slow and gentle but every bit as accomplished as it higher powered and more modern cousins. |
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Despite being a member of the carp family, crucians are much more delicate feeders than their larger cousins. |
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In Shiver, a sexy bride and her nebbish hubby go to visit her cousins in their ancestral home. |
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Ron and Ken are first cousins who grew up on neighboring farms near Harlan in western Iowa. |
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On occasion his position became hereditary, sons, cousins, nephews succeeding. |
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The jumping bristletails are an inconspicuous group, looking much like their better-known cousins, the silverfish. |
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Like its cousins, Tequila and Mezcal, Sotol has its own denomination of origin. |
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I don't want my cousins, nieces and nephews are my daughter to idolise thugs. |
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It seems we are already somewhat more sophisticated in our rural debate than our southern cousins. |
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Although they were diverse, two crucial factors distinguished these new southerners from their northern cousins. |
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His two cousins, two uncles, a brother and a brother-in-law were all killed fighting in Indian Kashmir. |
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Then we're off to Xmas brunch, lunch and dinner with some of my favourite cousins, one of whom is back from London. |
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Considering they're cousins I've never seen a more viperish attack of sibling rivalry ever. |
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Natasha and Valya are Buryat, they are cousins and run the hostel where I stayed when I got here first, the other one is Mom! |
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These shrimp stand in silent rebuke to their unfortunate cousins that are butterflied and flattened by less sensitive restaurants. |
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I can only note that the English-language press is far more squeamish about publishing grisly images than their continental European cousins. |
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The cousins of the Triassic nothosaurs, the long-necked plesiosauroids and short-necked pliosauroids, were also common. |
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But the real hit of the night was the card from my aunt, uncle and cousins. |
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And I have aunts and uncles and cousins who are really, really close to me and marvelous friends. |
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They went back and discovered that their mother was there, they had brothers, cousins, sisters and a whole branch of relations. |
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He now knows his mother, knows about his father, half-brothers, cousins, a grandma. |
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At any given time, there are about ten kids outside, plus various aunts, uncles, cousins and other assorted relatives. |
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The family includes many relatives, such as grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, nephews, and nieces. |
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Thuy came to Australia as a 24-year-old Vietnamese boat person, together with her uncle, aunt and cousins. |
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Stop treating us like your distant cousins when we are your brothers and sisters. |
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Today, many of his cousins and extended family members are contributing to the Pakistani architecture and urban planning. |
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Two brothers and a sister, big Irish family, you know, a lot of extended relatives and cousins, and now just a wonderful, idyllic upbringing. |
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But these tropical bananas aren't much like their commercial cousins in North American supermarkets. |
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Most people know that PDAs started as electronic counterparts to their cousins, paper-based organizers. |
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Never mind the fact that the cruisers gracing the city roads are mere pocket versions of their original cousins built for autobahns and freeways. |
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After all that effort, to have the Pentecostals create a powerful Religious Right in South America analogous to its cousins in the North? |
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In some Chilean varieties, the ears are much larger than their North American cousins. |
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They wanted to look and live like their European and American cousins and for that they needed capital. |
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In the spring, these British birds can beat their Spanish cousins back to Germany, getting dibs on the best nesting sites. |
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The French call this potager gardening, while our American cousins know it as edible landscaping. |
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Millions of Americans have also followed the example of their British cousins, remortgaging to take advantage of record low interest rates. |
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In daily campaigning, Australians borrow very little from their American cousins. |
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Besides, New Zealand would be more favorable to Australia, because after all, you people are cousins. |
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The entire nation, although separated from our American cousins by 3,000 miles of ocean, has been touched by the tragedy. |
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There is, however, more villainy afoot in this film than the English or the class that they and their American cousins represent. |
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My first cousin's grandchild and I are first cousins twice removed to each other. |
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The children of your first cousin are first cousins once removed and their children are first cousins twice removed and so on. |
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Mary's children and John's great-grandchildren will be first cousins twice removed, and so on. |
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So the children of my first cousin are first cousins once removed, the grandchildren of my first cousin are first cousins twice removed etc. |
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As far as I can see the American doctors aren't as brazen as their Australian cousins in calling for a statute of limitations on tort claims. |
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The story concerns two cousins, Laura and Janette, who consider two offers of marriage extended to Laura. |
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There were many others on the porch, her cousins, stepmothers and other female relatives. |
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I did have the distinct advantage of having on-site Irish cousins, though I had never met them. |
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Both are cats, cousins of our amiable purring friend of the hearthrug, but the tiger is king of the family. |
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Unlike their cousins the spotted hyenas, the striped hyenas in the wild, forage during night hours. |
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And you can get even better protection by avoiding poison ivy all together, as well as its cousins poison sumac and poison oak. |
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In general, European chestnut trees haven't suffered as devastating an outbreak as their American cousins. |
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While woodchucks tend to be pretty silent, their cousins are quite vocal and emit loud piercing whistles or chirps at the slightest provocation. |
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Cardiff is just the place to expand your culinary horizons, meet your canny Celtic cousins and do a little name-dropping. |
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Before that, he had spent six months with Antipodean cousins, in an old prospecting town, panning for gold. |
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Ask anybody who works for a big media company how much cooperation they get from their corporate cousins, and you'll be greeted by a horse laugh. |
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Unlike their snake cousins, threadsnakes are chowhounds, tucking into meals at a rapid rate, with three or four bites each second. |
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And living in the country and being a part of a close-knit community is definitely something they wouldn't swap with their city cousins. |
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But if you like the leisurely chug of the old ferries, they still exist, and cost half as much as their speedier cousins. |
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Seth's father, three uncles, and paternal grandfather, along with a number of cousins and subsequent generations of relatives, were carpenters. |
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I had grandfathers and grandmothers and cousins and uncles and aunties, everyone was there. |
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Years ago one of my cousins, who would have been about 7 or so at the time, asked me what I was listening to on my personal stereo. |
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I wanted to run with the pack of cousins and friends in the common yard that connected all our properties. |
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Apparently Australian and English magpies are not close cousins although they have similar feathering. |
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Fiddler crabs, like their arthropod cousins the insects, have compound eyes. |
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Nobody else in my family is a figure skater but I have two other cousins who play hockey. |
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As a young girl, Cora had always enjoyed playing the nurse for her brother or her cousins. |
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Not all Hyderabad cousins can watch their show for it is on invitation only. |
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The result is that the Nomad paddles faster on flat water than most of its cousins. |
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Brooklyn schools are the Appalachian cousins of the Baby Ivies and take great pride in the number of their Manhattan applicants. |
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He also reads the Limerick Leader and is in regular correspondence with cousins and neighbours in Ballingrane. |
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However, some experts say that the these foamless versions are not quite what their bubbling cousins are, in terms of the final product. |
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Tensions have increased between the cosmopolitan city dwellers and their recently-arrived country cousins. |
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Yes, it's that time of year again when city slickers meet their country cousins for a day all will remember. |
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And while Hong Kong people once disdained Chinese visitors as poor country cousins, the touring mainlanders hardly fit the bumpkin stereotype. |
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She enjoyed holidays on an uncle's farm or having country cousins to stay in the city. |
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At the same time the Nationals cannot appear to be little more than the Liberals' country cousins. |
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Everyday low prices no doubt appeal to city dwellers no less than to their country cousins. |
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She will also be sadly missed by all her cousins, aunts, uncles and many dear friends and co-workers. |
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For instance, parallel cousins are not considered to be marriageable, but cross cousins are. |
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I was nothing compared to my cousins, whose shoulders were almost tan they were so freckled. |
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I planted it, though, not for fritillaries but for one of their cousins, the Zebra Longwing. |
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In the health arena, however, milk will continue to face stiff competition from its own fruity cousins drinkable yogurts and smoothies. |
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Fungins, much like their larger cousins, fungoids, thrive in dark and moist environments. |
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Sydney funnel-web spiders aren't as dangerous as their northern cousins, but live in a more populated area. |
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They are similar to our native Ohio cypripediums and you may consider the paphiopedilums to be the tropical cousins to the cypripediums. |
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At a still greater distance are cousins and research on the family history and genealogy. |
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Countless stories have been told by my older cousins about the pre-war visits to my grandparents' house in the mountains. |
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I had thought of visiting Pakistan but seeing as most of my cousins are now living in Mill Hill, I decided against it. |
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Falling in love with bhangra when she first heard the music, she started deejaying in the '90s in New York with her male cousins. |
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It is a member of a group called the deinotheres which were cousins to the elephants. |
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Letters from my family are sort of depressing, though sometimes my cousins write a few words that makes me laugh. |
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Birds, close cousins of pterodactyls, are believed to have evolved from theropod dinosaurs about 150 million years ago. |
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We would always have aunts, uncles, grammies, and cousins over to our house on Christmas Eve for a huge dinner. |
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Most of my aunts, uncles and cousins were already at my grandpa's when we arrived. |
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Aunts, uncles, grandmas, grandpas, cousins and unlinked others often swelled the crowd to near 40 by noon. |
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It is an attempt to diagram the allies, enemies, cousins, straw men, party followers, puppets, and courtiers and their relationships. |
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It has several cousins on the continent, including the edible dormouse, the garden dormouse and the forest dormouse. |
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In fact, we save a much lower proportion of our disposable income than our cousins on the Continent, as this article demonstrates. |
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Even if you counted distant third cousins, our ancestors might have been exposed to a grand total of 500 people in their lifetime. |
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There wasn't a dunny man, not in those days, so the boy cousins used to empty the can. |
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And I was really ticklish when I was a kid, and my cousins used to trap me at Empire Bay and tickle me unmercifully. |
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With no money coming in, the girls wore hand-me-downs from their Milford Haven cousins and Philip grew up learning the value of economizing. |
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Predictably, Babur's uncles and cousins attacked his territories soon after he had acceded to the throne. |
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The two cousins and their jennet symbolically parallel the uneasy relations between colonial tourist and colonized native. |
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I used to play that with my cousins during the holidays and always took them to the cleaners. |
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Although no one would plant these weedy types, they all have attractive, cultivated cousins. |
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It is a fact that we are cousins of gorillas, kangaroos, starfish, and bacteria. |
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These cousins are brought up worlds apart and have enormous differences, but also enormous similarities. |
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While killer bees carry less venom than their cousins, they more aggressively defend their nest. |
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Add in grandkids, in-laws, and cousins, and it must make for a heck of a big family reunion. |
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Paddy is mourned by his sister, cousins, neighbours, in-laws, relatives and friends. |
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How is it that you always made pies for the cousins, even if they visited when Key limes were out of season? |
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When I was 12 my summer nights were spent in the street, playing kickball with my cousins. |
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It was kinda fun and I got to socialize a bit with some of his other cousins. |
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Black kingklip meat is lighter, larger, and firmer than the meat of its more expensive cousins. |
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As any woman who's been pregnant knows, the uterus and the bladder are kissing cousins inside your abdomen. |
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Innovation and entrepreneurship may not be perfect synonyms, but semantically the two are at least kissing cousins. |
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Outsourcing and shared services have always been related, but the Web promises to make them kissing cousins. |
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For rank-and-file Democrats, reformers and Republicans were kissing cousins. |
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I just found out that my best friend and I are related through distant cousins. |
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I've always gone around, talking to aunts and uncles and cousins, and I've asked their advice and their permission to paint traditional dot painting. |
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All my cousins and aunts and uncles got together in my grandfather's house and we all spent this day together with traditional gaiety and tons of happiness. |
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He grew up an only child, with his cousins being his brothers and sisters. |
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He grew up in Dublin and studied at Trinity College, as did all my cousins. |
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These two ethnic groups, who share the same language, together with their cousins, the Bushmen, form the Khoisan peoples, the original inhabitants of Southern Africa. |
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Like their cousins back in England, these American Puritans strongly identified with both the historical traditions and customs of the ancient Hebrews of the Old Testament. |
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He thought about seeing if his cousins wanted to play some street hockey. |
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We had to be less developed to pass through a smaller, bipedal apes cervix, and as a result developed longer and slower, but further than our ape cousins. |
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The JCC is where my father went for workouts, where my cousins, uncles and friends send their kids to daycare. |
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Are they afraid that their little cousins will show them up? |
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Around the table were aunts in twinsets and freshly scrubbed cousins. |
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All of it going to kissing cousins of those who had to approve the deal. |
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To me it sounds like we're all stupid, helpless idiots, no different from our kissing cousins, the chimpanzees, trying to learn the Pythagorean theorem. |
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Traditional societies in underdeveloped countries are no more immune to creeping moral decay than their more sophisticated cousins in rich, developed nations. |
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Seventeen and trembling on the brink of womanhood, she has already suffered the humiliation of being packed off as the poor relation with her rich cousins on holiday. |
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Could it be that the Navy, like its American cousins, is so anxious to get rid of at least a dozen mothballed warships that it will give them away? |
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Sylvia O'Donovan's display of Irish dancing was a big hit as were the reels and hornpipes of cousins Deirdre Bonham and Gillian Reilly from the Mary Gohery school of dancing. |
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In principle, one should not marry a blood relative, but in small communities marriages between kin more distantly related than first cousins are common. |
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As part of the investigation into her disappearance police travelled to Bradford to interview members of her extended family, including cousins thought to be of a similar age. |
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An extended family tree will grow to include many distant cousins. |
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When not screaming or yelling hysterically, Samuel is brandishing makeshift weapons and pushing his cousins off a tree house. |
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The definition does not include your cousins or any relations by marriage. |
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Mother and daughter found themselves surrounded by distant cousins. |
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Sympathy is extended to his extended family, cousins and friends. |
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Numerous people wept for their friends, husbands, parents, uncles, aunts, cousins, siblings and in some distressing cases, young sons and daughters. |
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Lee was left to play by himself when his cousins left the house and his mother went to fetch a cup of tea for Lee's disabled great-grandmother, Margaret Duplex. |
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I have so many very happy and fond memories of my aunt, who was also my Godmother, and the many hours I used to spend mucking around as a kid with my cousins at her house. |
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I'm from a small, low-key family with no aunts, uncles or cousins. |
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Tomio Geron of Forbes has a terrific new piece about AirBnB, and its many cousins in the emerging market for peer-to-peer sharing. |
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Hence the Kings of Jerusalem were close cousins to the Angevins in Europe. |
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The story for domestic banks, however, was different from their nonfinancial cousins. |
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Every day my cousins and I would make several trips to distant Virar, then located outside Mumbai, where we would buy rice for 1 rupee and 14 annas per pound. |
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Americans are still just as squeamish about eating our equine friends as our cousins across the pond. |
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For the kids a Pinoy party is the perfect opportunity to show their cousins and friends how much improved their otso-otso and spaghetti song dance moves have become. |
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I've seen the family lineage and it actually makes them distance cousins. |
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Like their European cousins, Indian breeds also have geographical names. |
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Unlike its Indian and African cousins, the critically endangered Sumatran rhinoceros is covered with patches of stiff hair, most prominent on its ears. |
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Watching them frolicking on Cape Cod with their cousins, I sometimes assumed they must be immune to such feelings. |
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Bilyeu, along with his brother and cousins, play in Big Smith, a mountain roots band that bridge the gap between traditional Appalachian gospel and modern country. |
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My Aunt Jill and my three cousins went on holiday a little while back to the south of France and were thrown out of their holiday camp for being too noisy. |
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The wolves live in packs of up to 12 adults but hunt and forage alone, unlike gray wolves, their North American and European cousins, that hunt in packs. |
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British bluebells are already threatened by their Spanish cousins, which are crossbreeding with the English variety, interfering with its genetic integrity. |
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Small red stars vastly outnumber their larger cousins, and the new exoplanet is orbiting one of those. |
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But unlike its smokier and fattier cousins, gravlax is made by an entirely different process. |
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The air of expectation was almost palpable in the hall as mammies, daddies, grannies, grand dads, sisters, brothers, cousins and friends waited for the show to begin. |
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Although fortepianos have higher decay rates than their 20th Century cousins, Bilson manipulates that decay with such skill you can feel the tail of silence quiver. |
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Many of Wahhab's puritan teachings bore certain similarities to those of Cromwell's 17th century supporters in England and their cousins in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. |
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My cousins had visited our tight little terraced house, stayed for the mind-altering Soave then in fashion, and reached 2am without exhausting the singalongs. |
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Of course, once permanently established, the Australian settlers lived and worked as their forebears in England and their cousins in North America. |
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Also invited were my two four-year-old, bratty twin cousins. |
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The molecules are similar to their better-known cousins, carbon nanotubes. |
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Though neurofinance is still in its infancy, its ancestors and cousins include behavioral finance, behavioral economics, behavioral game theory, and neuroeconomics. |
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A cross cousin is the child of your mother's brother or father's sister, while the children of your mother's sister or father's brother are parallel cousins. |
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He was spending the summer with his great-uncle and cousins on the outskirts of a down-at-heel Mississippi community inappropriately called Money. |
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Those rodents given a diet containing 2 percent freeze-dried spinach were much quicker at learning motor skill tasks than their cousins fed on everyday rat food. |
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Two of the victims, 15-year-old Andrew Fryberg and 14-year-old Nate Hatch, were cousins of the shooter, according to relatives. |
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My older cousins were also at the party with their kids which was a rare treat as we only see each other every few years, weddings, christenings, funerals. |
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The Mile High dinner series is just one of many events the cousins throw under their umbrella company, shuttlecock Inc. |
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We drink more than our European cousins, more than we used to. |
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Like jays and crows, their cousins, magpies are mischievous and bold. |
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But while his parents and brothers are dead, five cousins have now been contacted, allowing the long-lost airman finally to be laid to rest in Scotland. |
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Ferdinand hated my being friends with my cousins and thought that were trying to secure a place by the future grand duke, which is what he wanted to do. |
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Hoch found that when he tested species like paper birch, which remains brilliant yellow, the tree recovered nutrients just as well as its red-leaved cousins. |
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Jupiter and its cousins, by contrast, are mostly made of hydrogen and hydrogen compounds. |
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Although terns are closely related to seagulls, sharing a general black-and-grey pattern of plumage with their cousins, they have slim silvery bodies and deeply forked tails. |
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Camille was in a mostly brown and white dress, while her cousins Miranda and Riley were primarily, if not totally, in purple or maroon, respectively. |
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A number of people ask me that question after reading my page about cousins, which explains first cousins twice removed and second cousins once removed. |
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Unlike their fast cousins, the water striders, marsh treaders can walk very slowly on the water's surface. As a result, they seem to hunt in slow motion. |
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During the intense firefight that followed, four Kurdish fighters died, including three of Ahmed's cousins. |
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Actually they comprised four families of second and third cousins. |
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He also realizes how many outside forces, from family to friends to coaches to guidance counselors to third cousins, can influence a recruit's decision. |
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Both phones offer dramatically faster downloads than their non-3G cousins. |
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Pygmy hippos are a distinct sub-species to their larger cousins the common hippopotamus. |
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I was the first of eighteen cousins to earn more than one master's degree, and yet the only job I could find in my town was as an elementary school custodian. |
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Matches are often made between cousins, second cousins, or other family members, or if not, at least between members of the same tribe and social class. |
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If only their poor country cousins had an inkling of what was going on! |
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Like their cousins the cacomistles and ringtailed cats, Kinkajous can turn their hind feet backwards, so that the clawed toes can be used when descending head-first. |
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She looks more human now, but still behaves like her distant cousins. |
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Josephine was nowhere to be found, so I stepped up, along with my cousins Fernon and Napah. |
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The startled cousins suddenly stop as they see the woman in a white terrycloth bathrobe sitting at the bottom of the stairs on the fourth floor landing. |
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Applicants must be a Male and a Female, at least 18 years of age, and not nearer of kin than second cousins or cousins of half blood, and not having a husband or wife living. |
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I have never been one for arguing, mainly because in the context of my extended family there were always plenty of aunts, uncles and cousins willing to take it too far. |
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With no aunts, uncles or cousins, she and Emily had only each other. |
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A large supporting party will include mum, dad, brothers and cousins. |
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The extended family system has cemented the blood line relationship to an extent that children born of brothers are not called cousins but brothers or sisters. |
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When my parents arrived, we found ourselves introduced to more cousins than you can shake a stick at, most of them so many times removed you can barely detect them. |
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Isn't it funny how innocuous little expressions and everyday phrases can well and truly confuse our cousins from across the Atlantic ocean, and vice versa? |
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He recommends that consumers think about noise when plunking their cash down on items such as car alarms, or gas mowers, which are far noisier than their electric cousins. |
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There is no doubt that choline and its cousins are related to memory. |
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On Dec. 22, 1799, Sands told her cousins that she would be leaving to elope with a fellow boarder named Levi Weeks that night. |
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The chemicals in 'bath salts' seem to be cousins of the amphetamine agents that debuted as crystal meth. |
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Distant cousins of the Bordens are on hand to assist the cast of 20 people, some of whom are very dedicated guests. |
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