Did the normal business competition and healthy professional rivalry they cultivated really amount to a war? |
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Kings Park itself is a city park in which lush cultivated landscapes blend with bushland. |
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Archaeologists have assumed that Mill Creek agricultural fields were located on easily cultivated alluvial stream terraces. |
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The most valued of the cultivated seaweeds is the red alga Porphyra, or Nori. |
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The glossy abelia, a hybrid derived from species native to China, is the most commonly cultivated form. |
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Coconut palms, jackfruit, mango, orange, lime, and rubber trees, as well as coffee bushes, were cultivated. |
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Furthermore, in cultivated soils, dense compact subsoils frequently underlie the loosened topsoil. |
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Although no one would plant these weedy types, they all have attractive, cultivated cousins. |
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Oats, millet, opium poppies, and flax were also being cultivated by the end of the Neolithic period. |
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Bracken is cultivated commercially in America, Canada and Brazil as a remedy for bronchitis and parasitic worms. |
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The azarole has long been cultivated for its edible fruit in S. Europe, though it is now going out of favour. |
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They also deprive Australian livestock of food by scouring the cultivated rangelands, which also facilitates erosion. |
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Two putative hybrids between Kalmia and Rhododendron are cultivated by enthusiasts and their status has always been the subject of debate. |
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Systematists have described over 80 species, including two cultivated species, C. arabica L. and C. canephora Pierre. |
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The Romantic movement renewed the interest in the mad genius that had been cultivated by Renaissance Platonism but dampened by the age of reason. |
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Like its cultivated successors, the wild vine is a climbing plant which needs to grow up some support. |
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Though more tolerant of people than many other wildcats, bobcats tend to avoid large cultivated areas. |
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Onions and leeks were cultivated as flavourings and wild garlic may have been used. |
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However, interest in how cultivated plants consort with wildlings had started long before genetic engineering was even a glimmer in a test tube. |
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The reason you can is that most popular cultivated orchids are epiphytes, or air plants, which most often grow on trees or the surfaces of rocks. |
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The party had cultivated an image of moderateness, and had been unwilling or unable to have an effective negative element to its campaign. |
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Wiens noted their aversion to woody edges and cultivated fields, and Bock found them more abundant on interior plots than on edge plots. |
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The reason people stay at home is apathy, cultivated by a belief they won't be listened to by the powers that be. |
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Weed-free stands of clover or alfalfa and clean cultivated row crops are not likely to be infested. |
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I'm talking carefully ripped jeans, studiously scuffed shoes, lovingly tousled hair and, for guys, cultivated stubble. |
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In many countries, it is cultivated for its starchy tubers, sometimes called air potatoes or Chinese yams. |
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In certain regions corn, rice, groundnuts, vegetables, and yams are cultivated. |
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The upper region of the Camargue, blessed with rich alluvium soil, has been cultivated since the Middle Ages. |
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The world's cultivated lands have grown to an area about the size of South America. |
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Immensely popular with cultivated collectors, Baschenis ran a studio which produced repetitions and variants of his works. |
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I'm really glad British individualism is now being cultivated more than ever before. |
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Wild crops such as wheat and barley began to be cultivated, and wild animals such as sheep and goats were tamed and then domesticated. |
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The wild and weedy rice taxa were used as pollen recipients, whereas the cultivated rice was used as the pollen donor. |
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It is said that this area was barren in its early beginnings, but its founder, Osho, cultivated it to become a viable territory. |
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Most cultivated bananas are seedless, but the memories of seeds remain as brown specks within the flesh. |
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The plants grow wild in or on the banks of mountain streams and are cultivated in flooded mountain terraces. |
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No fool, he also cultivated a lucrative enterprise from his beefcake image. |
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He got a yield of six tonnes from the Cabernet and Shiraz variety of wine grapes he cultivated on two acres. |
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On sloping terrain, they can create level terraces to extend the cultivated area. |
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While the tobacco plant is indigenous to North America, it is now commercially cultivated and naturalized in most sub tropical countries. |
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With the labor-union allies it has cultivated, it has even helped create new parties that have scored real successes. |
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The study area is a fragmented landscape of lowland tropical rainforest surrounded by roads, cultivated fields and pasturelands. |
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However, in a few cases, seeds of plants cultivated in botanical gardens were also used. |
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Originally, Alexandrian senna was obtained principally from Sudan, but it is now cultivated in both Egypt and Sudan. |
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Today, all that remains is a bluff of trees in the middle of a cultivated field. |
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Matching his rugged features he cultivated a bluff manner, parading humble origins and ridiculing a man who corrected his accent. |
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Stalls will be laden with fresh, dried, wild and cultivated mushrooms and truffles as well as blackberries, wet walnuts and hazelnuts. |
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It occurs along coastal beaches of the West Indies and Central America, where its dense thickets are often cultivated to provide a windbreak. |
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He added that the field they are in is pastureland and as such is specially cultivated grass. |
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Her carefully cultivated media image as a moderate cannot disguise her consistent history as a rejectionist and a maximalist. |
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It is mainly cultivated for its dry seeds and green vegetable in dry areas of the tropics and subtropics. |
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He cultivated his role as a celebrity with all the assiduity common to our media stars today. |
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That was part of his charm, a sign of his cultivated sense of the many-sidedness of the world. |
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Maize and squash were cultivated in river valleys, and after ad 1200 beans were grown too. |
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His carefully cultivated 48-hour stubble never lapses into beard-dom and, locker-room bragging aside, he never lays himself bare. |
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As we come up over a rise, endless cultivated orchards stretch for many kilometres against a backdrop of blue mountain ridges. |
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Masterwort, though rare in the wild state, was formerly cultivated in this country for use as a pot-herb and in medicine. |
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For efficiency, a pipeline must follow the lay of the land, cutting through barnyards and across cultivated fields. |
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But the practicalities of measured judgement and well-timed decisions and deals can, they argue, be learnt and well cultivated. |
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If you have neither the time nor the energy to find your own wild brambles, the cultivated variety is widely available at pick-your-own farms. |
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Anne was dark-haired, with large eyes, composed and cultivated, with a mole on her neck and a malformed finger. |
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The iron-oxidizing heterotroph designated SCL2 was cultivated in glycerol salts medium containing 50 mM FeSO4. |
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The genus Reseda has been introduced into Panama and is cultivated in gardens in the Boquete region. |
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Ivan Fischer is the person, once a relationship is cultivated, to raise the bar. |
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Greenspan cultivated an oracular air, his utterances vague and technocratic yet hinting at shamanistic powers. |
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Jackson is, contrary to this off-field image people have cultivated for him, a pillar of the community. |
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He has a stubborn streak and definite strains of a rebellious nature, partly cultivated by his circumstances, which give him an appetite for dispute. |
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She was a literate, highly cultivated, liberally educated woman. |
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The effects of such scrupulous husbandry are manifest by the way in which the cultivated and natural landscape merge into one another in a rare reciprocity. |
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The presence of foreign musicians from the 12th century onwards is a sign that the music of the troubadours and the German Minnesinger was cultivated by the court. |
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The Honglian-type hybrid rice has also been widely cultivated in China. |
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Cereals include wheat, rice, barley, oats, rye, maize, millet, and sorghum, all of which have been used as food since prehistoric times, and cultivated since antiquity. |
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Although Byron had cultivated a reputation as a fighter and scapegrace at Harrow, he could not allow his former tutor, a mere commoner, to define him. |
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Plants were cultivated for 8 d either in hydroponics or in aeroponics. |
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Helen cultivated a low and seductively breathy voice and gushed with compliments to win people to her wishes. |
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And yet the trees are cultivated in every country within 15 degrees of the equator, so a virtual cocoa belt encircles the globe. |
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They were grown by the Aztec emperor Montezuma, revered in ancient China and cultivated in medieval Iceland because of their supposed aphrodisiac properties. |
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Uncertainties in history, archeology, biogeography, anthropology and biosystematics obscure the dates and places of the first domestication of cultivated crops. |
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Online society is primarily a society of personal relations, which must be continually cultivated and reforged in a relatively unstable and unclear environment. |
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In the lush green foothills above town, I'd found every incline, even a slope that seemed too steep to climb, cultivated with longan, lychee, pineapple, betel nut or banana. |
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Fraelick borrowed a camper and cultivated a guy working there with a six pack of beer to get the camper into the garage overnight. |
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However, in the highlands, where there is little cultivated land, privatization may entail restitution, as families respect traditional ownership. |
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Yams, taro, bananas and coconuts are also cultivated, but a reliance on sago means that the production of it remains a major practice of village life. |
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A response to this position, of course, would be that the assiduity with which Carroll cultivated friendships with small girls seems out of proportion to such a purpose. |
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In the western zone, oranges, limes, and bananas are cultivated. |
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It is extensively cultivated in marginal rainfall areas of the tropics and subtropics, and selected varieties are widely grown in temperate climates. |
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Valerie isn't going anywhere, and her work will extend through those she has cultivated and inspired. |
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Many kinds of pistachio trees that aren't cultivated for their nuts are instead used as rootstocks to which the upper, nut-bearing portion of the tree, or scion, is grafted. |
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The asparagus pea is indigenous to the Mediterranean region of Europe and the Near East, but now cultivated in Western Europe almost exclusively as a connoisseur's vegetable. |
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The man who sings with the kind of lonesomeness associated with Hank Williams has cultivated a major following in the western region over the past decade. |
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After all, the biggest names in the art world have cultivated their craft through heartbreak and emotional strife. |
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There is little indication that their parents begrudged them their cultivated and hunting ways provided they evinced lofty intellectual interests. |
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She was charming, with the indefinable magnetism certain older cultivated European women possess whether or not they were beauties in their youth. |
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It's cultivated through the daily activities of people, over the course of years, warts and all. |
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Farmers cannot afford these higher costs and consequently many paddy fields have not been cultivated for lengthy periods and have become barren lands. |
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Cassava is widely cultivated and eaten as a staple food in Andhra Pradesh and in Kerala. |
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Sweet potatoes are cultivated throughout tropical and warm temperate regions wherever there is sufficient water to support their growth. |
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This observation makes cultivated sweet potatoes the first known example of a naturally transgenic food crop. |
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Black pepper is native to south India and is extensively cultivated there and elsewhere in tropical regions. |
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Producers were unable to respond to the rising demand as new and less fertile land were cultivated. |
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By the end of the 15th century, French became the second language of a cultivated elite. |
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The broad, general and cultivated accents form a continuum that reflects minute variations in the Australian accent. |
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The colony became a slave society and cultivated tobacco as a cash crop, although English immigrants continued to arrive. |
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The river's flooding created natural levees, which planters had built higher to try to prevent flooding of land cultivated for cotton crops. |
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By the end of the 16th century, cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions of Asia and the Americas. |
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In the Indus Valley, crops were cultivated by 6000 BCE, along with domesticated cattle. |
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Potatoes were first cultivated in the Andes Mountains of South America, where the llama was also domesticated. |
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Jethro Tull was the first who inculcated the advantages of hoeing cultivated soils. |
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So the cultivated men could not be employed and the men employed could not be cultivated. |
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Butterworts are often cultivated and hybridized primarily for their flowers. |
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In many areas peat is cultivated as a fossil fuel and used either in electricity generation or domestic solid fuel for heating. |
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They cultivated small patches of land, kept sheep and cattle, traded with foreign merchants, and occasionally fought. |
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Saprobic edible fungi are also collected from the wild but they are best known and most widely valued in their cultivated forms. |
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One of the most remarkable features of cultivated beans is the enormous range of testa colours and patterns which can be found. |
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In France, Europe's most fertile and cultivated land, the tillers of it suffered more and more hunger. |
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Experts say vegetables like tomato, water melon, cucumber, chilies can be cultivated in walk in tunnel. |
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Acerola Tropical fruit-bearing shrub Vitamin C, Antioxidants or small tree, cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions. |
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Lenpur is a fiber made from the pulp of sustainably cultivated white fir trees. |
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The fires destroyed hundreds of olive and almond trees and a large area of cultivated land and crops. |
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Magali A was significantly the most nodulated when it was cultivated on soil. |
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Zingiber officinale is a native herb of Southeastern Asia that has been widely cultivated abroad. |
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It was cultivated in Greece for its medicinal qualities and by the Romans for its supposedly aphrodisiacal qualities. |
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Kapok is now seen throughout the tropics mainly because it was extensively cultivated for the fibrous kapok found in mature fruit capsules. |
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Uptake and phytotransformation of organophosphorus pesticides by axenically cultivated aquatic plants. |
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Furthermore, a wide variety of plants, such as fruit vegetables and grains, can now be cultivated, in addition to conventional leaf vegetables. |
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Its taste is stronger than cultivated rocket, rucola coltivata, pictured right. |
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The first species of salmonids and trout, rainbow, which was cultivated as a staple food of man and domesticated. |
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In the year 2007, the global yield was 25 million tons from 35 million hectares cultivated in more than 50 countries. |
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The professor of barker has been made largely obsolete by the realization that in most cases saplings can be cultivated far more profitably. |
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To aim at breeding, raising, and fattening one cattle beast from every ten cultivated acres of the Province. |
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These, and such as these, were all the cultivated and cultivable land in Provincetown. |
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Depredation of cultivated crops by elephants is widespread in both Africa and Asia. |
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Self-made freaks like excessively tattooed people created and cultivated their freakdom. |
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This evidence suggests that figs were the first cultivated crop and mark the invention of the technology of farming. |
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During the High Middle Ages, many forests and marshes were cleared and cultivated. |
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Because of the focus on reason over superstition, the Enlightenment cultivated the arts. |
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There are also cultivated areas including the Brendon Hills, which lie in the east of the National Park. |
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The rowing trainer at the time noted that Hawking cultivated a daredevil image, steering his crew on risky courses that led to damaged boats. |
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During this time the people on Malta mainly cultivated olives and carob and produced textiles. |
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Thyme, juniper berry, sweet gale, yarrow, rue and peppercress were also used and cultivated in herb gardens. |
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Music was considered an art form and music proficiency as fitting for a cultivated man. |
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By crossing the wild and cultivated maizes, researchers created resistant varieties, saving thousands of farmers from ruin. |
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Most of the plays were comedies, which suggests how Austen's satirical gifts were cultivated. |
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Kipling cultivated their friendship and came to admire the men and their politics. |
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A native of Southeast Asia, the melinjo tree is found wild in the forests and is also cultivated in some areas. |
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Forced labour of the peasants by the zamindars became more prevalent as cash crops were cultivated to meet the Company revenue demands. |
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The remainder of the species list consists of cultivated food or ornamental species, grown in restricted environments such as a planter's pot. |
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Crop loss in 1845 has been estimated at anywhere from one third to as high as one half of cultivated acreage. |
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The very exemplar of a 1980s narcobourgeois, he travelled extensively and cultivated extremely profitable contacts. |
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The summer Navette is less cultivated than the Coleseed, being less prolific, the seeds being much smaller. |
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Ethiopia is one of the eight fundamental and independent centers of origin for cultivated plants in the world. |
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The landscape is covered mostly by coniferous taiga forests and fens, with little cultivated land. |
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Should regular wild foods become scarce, boars will eat tree bark and fungi, as well as visit cultivated potato and artichoke fields. |
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In particular, Henry cultivated Frederick II, hoping he would turn against Louis or allow his nobility to join Henry's campaigns. |
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Within Europe, where mussels have been cultivated for centuries, Spain remained the industry leader. |
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Both wild and cultivated plants have naturalised widely, and were introduced into the Far East prior to the tenth century. |
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It is also cultivated in Kobe, Japan and used to make a meat pancake, a local speciality. |
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The first domesticated crops seem to have been the foxtail and broomcorn varieties of millet, while rice was cultivated in the south. |
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The Olympian distance he so carefully cultivated was shot through with genuine exhaustion. |
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The terrain of inland Sicily is mostly hilly and is intensively cultivated wherever possible. |
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In both cases, oysters are cultivated onshore to the size of spat, when they can attach themselves to a substrate. |
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With respect to plants, these latter are in this case defined as either ornamental or cultivated plants. |
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Some live in symbiotic relationships with other life forms, including termites, ruminants, and cultivated crops. |
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The surrounding wetlands were drained and cultivated by the monks of nearby Bergues Abbey. |
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Pliny's work includes discussion of all known cultivated crops and vegetables, as well as herbs and remedies derived from them. |
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Also, it was the Greek agriculturists and farmers that first systematically and with scientific planning, cultivated cotton and tobacco. |
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Outside cultivated land it prefers marginal zones of forests, particularly ecotonal grass and scrub vegetation. |
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They are also seen on mountains, swamps, grasslands, and even open cultivated fields. |
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It is cultivated worldwide as a fruit tree, and is the most widely grown species in the genus Malus. |
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When cultivated, the size, shape and branch density are determined by rootstock selection and trimming method. |
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The apple tree was perhaps the earliest tree to be cultivated, and its fruits have been improved through selection over thousands of years. |
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Apple cultivars brought as seed from Europe were spread along Native American trade routes, as well as being cultivated on colonial farms. |
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It is often found cultivated in coppices and orchards and more rarely found in forests stand. |
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As early as Roman times, it was introduced into more northerly regions, and later was also cultivated in monastery gardens by monks. |
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Norway maples are not typically cultivated for maple syrup production due to the lower sugar content of the sap. |
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Most cultivated orchids are tropical or subtropical, but quite a few which grow in colder climates can be found on the market. |
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They were rapidly introduced into Europe and cultivated and became a frenzied commodity during Tulip mania. |
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In the Ottoman Empire, numerous types of tulips were cultivated and bred, and today, 14 species can still be found in Turkey. |
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Over time and thousands of years, American indigenous peoples domesticated, bred and cultivated a large array of plant species. |
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Some crops which have been traditionally farmed in tropical climates, such as mango, litchi, and avocado, are cultivated in the subtropics. |
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A number of commonly cultivated plants are usually propagated by vegetative means rather than by seeds. |
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This crop was unknown in Europe at the time of the chapel's construction, and was not cultivated there until several hundred years later. |
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The institutionalization of these devices cultivated the notion of terror from above. |
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The largest producers are, in order of cultivated area, China, India, and the United States. |
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Floriculture crops include bedding plants, houseplants, flowering garden and pot plants, cut cultivated greens, and cut flowers. |
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It is thought that wild foods can have a significantly different nutritional profile than cultivated foods. |
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In agriculture, season extension is anything that allows a crop to be cultivated beyond its normal outdoor growing season. |
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It has been cultivated for at least 3,000 years, and was probably introduced to other parts of Europe by the Greeks or Romans. |
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However all the major cultivated and commercial forms resided in the Stoechas and Spica sections. |
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Specific crops are cultivated in distinct growing regions throughout the world. |
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This is hotter, drier and less intensely cultivated than the Highveld above the escarpment. |
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Heinrich Heine must have had the same experience when he tried, with his cultivated scorn and gifted melancholy, to find the people of Hamburg. |
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Millet and oats were cultivated for the first time in Hungary and Bohemia, rye was already cultivated, further west it was only a noxious weed. |
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The Visigoths had acquired and cultivated the apparatus of the Roman state but not the ability to make it operate to their advantage. |
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In the plains, intensively cultivated for centuries, little of the original environment remains. |
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Only between 0 and 9 per cent of the land in the other Nordic countries is cultivated. |
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Vineyards have been cultivated in Switzerland since the Roman era, even though certain traces can be found of a more ancient origin. |
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Farming also implies individual or corporate ownership of the stock being cultivated. |
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Fish and prawns can be cultivated in rice paddies, either arriving naturally or being introduced, and both crops can be harvested together. |
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He was unable to decide between the comparative advantages of the savage state of nature and the most highly cultivated society. |
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There wheat and later sugarcane were cultivated, like in Algarve, by the Genoese, becoming profitable activities. |
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The writings of Classical antiquity were cultivated and extended in Byzantium. |
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However, the scale of production was always far smaller than for cultivated silks. |
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Wild silks also tend to be more difficult to dye than silk from the cultivated silkworm. |
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Silks from Bombyx mori, a kind of cultivated silkworm, are the most widely investigated silks. |
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Key products were cultivated and distributed nationally through producers' and consumers' cooperatives. |
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Until 1500 BC, eastern coastal areas of the Mediterranean were most heavily cultivated. |
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While ensuring that it maintains its independence, Sri Lanka has cultivated relations with India. |
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Already cultivated in Algarve, the accessibility of Madeira attracted Genoese and Flemish traders keen to bypass Venetian monopolies. |
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Collective labor cultivated the confraternities' lands, which included raising the traditional maize, beans, and cotton. |
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These were supplemented with a wide variety of other plants either cultivated in gardens or gathered in the forest. |
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In addition to basic foodstuffs, the Maya also cultivated prestige crops such as cotton, cacao and vanilla. |
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Sugarcane is cultivated on 254,000 hectares, producing 16,867,958 tons annually. |
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It was a natural reserve for thousands of native Peruvian species, including around 3,000 varieties of potato cultivated by the people. |
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By 1612, Rolfe's new strains of tobacco had been successfully cultivated and exported, establishing a first cash crop for export. |
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New crops were widely cultivated and industries such as those producing porcelain and textiles flourished. |
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In the Andes, where the species is indigenous, some other closely related species are cultivated. |
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Archeological evidence from Florida sites indicate they cultivated it as well. |
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It was cultivated in Spain just a few decades after Columbus's voyages and then spread to Italy, West Africa and elsewhere. |
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Maize is widely cultivated throughout the world, and a greater weight of maize is produced each year than any other grain. |
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They agreed on a strategy to sequence the genome of cultivated, tetraploid cotton. |
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Once both diploid genomes are assembled, then research could begin sequencing the actual genomes of cultivated cotton varieties. |
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The roof structures are saddle and mansard roofs, as well as mixed constructions with numerous Dachauf and cultivated. |
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This plant can be cultivated in china, but it needs a long time to maturate and the cultivar degenerates easily. |
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That's because the pollen flow from cultivated brinjal to wild brinjals is extremely remote under natural conditions. |
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Work of a tractor and trailer in a cultivated soil and stubble is always affected by the slippage of a driving wheel. |
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Chia seeds appear natively in both Mexico and Guatemala, although they are now also cultivated in Australia, Bolivia, Argentina and Ecuador. |
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It is a nutritional algae, known as spirulina, cultivated just steps away on the hotel's rooftop 27 stories above Siam Square. |
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Isolates of Pilobolus were collected from the dung of horses in Ohio and Indiana and cultivated in microcosms until sporangia were produced. |
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It also illustrates application of this method using 2 different surface soils in a cultivated, but not cloddy, condition. |
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If you're in recovery, you have cultivated the courage to be the only nondrinker at the tradeshow. |
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Although maize has been grown since man has cultivated the land, sweetcorn as we know it was developed in the 19th century. |
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Maura Johnston on the carefully cultivated rise of a pop phenomenon. |
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Following the collapse of Afghanistan's Taliban regime in November last year, the opium poppy was cultivated on a record acreage. |
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The site lies in the Lake Urmia basin, at the edge of the range for wild grape, so it cannot be assumed that the grapes were cultivated. |
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Arkwright recruited large, highly disciplined workforces for his mills, managed credit and supplies and cultivated mass consumer markets for his products. |
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For some writers, the flowering of chamber music around 1910 represents a reaction against the gargantuanism cultivated so vigorously in the previous century. |
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To reclear of brush and young trees, land that has once been cultivated, often is less expensive in labor and materials than to clear the original heavy forest. |
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Tobacco is cultivated annually, and can be harvested in several ways. |
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The Kadamba fame reached its peak during the rule of Kakusthavarma, a notable ruler with whom even the kings of Gupta Dynasty of northern India cultivated marital alliances. |
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Quinoa was cultivated about 3,000 years ago in the Andes mountain region, and was the favored crop of the Incas, who used it as a sacred plant in rituals. |
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Another point is that the sweet potato in Polynesia is the cultivated Ipomoea batatas, which is generally spread by vine cuttings and not by seeds. |
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It is extensively cultivated as an annual crop in tropical and subtropical regions for its edible starchy tuberous root, a major source of carbohydrates. |
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Tobacco is cultivated similarly to other agricultural products. |
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To that end, they cultivated contingent relations with the Five Nations of the Iroquois to procure greater access to key central regions from which the skins came. |
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Maize is the major crop cultivated but they also harvested maguey. |
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The diverse climate allowed for wide variation in available crops, but all regions of Mesoamerica cultivated the base crops of maize, beans, and squashes. |
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The Cacao Route consists of various cacao haciendas, where guides give lessons on how the plant is cultivated and the cacao bean is harvested, then processed into chocolate. |
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Title to land resided with the headman, who held it in the name of the community, although peasant proprietors enjoyed the use of land as long as they cultivated it. |
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Food was often salted and enhanced with spices, some of which were imported like black pepper, while others were cultivated in herb gardens or harvested in the wild. |
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The Romans too read these cues, so that they cultivated their Berber alliances and, subsequently, favored the Berbers who advanced their interests following the Roman victory. |
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Popolo is a branching green herb with a tendency to being woody at the base. This annual grows one to three feet high on cultivated land and is regarded as a common weed. |
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Since the 7th century, Cannabis has been cultivated in the Rif Region. |
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Cloves and nutmeg are still cultivated, as are cocoa, coffee and fruit. |
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A 2006 Space Shuttle experiment found that Salmonella typhimurium, a bacterium that can cause food poisoning, became more virulent when cultivated in space. |
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Wheat and barley were cultivated, together with pulses and the horse bean. |
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South Africa has cultivated a burgeoning astronomy community. |
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Because the cultivated forms are planted in gardens worldwide, they are occasionally found growing wild as garden escapes, well beyond their natural range. |
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The most widely cultivated species, Lavandula angustifolia, is often referred to as lavender, and there is a color named for the shade of the flowers of this species. |
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Chaste tree is a deciduous aromatic shrub native to Mediterranean Europe, central Asia and parts of India, but now widely cultivated in sub-tropical regions. |
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Pliny the Elder describes the Italian fruit as very small, probably like a gherkin, describing it as a wild cucumber considerably smaller than the cultivated one. |
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The large, lumpy variety of tomato, a mutation from a smoother, smaller fruit, originated in Mesoamerica, and may be the direct ancestor of some modern cultivated tomatoes. |
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The Norwegian regents, however, cultivated Snorri, made him a skutilsvein, a senior title roughly equivalent to knight, and received an oath of loyalty. |
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Sargassum is also cultivated and cleaned for use as an herbal remedy. |
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Many sites of bombed buildings, when cleared of rubble, were cultivated to grow vegetables to ease wartime food shortages and were known as victory gardens. |
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In North America, Louisiana iris and its hybrids are often cultivated. |
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For years he had cultivated an obsessive fascination with the common vulture, and even named one album, Urubu, in honor of the Brazilian counterpart of the turkey vulture. |
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The most ordinary temptation of the cultivated mind is to desire to criticize too much, to overjudge, to criticize even that of which he knows nothing. |
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The cultivated hillsides of the Douro river valley of Northern Portugal. |
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William cultivated close relations with the church in his duchy. |
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The two great writers of the 14th century, Petrarch and Giovanni Boccaccio, sought out and imitated the works of antiquity and cultivated their own artistic personalities. |
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Seaweed are also harvested or cultivated for the extraction of alginate, agar and carrageenan, gelatinous substances collectively known as hydrocolloids or phycocolloids. |
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For the next seven years, while Jack rode the wallaby track alone, she based herself with friends in Bathurst and cultivated the local squattocracy. |
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Similarly, some species of Silybum that occur as weeds, also are cultivated for seeds that yield vegetable oil and pharmaceutical compounds such as Silibinin. |
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Ethiopia is the place of origin of the coffee bean, which was first cultivated at Kefa, one of the 14 provinces in the old Ethiopian administration. |
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East of the Coast Ranges lie several cultivated fertile valleys, notably the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys of California and the Willamette Valley of Oregon. |
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The relationships Honda cultivated with personnel at Toyota, Nakajima Aircraft Company and the Imperial Japanese Navy would be instrumental in the postwar period. |
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And, most fortunately, you have pursued a course of reading, and cultivated your mind in a manner the most admirably adapted to make you a great and successful author. |
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While there, he cultivated friendships with Elizabeth Pigot and her brother, John, with whom he staged two plays for the entertainment of the community. |
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These may be suitable to smaller, more intensively cultivated plots, and to farming on poor, shallow or degraded soils that ploughing would further degrade. |
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The cultivated mushroom as well as the common field mushroom initially form a minute fruiting body, referred to as the pin stage because of their small size. |
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Holt that the Robin Hood legend was cultivated in the households of the gentry, and that it would be mistaken to see in him a figure of peasant revolt. |
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During the Cold War, Bangladesh cultivated good relations with both the United States and the Soviet Union, but it remained nonaligned with either superpower. |
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The rulers of the Turkic Ilyas Shahi dynasty built the largest mosque in South Asia, and cultivated strong diplomatic and commercial ties with Ming China. |
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Let us, indeed, see how the point of view has changed which was held in regard to those cultivated and glib accumbents who in former days were taken for real social workers. |
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Working at home, Melody cultivated the Cape sundews under controlled conditions and measured their growth response to varying soil nutrient levels. |
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He said Pakistan had a vast uncultivable area across the country and all stakeholders should come forward to enhance cultivated land to boost the national economy. |
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To help you, I have outlined the life cycle of this sawfly, one of over 400 different sawflies which attack a wide range of wild and cultivated plants. |
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And, unlike recent Welsh musicians, Rees' rise to the brink of success has been toughed out and cultivated on the local circuit over the last six years. |
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Legend has it that Spanish explorers cultivated grapes here for six years before setting sail for Central America in search of the great Aztecan Empire. |
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Depression-Era reminiscers remember the closeness and appreciation for family and loved ones cultivated out of the lean years experienced during those tough times. |
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Like comic books and scuzz music, videogames are into this repeating pattern of violence and anger, a pattern cultivated by game labels to chime with their core demographic. |
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In Ribe, grains of rye, barley, oat and wheat dated to the 8th century have been found and examined, and these are believed to have been cultivated locally. |
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Land which has been taken from the el-Karnawi tribe was cultivated by the Mishmar Hanegev kibbutzniks, with the consent of the el-Karnawi Bedouins. |
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One way of making a fence both attractive and productive is to plant it with cultivated blackberries, and the hybrid berries like Japanese wineberry, loganberry and tayberry. |
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The turnrows and margins of the fields should be cultivated often enough to prevent the growth of weeds, many forms of which harbor the onion thrips. |
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Butterworts are widely cultivated by carnivorous plant enthusiasts. |
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Over the years, the town has cultivated a significant tourist population. |
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The hill catchment contained mountain coolabah open woodland and the 2 monitored contour bays were cultivated and planted to sorghum, as were the adjacent contour bays. |
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It was during this time that rice was first cultivated in southeast China. |
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