The pleasure we derive from being with others, along with our wanderlust and desire to explore, sets the stage nicely for smallpox. |
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It is to do with the loss of our national identity and nothing whatsoever to do with money or benefits we may or may not derive from such a move. |
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Adams' sarcasm did not solely derive from his jealousy of Franklin's easy popularity, though that always rankled with him. |
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The two buildings' formal similarities derive from their similar functions and desert landscapes. |
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These all seem to derive from the Folio text, but some may supplement it by accurately recording where breaks came between verses and refrains. |
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The word for poetry in Inupiaq is the same as the word to breathe, and both derive from anerca, the soul. |
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If obligations really were internal to promising then the obligation to keep a promise would have to derive from the institution of promising. |
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More recently, their prints derive from etchings, engravings and stencils, as well. |
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These data derive from computerised child health registers in each health authority and not from target payments. |
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A court's competence to grant an anti-suit injunction seems to derive from its jurisdiction to adjudicate. |
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It is difficult to believe that such clumsy moments derive from even a very early work by the great composer. |
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The second policy presumes that crimes derive from social disintegration and poverty. |
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Authentic architectural experiences derive from real or ideated bodily confrontations rather than visually observed entities. |
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Present day incorporations of towns and cities derive from this medieval use. |
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Funding for the operations, modernization, and support would derive from three sources. |
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They argue that existing differences in the lives of women and men derive from cultural definitions of gender roles. |
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Nearly all regional organizations and alliances derive from treaty-based sources. |
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Compliments derive from taking notice of praiseworthy situations and efforts. |
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Many of the criteria derive from the principles adopted in awarding special damages for personal injuries. |
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Many superheroes of bygone eras possess powers that exist in some way in the natural world or derive from real inventions. |
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It is tempting to build in successive layers of meaning and symbols that derive from acronyms. |
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Civil law and commercial law derive from the French, while the penal code is influenced by the British model. |
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The various continuities and discontinuities that are discernible derive from the real changes that are deemed to have taken place. |
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The myeloid lineage gives rise to the rest of the white blood cells or leukocytes, which all derive from the bone marrow in adults. |
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We believed that our rights, privileges and liberties did not derive from the king or government, but rather were a gift from god. |
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Several diary writers have claimed credit for the idea, which could even derive from the First World War trenches. |
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These ages plot as a normal curve, supporting the assumption that they all derive from a single thermal event. |
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Even then it would not derive from any objectively ascertainable standard or consensus within a recognised profession. |
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The oddly attenuated, gothic proportions of her figures, for example, derive from Varo's admiration for El Greco. |
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Many others derive from baptismal names, e.g., Jakubau, Haponau, Kazimirau, or such diminutives as Jakubionak and Hapanionak. |
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Melanocytes derive from cells of the neural crest and can migrate throughout the body. |
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Selflessness also lies at the core of what is essential in a general, for both moral and physical courage derive from self-abnegation. |
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The bulk of Microsoft's earnings derive from royalties on copyrighted software code. |
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I resist the view that the pleasures of fiction derive from its purely thought-experimental aspects. |
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Having said that, the film is not without its pleasures, most of which derive from the casting. |
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So by reading doorstops I'm actually reducing the average amount of enjoyment I derive from fiction. |
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Type II's derive from a supermassive red giant whose core collapses when it runs out of fuel, and then rebounds in a titanic explosion. |
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These farmers are mostly uneducated but they take full advantage of the benefits they can derive from their upper caste status. |
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This delusion may derive from egotism, or just complete lack of self-awareness. |
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Influx of trachytic volcanic rock fragments in the Albian may derive from inlra-platc volcanism related to extension. |
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As I don't own a television, my irregular glimpses of that misbegotten medium derive from the hospitality of someone else. |
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The warnings that permeate Polonius's speeches derive from his misperception of controlling his daughter's sexuality. |
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Although biocidal compounds derive from a variety of chemical classes, the final resulting damage may show considerable similarity. |
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Most black pigments derive from natural sources, although some processing or preparation might be involved. |
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The cinematic monkeyshines underscore the various triumphs and tribulations that derive from a lifetime in pursuit of physical pleasure alone. |
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Social meaning and communication derive from a variety of signs and signifiers. |
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Both uhlan and czapska derive from Turkish and clearly associate the Polish lancers with origins in Turkey. |
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The pristine Sinharaja Forest, Sinhagiriya and the Sinhala race all derive from sinha, the lion. |
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The concept of the multiplier is based on consumption spending and on incomes that derive from expenditure. |
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His style appears to derive from Ercole de' Roberti and shows affinities with that of Lorenzo Costa, during his Bolognese period. |
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Instead, they all derive from natural living sources, invariably micro-organisms themselves. |
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As many writers have noted, our English words cosmos and cosmetics derive from the same ancient Greek root for universe and ornamentation. |
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Species derive from a common genus and, within a taxonomy, are hierarchically represented according to their essential characteristics and differences. |
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This situation never happens for nuclear genes because at least half of the nuclear genes carried by females necessarily derive from hermaphrodite parents. |
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The evenly balanced scales of blind justice derive from this principle. |
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The benefits of preserving rainforest derive from two sources. |
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However, the Court cannot, by means of an evolutive interpretation, derive from these instruments a right that was not included therein at the outset. |
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The account in the Library might derive from the same source. |
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He has noted that population size is an important element in determining population diversity which is usually assumed to derive from the antiquity of a population. |
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It is, indeed, true that Americans derive from so many racial currents that it is a sine qua non that ways must be found to harmonize them without a loss of their uniqueness. |
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What conflicts do exist between them derive from misunderstanding and accident. |
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This finding supports the theory that hyperplastic mesothelial cells derive from reactive serosal mesothelium and are dislodged into draining lymphatics. |
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The most significant contributions derive from the conformational degrees of freedom of the chain, its vibrational modes, and the hydration of the chemical groups. |
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Voluntary identity groups derive from enacting the principle of free association and include civic, educational, religious, political, and service groups, among others. |
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The preference for open syllables which end in vowels rather than consonants may, however, derive from universal developmental tendencies as well as from substratum influence. |
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The broken branch fragments may derive from jointed colonies, such as the articulate Filicrisia, or represent narrow branched, unjointed tubuliporines. |
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The dough can derive from cornmeal, flour, potatoes, or green bananas. |
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The rules which determine the appropriate choice in conversation derive from the arcane art of knowing the ins and outs of the complex sociocultural fabric of Korean. |
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Both show heavy influences from Ptolemy, and both possibly derive from maps created around 1485 in Lisbon by Bartolomeo Columbus. |
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In most bilaterians, the gut musculature and most vascular muscles derive from the mesoderm. |
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The name of the Angles is thought to derive from the name of the area they inhabited, Angeln. |
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In the Celtic languages, the words designating English nationality derive from the Latin word Saxones. |
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However, several sites interpreted as Iron Age shrines seem to contradict this view which may derive from Victorian and later Celtic romanticism. |
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Spermatoceles are intrascrotal cysts containing sperm that derive from the small tubules of the epididymis. |
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The essays assembled in this book derive from the contention that there are as many Islams as there are situations that sustain it. |
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Some of the annotated variants derive from alternative editions in the original languages, or from variant forms quoted in the fathers. |
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Like karate, for instance, which would appear to derive from the ancient Indian martial art kalarippayattu. |
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Ultimately, the word is of Mediterranean origin, believed to derive from some Romanized Illyrian base. |
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The majority of French words derive from Vulgar Latin or were constructed from Latin or Greek roots. |
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Although the names may derive from traditional dishes, often the recipes do not. |
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Origin of the word scone is obscure and may, in fact, derive from different sources. |
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He concluded that poets should be allowed to depict things which do not exist but derive from popular belief. |
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It appears to derive from the place name Eidyn mentioned in the Old Welsh epic poem Y Gododdin. |
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Characteristic dishes such as apple pie, fried chicken, pizza, hamburgers, and hot dogs derive from the recipes of various immigrants. |
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It was, on the contrary, the device to secure for the whole of mankind the maximum of benefits it can derive from it. |
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Consciousness, itself a conditioned phenomenon, must derive from or depend on some different thing prior to or behind material phenomena. |
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The arms of West Dunbartonshire derive from the former arms of the burgh of Clydebank, including a red saltire as the arms of Lennox. |
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The oldest dances seem to be the passepied and the gavotte, and the newest ones derive from the quadrille and French Renaissance dances. |
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It remains to be established whether these northern European developments derive from Chinese ones. |
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English names for the Great Orme and Worm's Head both derive from the Norse word orm, referring to their shape resembling a serpent's head. |
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Many surnames in Wales derive from patronymics rather than, for instance, places of origin. |
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The framework of its phylogeny shows that repeated life habit states derive from evolutionary convergence and parallelism. |
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Heterokont chloroplasts appear to derive from those of red algae, rather than directly from prokaryotes as occurred in plants. |
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The species' common name does not derive from any particular green external coloration of the turtle. |
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The names of many rivers derive from the color that the transported matter gives the water. |
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Tolkien to derive from a Germanic language, and it has been attributed largely to either the Dutch language or Old Norse. |
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The Late Latin falco is believed to derive from falx as meaning a sickle, referencing the claws of the bird. |
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The Beaker culture has been proposed to derive from this specific branch of the Corded Ware culture. |
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The tribal names in kongo possibly derive from a word for a public gathering or tribal assembly. |
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The name Luzon is thought to derive from the Tagalog word lusong, which is a large wooden mortar used in dehusking rice. |
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These verbs derive from the subjunctive or optative use of preterite forms to refer to present or future time. |
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The word cuss appears to derive from the application of this sound change to the word curse. |
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It can also ignore harmful work outside employment and any benefits children normally derive from their work. |
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How is believed to derive from the Old Norse word haugr meaning hill or mound. |
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New high-value customers are what companies can derive from this. |
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In this discussion, I use the ideas of bipolarity, bilateralness, and correlativity to derive from a common source. |
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The only way to make sense of this problem is to convert goods into the marginal utility per dollar you derive from consuming them. |
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Paragangliomas are rare chromaffin cell tumours that derive from neural crest origin. |
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Middle English steke might derive from Old Norse steik, but Scandinavian wines are out of the question. |
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It's synonymous with the courage that you derive from not running a con game on the unique character and specific temper of your own mind. |
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And the honor did not derive from some stupefacient gimmick like race. |
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Trans fatty acids typically derive from the hydrogenation of vegetable oils, and are naturally present in animal fats, which are used in a wide variety of foods. |
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The announced changes to higher education in the UK derive from a radical, neo-liberal approach that now seeks to transform the multiversity into a market-based monoculture. |
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Myxomas are thought to derive from multipotential mesenchymal cells, and have a variable macroscopic appearance ranging from soft and friable to smooth and bosselated. |
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The stereotype of German humourlessness is believed to derive from their reputation for efficiency, punctuality and rationality, presumed to be at the expense of humour. |
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I just hope the lesson we derive from this nonsense is to avoid such screw-ups in the future so we don't have to depend on lawyers and judges to decide elections. |
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The fore-head is wrinkled transversely from the constant assistance which the levatores palpe-brarum derive from the occipito-frontalis muscle in the opening of the eyes. |
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As such, it is a minority woman's version, and it critiques the centeredness and rigidness that derive from a dominant perspective or white male bias. |
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Zazen and mindfulness both derive from Zen-Buddhist meditation. |
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The aroma and flavor of cinnamon derive from its essential oil and principal component, cinnamaldehyde, as well as numerous other constituents, including eugenol. |
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Hipparchus also created a comprehensive catalog of 1020 stars, and most of the constellations of the northern hemisphere derive from Greek astronomy. |
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Like other anatomical terms, many of these derive from Latin and Greek. |
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Tomolo'o, the Chumash word for such a craft, may derive from kumula'au, the Hawaiian term for the logs from which shipwrights carve planks to be sewn into canoes. |
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The common name cowslip may derive from the old English for cow dung, probably because the plant was often found growing amongst the manure in cow pastures. |
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This distinction appears to derive from Roman times, when the island was divided into Roman Britain to the south and the land of the Caledonians to the North. |
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Sources of food for benthic communities can derive from the water column above these habitats in the form of aggregations of detritus, inorganic matter, and living organisms. |
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One is that the terms derive from early nautical navigation. |
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The old financial centre is the South Mall, with several banks whose interior derive from the 19th century, such as the Allied Irish Bank's which was once an exchange. |
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It is said to derive from a legend that Saint George had voyaged to Roman Britain from the Byzantine Empire, approaching Britain via the channel that bears his name. |
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The Brittonic languages derive from the Common Brittonic language, spoken throughout Great Britain south of the Firth of Forth during the Iron Age and Roman period. |
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The law of arms is part of the law in countries which regulate heraldry, although not part of common law in England and in countries whose laws derive from English law. |
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Profits also derive from avoiding taxes or levies on imported goods. |
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Its name may derive from Capbreton near Bayonne, or more probably from the word Breton, the French adjective form of the proper noun Bretagne, the French historical region. |
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The High Court was founded in 1672 by the Courts Act 1672, but its origins derive from the College of Justice, as well as from the medieval royal courts and barony courts. |
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Instead, the rights normally associated with citizenship derive from what is called Belonger status and island natives or descendants from natives are said to be Belongers. |
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Derived from the French word 'chanter', meaning 'to sing', they may date from as early as the 15th century, but most recorded examples derive from the 19th century. |
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Malone's main argument seems to derive from the classism of his era. |
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The issue of establishing minority groups and determining the extent of privileges that they might derive from their status are subjects of some debate. |
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These derive from a deep understanding of what is relevant to physics and astronomy, and especially from a mastery of wholly new mathematical techniques. |
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The majority were struck in the reigns of emperors Constantius II and Julian and derive from a range of mints including Arles and Lyons in France, Trier in Germany, and Rome. |
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Although the names of the rival houses derive from the cities of York and Lancaster, the corresponding duchies had little to do with these cities. |
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The manuscripts are all thought to derive from a common original, but the connections between the texts are more complex than simple inheritance via copying. |
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Contrary to popular belief, the Louisiana code does not directly derive from the Napoleonic Code, as the latter was enacted in 1804, one year after the Louisiana Purchase. |
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Ethnographic and ethnohistorical studies indicate the possibility that Huichols derive from various groups who settled in the Sierra Madre Occidental. |
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The harlequinade ceases for the moment, and a two-character tragedy begins with the shepherds Thyrsis and Corydon, whose names derive from ancient pastoral poetry. |
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As in much of biology, the most satisfying truths in ecology derive from manipulative experimentation. Tinker with nature and quantify how it responds. |
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