I've never known a holiday to be spoiled, or even darkened, by an argument, by tensions that crackle and erupt in sharp words. |
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His head was leaning back, and every time he breathed a snore would erupt from his nostrils. |
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It's an inflammatory bone condition that causes a build-up of poisons that erupt into painful skin abscesses. |
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Shield volcanoes tend to erupt non-explosively, mainly pouring out huge volumes of fluid lava. |
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With the rise of oil wealth, the gap between rich and poor widened, stoking the social discontent that would erupt in the revolution. |
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But as soon as they are seen from any distance, they erupt into pulsing centripetal and centrifugal vortices. |
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I saw many feuds erupt in a blaze of automatic fire, peppering the walls with bullets that whined through the air like demonic bees. |
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It was a crime that finally ignited a powder keg and caused simmering tensions to erupt into violence. |
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Trinbagonians hit the streets at 1am for Jouvert, a small-hours celebration that sees the capital erupt with abandoned sensuality. |
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When anger turns into rage, it is no longer amenable to reason and can easily erupt into violence. |
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Then suddenly they erupt with snapdragon-like flowers that range in color from white to pink, lavender and purple. |
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If such adiabatic freezing were to control the ascent of hydrous mafic magmas, basalts would probably never erupt in volcanic arcs. |
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Blackpool will erupt in a blaze of colour tonight when the town's world-famous Illuminations blossom into life. |
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It can also lead you to erupt into violent behavior if your anger has been simmering without an outlet. |
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Why does Danny Elfman's music score erupt with Arabic-sounding ululations if not to make us think of the Middle East? |
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Someone in the crowd murmured a smart remark that caused a group of girls to erupt into a fit of laughter. |
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However, this growing opposition did not erupt in open upheavals or mass strikes, at least as far as I can judge. |
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Until that day, solar astronomers will continue to watch the sun with trepidation, never knowing what might erupt next. |
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Gone are the times when tensions would erupt in a blizzard of savage brutality. |
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Conflicts routinely erupt as a result of disagreements over how exactly to represent non-active shareholders on the board. |
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As he gazes past you into the middle-distance, you sense that he could erupt in a volcanic temper. |
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We'd certainly be more productive if more of our days were free of the kinds of crises that seem to erupt at a moment's notice. |
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This change in balance caused her to stumble and erupt in a fit of giggles. |
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When supervolcanoes erupt they do so with a force thousands of times greater than eruptions such as that at Mount Vesuvius. |
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The park's supervolcano has the potential to erupt with a force about 2,000 times the size of Mount St. Helens, according to a new study. |
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He warned that fresh factional fighting would erupt unless the meeting addressed key issues, such as the establishment of a new parliament. |
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But when the door is opened and oxygen again feeds the fire, flames can suddenly erupt again. |
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Individual volcanoes of continental monogenetic volcanic fields are generally presumed to erupt single magma batches during brief eruptions. |
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However, conflicts among households of the same lineage would periodically erupt and often lead to further fissions within the lineage. |
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Without the visual cues we get in face-to-face conversation, flame wars could erupt. |
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In fact, he became the worst crank and complainer I have ever seen even to the point of letting his temper erupt in public. |
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Not all cases of fossilized division will erupt in civil war, but all will generate significant economic and psychological costs. |
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Red carpets flow up sumptuous staircases and the walls erupt in cornices and curlicues. |
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So we have some people stopping compliantly while others erupt in fury at the idiots in front of them braking for no reason. |
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The pair grappled and wrestled and Smith then left the matter, only for the brawl to erupt again shortly afterwards. |
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Ice caps form, winds blow, volcanoes erupt, and magnetic fields are produced here on Earth and elsewhere in the Solar System. |
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Volcanoes erupt under glaciers, causing gigantic floods that make the island a fearsomely dangerous place for human colonization. |
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Although Cascade volcanoes do not erupt frequently, they threaten major populations and developments. |
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Volcanoes erupt not simply because magma is hot, but because hot, rising magma turns underground water to steam, which then expands explosively. |
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What was not explained was that for a couple of days afterwards, spots can erupt and you can feel strange, or more emotional than usual. |
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Five college kids head into the great outdoors, only to be stricken with an illness that makes their skin erupt in sores. |
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However, this also means that Fiona has been exposed to the virus, and may well erupt in spots a fortnight from now. |
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Teeth missing from the normal series may have failed to develop or to erupt or have been lost prematurely. |
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The first teeth to erupt are the incisors which appear at around 6-9 months. |
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Many likened the situation to a dormant volcano that may erupt violently if matters are left unresolved. |
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They are cooler areas and tend to erupt in gigantic explosions sending a tremendous amount of radiation towards the earth. |
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Usually, these types of volcanoes erupt explosively and violently, sometimes completely blowing their tops! |
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This, together with volatile exsolution, which creates buoyant magma, allows evolved magma to erupt. |
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I began walking down the hallway but stopped when I heard two girlish giggles erupt from behind a room. |
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In many people, the wisdom teeth are unable to erupt normally so they either remain below the jawline or don't grow in properly. |
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Ankylosed teeth fail to erupt to meet their counterparts in the opposite jaw. |
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The Roman settlement of Aquae Sulis developed where a number of thermal springs erupt from the floor of the Avon valley. |
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Once magmas erupt or cool beneath the surface, they are subjected to weathering and interaction with descending meteoric waters. |
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Not only will he not go, but any attempt to dislodge him would certainly cause trouble to erupt in that beleaguered state again. |
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When the dreamy washes of French horn, flute and piano suddenly erupt into vast singalongs, the sonic overload is spine-tingling. |
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To the south-east, just off the headland, there is a dangerous bombora at times, an area where broken waves can suddenly erupt. |
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During this time, chatter had begun to erupt around the table. |
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Although media coverage can often give an impression to the contrary, violent conflicts very rarely erupt unannounced or irrationally. |
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Rob Marshall lets a sigh of relief erupt so loud it could be heard by giants in the sky. |
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A bigger row could yet erupt over continental shelves, most of which are being slowly delimited under the UN's Convention on the Law of the Sea. |
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The trials of the Canadian infantry in Normandy would, a few months later, erupt in political crisis at home. |
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This ridge is really a long linear volcano, segments of which erupt frequently. |
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Such a situation is likely to cause discontents which can erupt into conflicts. |
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This will cause the hot oil to erupt with possible dire consequences. |
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Even fewer thought it would erupt over an issue so seemingly trivial. |
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The city's Neighbourhood Mediation Service is helping to settle disputes that can erupt over issues such as noise pollution, boundaries, nuisance and intimidation. |
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Within a few days, more lesions may erupt along with a malar rash, conjunctivitis, or diffuse urticaria. |
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Wondering how much effect going my counselling will have, as these days, my skin only really seems to erupt when I'm not processing poisonous stuff any other way. |
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Soon, however, the ghastly spectacle was to erupt on the streets itself. |
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We have listened to the hyperbole that has continued to erupt over this agreement. |
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When the jaws are not wide enough to allow the wisdom teeth to erupt in an alignment that is useful for chewing. |
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When do baby teeth erupt? Not soon enough for most parents, I have found. |
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Although none are erupting now many have the potential to erupt in the near future. |
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It depends on buffalo jams in the park, and how long we have to wait for Old Faithful to erupt. |
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Rainier is a composite volcano built of lava and fragmented rock and while volcanologists say it's unlikely to erupt again in the near future, they always add a small corollary. |
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But when he goes over a line that it is ambiguously drawn, then we erupt with outrage. |
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The very mention of his part in Spice World causes the brit to erupt in a violent fit of laughter. |
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In this way the ancestor of therian mammals came to possess a single generation of replacement teeth, which erupt when the jaw reaches a size large enough to accommodate them. |
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Who would have expected a political furor to erupt around a single Nevada rancher? |
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Being on the Temple Mount in 2005, the whole atmosphere felt extremely tense, as if chaos could erupt at any moment. |
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Whereas war can erupt in a split second, creating the momentum and awareness for peace is hard work. |
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There was a bank about ten deep of rabid movie fans along one side of the carpet, and each time a new star would enter they would erupt in a roar. |
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As states come to terms with the capabilities-and dangersof information warfare, it is not implausible that a cyberspace arms race could erupt. |
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Riding into a glorious sunset which backlit the stunning giant rock formations that seemed to erupt from the desert floor, we reached Tuba City just after dark. |
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The row broke out as it emerged that the conflict with China was threatening to erupt into a full-scale trade war that could send high street prices soaring. |
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They may serve as a useful indicator that a volcano is coming to life, and can be used to help predict when a volcano may erupt. |
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Any fight at the border over the passage of the lorries into Ukraine could erupt into a wider clash presaging Mr Putin calling in the troops. |
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More giddy people climb aboard, and again we erupt into applause and whoops. |
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Every now and again, a snaky comment would erupt from his lips but there was always a quick apology while he muttered something that she couldn't ever hear. |
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Fights and chases erupt when personal penguin space is invaded or when young marauders snitch a few prized pebbles to start building nests of their own. |
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Shin Fuji probably first became active about 10,000 years ago and has continued ever since to smolder or erupt occasionally. |
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I felt like a very unsightly verruca that had had the temerity to erupt on her toe. |
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We have spent our childhood and adolescence on a volcano ready to erupt at any minute. |
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I sucked in air, feeling goosebumps and tingles erupt all over my skin. |
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Worse still, because the button was on the side, you would naturally tilt the mug back, then open the spout, and the coffee volcano would erupt in your face. |
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But like boils that erupt at separate places on the skin, they are fevered into being by one invisible short-circuited wiring in the body politic beneath. |
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In as little as three minutes, a small fire can erupt into flashover. |
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At the age of 11 to 15 days, the teeth of the kittens erupt and when the kittens are 37 to 60 days old the milk teeth are complete. |
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Worried residents fear problems on a crime-ridden council estate will erupt into a full-scale riot unless police clamp down on hell-raising teenagers. |
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At times the stadium would erupt with support and chants for the Indian team which seemed to distract some of the gymnasts from other countries. |
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However, it comes under attack when recurrent financial crises erupt in an environment of low and stable inflation or even of deflation. |
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The conflict will erupt again if these other forms of violence are ignored. |
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Intended to improve the understanding of how these volcanos erupt, the system investigates the dynamics of the entire magma system below the island. |
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It's going to erupt to a great extent because of these inequalities. |
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Teeth are more sensitive to getting cavities when they first erupt. |
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What we have found is that because of smartphones and access to media, and because everybody knows how everyone else lives, you have no idea where the next huge social movement is going to erupt. |
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This in effect would mean that some form of governance will actually exist on Syrian soil when Assad's regime falls, and this is probably to off-set any chaos that might erupt. |
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If we look at the private sector, however, we will find not only that this fabled financial stability' has been unsuccessful but that we are most probably sitting on a volcano ready to erupt at any moment. |
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However, if the baby teeth are left to abscess, the second teeth may be deflected by the abscessed baby teeth and erupt in an improper location thus producing an orthodontic problem. |
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Writers are a classroom of rude boys, ready to chuck spitballs and erupt with razzberries as soon as the teacher turns to the blackboard. |
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Such research also ensures that the Bank will always have a contingency plan in place to deal with unexpected surges in counterfeiting, which can erupt suddenly. |
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I won't dilate on British sparrowfart 'dawn,' except to wonder if these birds are really that flatulent and who has actually heard them erupt? |
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Being the last teeth to erupt in the oral cavity, many wisdom teeth are impacted. |
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The milk teeth erupt after three weeks, and solid food is eaten after four weeks. |
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Extinct volcanoes are those that scientists consider unlikely to erupt again because the volcano no longer has a magma supply. |
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It is covered with volcanoes that erupt sulfur, sulfur dioxide and silicate rock, and as a result, Io is constantly being resurfaced. |
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The arc is formed from volcanoes which erupt through the overriding plate as the descending plate melts below it. |
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Posterior molars erupt at the back of the row and slowly move forward to replace these like enamel crowns on a conveyor belt. |
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I apologise to Mr Romagnoli, who we have just heard. These types of response risk fuelling a dangerous climate which could erupt into violence and racism. |
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Where wars erupt, suffering and hardship invariably follow. |
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Each bomblet is designed to erupt into a deadly fireball containing 300 blades of armor-penetrating shrapnel. |
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How did the telephone industry's first trade union disputes erupt? |
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Nobody knows the latent volcano of the soul of woman nor indeed of man which can erupt suddenly and determinably. |
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Their eyes open at four to five weeks and their milk teeth erupt about the same time. |
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Coronal mass ejections, in which the sun spews huge magnetic clouds, erupt several times a day. |
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I looked over towards the boggy ground I would have to tackle should I choose the bothy, then towards the blistering purple sunset just beginning to erupt along the horizon beyond the beach, and made my decision. |
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Events in Kyrgyzstan have shown that violence is likely to erupt at times of a power struggle: the end of one regime will create a vacuum that emerging powers, including criminal business interests, will seek to fill. |
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Arc volcanism has the greatest impact on humans, because many arc volcanoes lie above sea level and erupt violently. |
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These pin feathers began to erupt through their sheaths by day 22-24 at which time they began to appear through the semiplume covering of the chicks. |
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The picture has caused uproar in Holland, with the row over whether the tradition of Zwarte Piet ready to erupt again as the festive season approaches. |
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The teeth continue to erupt throughout life and are worn down by grazing. |
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A popper would glug, glug, glug as it pushed water out of its path on the retrieve and then erupt in a splash of teeth and gill rakers flaring like a bad monster movie. |
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The next morning, the Beatles awoke to a negative critical consensus in the US, but a day later their first US concert saw Beatlemania erupt at Washington Coliseum. |
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Volcanoes with rhyolitic magma commonly erupt explosively, and rhyolitic lava flows are typically of limited extent and have steep margins, because the magma is so viscous. |
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Such malocclusions resolve spontaneously if thumb-sucking stops before the permanent teeth erupt. |
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But who knows, years of being a doormat may finally erupt, much like Ndamukong Suh did last year when he stomped on another guy. |
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While there were no major labour strikes during his term, MacDonald acted swiftly to end those that did erupt. |
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Sometimes, a brawl would erupt, as a result, but, in general, public speakings were peaceful events and essential ingredients for election to office. |
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