The wader armed with a suitable fly rod is in excellent position to take advantage of this seasonal situation. |
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So next time you fly away for business or pleasure consider the advantages of renting a serviced apartment rather than booking into a hotel. |
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Santa asked him to leave out a carrot and some lettuce for the reindeers to give them energy to fly around the world. |
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I fly this route regularly and every time there is a huge, egalitarian, all-inclusive line to enter the gate lounge. |
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Tommy Steele used to fly in to buy Regency furniture from the Organ Brothers. |
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I stepped outside under a refulgent sky, and I saw a tiny yellow-brown bird fly over the house into an oak. |
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The helicopter which the service hopes to acquire has bigger fuel tanks and can fly for longer without refuelling. |
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The fly half had two attempts at levelling the scores with long range penalties from inside his own half which drifted wide. |
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Unlike most of their relative alcids, they do not fly out to sea to feed during the breeding season. |
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Then I saw the cop fly past me and realized the young man was fleeing from a crime worse than not wearing a helmet or running a red light. |
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The squad fly out on Friday, with less than 24 hours to settle in before meeting the world champions. |
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When the wind blows, the fly fisherman keeps on casting and reeling them in! |
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If you have a costly fly reel, I suggest you take it in your partner's handbag. |
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Purple Heron is a regular overshooting migrant to Britain and it is always worth checking any heron you see fly from a reed bed. |
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We had a great time stalking redfish in two feet of water with fly or spinning rod, both methods worked for us. |
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Red-tailed hawks, red-shouldered hawks, and American crows often fly over my yard and out over the canyon. |
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In spring especially they come alive with collared fly catchers, woodchat shrikes and huge flocks of all kinds of warblers. |
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Like a top, once its even spin turns into a reckless wobble, these things can be very, very hard to right once they fly out of control. |
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Lingfield's all-weather meeting was left to fly the flag after all three of yesterday's jump meetings were abandoned on Sunday. |
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For attaching your leader to fly line, my advice is use the simple nail knot. |
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I watched my big kit of pigeons fly over in a constantly changing formation. |
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They fly their Hawk 100 jets at hundreds of miles an hour as low as 300 ft, yet their safety record is exemplary. |
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I explained to him that I needed to turn around and fly a reciprocal course to re-establish communication with a soldier in distress. |
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Would you really get on an airplane and fly 30,000 feet in the air if you thought one little kill switch could take it down? |
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It wasn't enough to fly under the Red River Bridge in Louisiana wing tip to wing tip, but they did it upside-down. |
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I can only fly five hours maximum in aircraft with a decent seat pitch and only in an aisle seat, so I can move about. |
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An American airwoman becomes the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound. |
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So, when I was offered the opportunity to fly to Miramar for my airways navigation cross-country, I jumped at the chance. |
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When airborne, do pilots fly directly to their destination airport using GPS or do they still fly specific airways? |
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The weather was such that I could fly airways on a fairly direct route home. |
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Pilots regularly fly into the airport's airspace without telling air traffic control of their route. |
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Because there is no other way to pass on the experience of 2,000-hour fighter pilots to the new wingmen except to fly them together. |
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I am not suggesting in this article that young wingmen should never fly with 2,000-hour instructor pilots. |
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This type of accident happens when a pilot tries to fly out of ground effect without sufficient airspeed or power. |
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Hen harriers rarely fly in wet weather, but in dry conditions the birds spend much of the day on the wing. |
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I don't know how the future will take us, how we will fly on the wings and winds of fate and fortune. |
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The male scorpion fly possesses what is called a notal organ, a clamp behind its wings. |
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Almost 40 years ago Ed Lewis discovered a remarkable fly that differs from an ordinary fly by one extra pair of wings. |
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Bats rustled their wings above him, restless as the evening turned to night and the time to fly in search of food approached. |
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Losing fuel and hydraulic fluid, it would not be able to fly the 60 miles to the nearest air-sea rescue point. |
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It is capable of handling crosswinds and it's a relatively easy airplane to fly from a pilot's point of view. |
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The baby could fly through the windshield, hit the dashboard or be crushed by your body. |
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Bernie was a self-taught engineer who learned to fly in the 1920s, designed his own airfoils and did his own stress analysis on the airplane. |
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It can fly off a ramp or an airfield and land on a field the size of a soccer pitch. |
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In Gippsland the aircraft fly out of airfields of Latrobe Valley, West Sale and Bairnsdale to assist during fires. |
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In the most basic sense, aircrews want mission-ready aircraft to fly and modern, new weapons to play with. |
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The purpose of going to the airfield can only have been to fly in the aircraft. |
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In 1997 there was a change of government and they invited me to stay here permanently to fly air ambulances for them. |
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It would fly up in the air and you had to hit it again as far as you could. |
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Look at any fly rod and you will see that the screw winch fitting is at the very end of the rod. |
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Some of the wildfowl known as ruddy ducks tend to fly to Spain for the winter and then stay on for the spring mating season. |
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It was cheaper to rent a car, put gas in it and use it to transport two people than it would have been for one person to fly up there and back. |
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There are many waters in the UK where you can fly fish for pike with a realistic chance of catching a good fish. |
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In some management systems, agitating the liquid in pits has greatly reduced fly breeding. |
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My eyes suddenly fly open and my mouth widens and my back arches off the ground. |
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Perhaps I need to find a private moment of zen each day, a way to let the aggravation fly away from here. |
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As the fall of 2002 approached, researchers hoped the cranes would fly south unassisted, while a new flock of whoopers trailed ultralights. |
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When heron's leave the marsh and fly above the clouds they announce the coming of a storm. |
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These pieces were sharp and biting, making no apologies for being unedited and written on the fly while emotions are still raw. |
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I love the wonderful flat landscape with its wide skies where so many flocks of birds fly freely. |
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With thirteen minutes to go Murray let fly from twenty yards and rattled the crossbar. |
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Without a break from generators, a bailout wouldn't fly politically, since ratepayers would foot the bill. |
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If you're nostalgic for gin slings, parasols and fly whisks, the White House Rose Garden was the place to be last week. |
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Seated on a figured rug, supported by a wooden armrest, he holds a fly whisk in one hand to signify his authority. |
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Denver's rarefied air adds about 10 percent to the length of fly balls, making extra base hits too easy. |
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The University of Bath researchers are studying the complex aerodynamics needed to fly very small unmanned aircraft. |
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The primary means by which a fly wing creates aerodynamic force is dynamic stall. |
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He whines, whimpers and barks at anything that dares enter our garden, even if it's only birds doing a fly over. |
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However, Percy decided to fly off early on Saturday morning, and his whereabouts are currently unknown. |
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There were times when I would fly out to L.A. and see him, or whenever he'd be in Philadelphia, we'd hang out. |
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Other adventurers came to grief here in 1897 after a failed attempt to fly a balloon from the North Pole. |
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Concealed doors and traps tend to fly open unexpectedly like windows on an Advent calendar. |
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The pied wheatear perched on a telephone line and would fly down to the ground to catch something then go back to its perch. |
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A wheatear with white eyebrow and orange bib perched nearby, robin shaped, hardly larger, soon to fly to Africa. |
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He is permitted to fly in a jump seat near the captain, enabling him to supervise the cargo throughout the flight. |
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Performance mixes include the addition of fly ash and a water-reducing admixture. |
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The two pilots of the jumbo had escaped before the hijackers had reached the cockpit, making it impossible to fly the plane. |
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That I am a westerner is viscerally obvious to me every time I have to fly east. |
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Today's anglers fishing for rainbow trout carry several boxes of fly patterns, but only use a dozen flies. |
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Jumbo jets that fly passengers on long haul journeys across the world will not be coming to Southampton Airport. |
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The key to planning a holiday for a large party is to book well in advance to ensure you all fly together and stay in the same hotel. |
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Welsh flags fly proudly everywhere, and Welsh as an official language is commonly spoken. |
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The batter lifted a short fly ball to center field where the Orioles' Jackie Brandt made a shoe-string catch of the ball. |
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In the ninth, the devilish player lifted a long fly ball that fell behind him in center for a pinch-hit triple. |
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The least expensive days to fly are typically Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. |
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We definitely had a few nervous jitters brought on by the unknown of what or who was down there waiting for us to fly overhead. |
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Attached to a single center of gravity by a harness made of strong webbing, hang gliders fly with bodies vertical. |
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Joking apart, my husband has been moaning at me for weeks to fly to the UK where I would be safe. |
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It is a little jewel of a place and an interest in fly fishing or shooting is not necessary. |
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How often have you ever heard of someone who qualified to fly fighter jets never flying a plane again? |
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He insisted on training to fly a jumbo jet despite an obvious lack of skill even with small planes. |
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We were rewarded with the sound of calling Whooping Cranes piercing the quiet of the early morning, then a close fly over. |
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It is also a popular watering hole to gaggles of geese which fly in from time to time. |
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After the plane arrives, we fly over the watery green plain, skimming above rivers of burnished silver and snowy flocks of tundra swan. |
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The site is heavily contaminated and a 24-hour watch is required to prevent fly tipping. |
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I also caught trevally on the fly and a bunch of other species including queenfish and others which I can't name. |
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The queen and half of the bees fly off to begin a new hive, and the remaining bees raise a new queen and continue reproducing. |
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We believe effective fly control will require the utilization of parasitic wasp species native to Nebraska. |
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Female wasps parasitize fruit flies by inserting their eggs into fruit fly eggs. |
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They will fly to Las Vegas on July 8, pick up a rented vehicle and drive to Death Valley for a few days of acclimatization. |
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In December the air group was only able to fly on 17 days but managed 630 sorties without accident. |
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Shortly after, I began learning to fly with the sole goal of flying vintage warplanes. |
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As the ship accelerated, chunks of the back end began to fly off and disintegrate. |
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First he let fly from 25 metres out, his ambitious drive banging off the outside of the upright. |
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When I fly to Washington for our meetings, the most dangerous part of my journey is my drive to the Grand Rapids airport. |
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The warble fly lays eggs on cattle in the Spring and Summer, and the larvae enter the animal to migrate through it. |
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When you walk this route as I do, you see what you miss when you fly past in a car. |
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Squadron aircraft were the first bombers engaged in World War II and the last to fly missions in support of that war. |
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Meaning that, you've got to fly business or be prepared to take a chance on the wait list. |
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Does anyone remember that fly on the wall documentary on channel 4 where some teenage kids looked after real children? |
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This spoof, fly on the wall, documentary is funny, scary, provocative, disturbing and has a real point to make. |
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They will report back in six months with their recommendations, but, oh, to be a fly on the wall as this little lot get around the table. |
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Most contemporary memoirs leave you feeling cheap, like you've been a fly on the wall at a particularly horrific therapy session. |
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It is very disconcerting to be a fly on the wall as a band figures out what musical style best suits them. |
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Should we be a fly on the wall, monitoring the conversations back and forth? |
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He reveals details of boardroom machinations and backstairs skirmishes which only a fly on the wall could have witnessed. |
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Why all neoprene chest high waders don't have a fly zip I will never understand. |
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Thus it attracted a wave of cowboy operators to fly passengers and cargo between cities. |
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On the next pitch, Dent lifted a high fly ball toward left field. |
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Another time, I was shooting a locomotive and it blew up, and some of the stuff got in my air scoop, but I managed to fly it back. |
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It was on this assurance that the FAA certified that the 787 was safe to fly again. |
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The autopilot would be used throughout a normal flight because the 777, like all large airliners, is difficult to fly manually. |
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There were a lot of folks begging us to confront the Assad regime or at least create a no fly zone and stop the barrel bombs. |
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They even tried to fly the patient out of Belize, but she is still here on the ship. |
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Andrew still plans to fly to Davos in Switzerland for the World Economic Forum on January 21, representing the British government. |
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I miss the hustle and bustle of New York when I fly in to speak or for meetings. |
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In the end, conduct that might not fly in butte could draw a fugghedaboudit in Brooklyn. |
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He stood, buttoned the fly on his camouflage uniform and tightened his black riggers belt. |
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I would have loved to be a fly on the wall in last week's Cabinet meeting. |
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I'd have loved to have been a fly on the wall for that conversation. |
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The cheapest countries to fly to, Seaney says, will be Germany, Ireland, and Spain. |
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When I was trying to wangle invitations to Washington to talk about this stuff, they would get private investors to hop on a plane and fly to New Haven to see it. |
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His research began by linking outbreaks of the disease with the compulsory application of organophosphate pesticides, used to prevent warble fly infestation in cattle. |
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Navy ships not underway fly the union jack on the jackstaff. The union jack is also flown from a yardarm to denote that a general court-martial is in session. |
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She pointed out damselfly larva, water beetles, tadpoles, backswimmers, dragon fly larva and snails as they circled around in our tiny sample of the marsh. |
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Pilots use two keyboards and a joystick to fly the craft, and they have to learn the key strokes similar to the old DOS commands of first generation computers. |
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Nasa has said that it will not fly another shuttle until it has pinpointed why solid foam cladding juddered off the external fuel tank during lift-off last month. |
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If you fly into wind you will get much less mileage to the litre. |
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Air traffic controllers and pilots together take great care not to fly in conditions that can jeopardize an airplane. |
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A few years ago, I was fishing in a remote part of Maine, and after hours of unfruitful casting with a local streamer pattern, I tied on a wet fly popular in California. |
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One of the best wet fly or nymph pattern I have used for the Arctic grayling is the Teal blue and silver, a well known sea trout fly, I cannot understand why this should be. |
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Over the week to May 12 th, 43 anglers fishing in the area between Greenfields and Cornamona landed 144 trout for 205 lb in 55 angling days, mostly all to wet fly and dapping. |
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With every corner she turned she had to fly past another guard, and with every door she opened another alarm would sound and scare her out of her wits. |
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It was to be regretted, he would admit if questioned, that the table flipped sideways, causing all those plates and their children to fly every whichaway. |
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He had no time to spare and couldn't afford to fly by the target. |
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To fly the white flag and to surrender was not an option for us. |
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To hear Ruckus soliloquize is to be a fly on the wall in a country club locker room. |
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Forest wagtails, fly catchers, black crested buzzard, open billed storks and egrets are some of the migratory birds one can sight at the Guindy National Park during winter. |
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Hamish and his wife, Lesley, were expert fly fishers and keen gardeners. |
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Richard, my husband, and I fly out to Melbourne on Tuesday evening in readiness for New Zealand v South Africa, and then on to Brisbane for the England v Wales game. |
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Next week, Brown will fly to Dallas and crisscross the country, stopping in California and Florida. |
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I'll fly you and your wife first class to New Orleans for a symposium. |
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The aircrews went to the Baltimore plant to fly the planes back. |
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Whenever I fly anywhere I always like to sit in a window seat if I can. |
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The study would also put the Yorkshire-born pioneer airwoman, the first woman to fly alone to Australia from England, in the unlikely class of more subdued people. |
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She had poohed in the living-room the first night, she had destroyed a couple of plastic bowls, and she had made their kitten fly high in the air. |
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The gun recoiled, and I saw my shot fly forward and hit him in the chest. |
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Although wild turkey gobblers can fly well, they prefer not to. |
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By staying out in the cold, the worker slows down the parasite's metabolism, often so much that the bee dies a natural death before the fly larva can mature. |
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This was all brought home to me when I saw the speed at which the Tuna pulled the fly line off the reels and the heat that was generated by the friction. |
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She can leave, and fly down to a safe opening at the base of this cliff. |
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However, for alcids and diving-petrels that also fly in air, forelimb joint mobility is much lower than in penguins, probably due to constraints of aerial flight. |
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They begin a round of verbal sparring about their past together, Linklater's camera constantly swivelling to catch all the insults as they fly across the room. |
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And what happens when the industry is flooded with cheap fly by night Cloning Clinics producing substandard clones, like Xeroxes without any toner? |
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The failure to fly a flag at half mast was widely interpreted as an expression of disrespect. |
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The tourists took matters a step further and agreed to delay their departure to Zimbabwe provided a charter plane could be laid on for them to fly out on Monday night. |
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Approximately forty thousand of these birds fly from the continent of Australia, Asia, and Africa. |
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A protein in the molecular structure of the fruit fly was named Barentsz, in honour of the explorer. |
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These airlines fly direct routes to Brisbane, the Gold Coast, Melbourne and Sydney. |
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Damian also researched aviation and undertook a failed experiment to fly from the battlements of Stirling Castle. |
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Prior to 2002, the Scottish Government followed the UK Government's flag days and would only fly the Union Flag on Saint Andrew's Day. |
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Alarmed, Laura sought help from her friend, Frances Donaldson, whose husband agreed to fly out to Ceylon and bring Waugh home. |
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A stricken ship within 3 miles of the shore had to fly at the main mast a yellow and black flag borne quarterly from sunrise to sunset. |
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The computer-guided aircraft would then fly itself back to its base under the power of auxiliary jet engines. |
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Navy pilot to fly a jet, and he defined the operation requirements for carrier-based, jet-propelled aircraft. |
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He sat cross-legged on a damask pillow and scrutinized the pale puckered nates with the air of an epicure examining a fly in his vichyssoise. |
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In 1986, government policy during state visits to London was to fly the crosses of George, Andrew and Patrick and the Welsh Dragon. |
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The Scottish Government has ruled that the Saltire should, where possible, fly on all its buildings every day from 8am until sunset. |
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It was called the Trout Memo and compared the deception of an enemy in wartime to fly fishing. |
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However, the Union Flag continues to fly on many churches in Northern Ireland. |
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You may fly to the ends of the world and find no God but the Author of Salvation. |
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An aviation breakthrough, it was the first commercially successful pressurized airliner, allowing it to fly higher than other airliners. |
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On March 24, 2010, flutter and ground effects testing was completed, clearing the aircraft to fly its entire flight envelope. |
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The First Minister is one of the few individuals in Scotland officially permitted to fly the Royal Banner of Scotland. |
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Both France and Spain refused to allow US aircraft to fly over their territory for the raid. |
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On a sighting, other patrols at lower altitude would fly up to join the battle. |
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The BAE Mantis is another UCAV under development, with an autonomous capability, allowing it to fly itself through an entire mission. |
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Put together the stealth of fly fishing with that of kayaking, and you have a great way to sneak up on fish. |
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Private air charter services operated by Island Birds Air Charter fly directly to all three islands from any major airport in the Caribbean. |
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Danish mass media date back to the 1540s, when handwritten fly sheets reported on the news. |
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While consultation on new guidelines is under way, the decision to fly the flag may be made by each government department. |
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A book Many civil vessels continue to fly the white bordered Union Flag without official opposition, making it the de facto Civil Jack. |
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Several airlines began enacting flexible rebooking policies Thursday for passengers scheduled to fly into the storm's path. |
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These are used in cases where it is illegal to fly the Union Flag, such as at sea from a ship other than a British warship. |
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As a solo pilot, this was a difficult thing to do in a moving aircraft, as the pilot also needed to fly the aircraft at the same time. |
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He had spent the previous year learning to fly and had completed nearly 250 hours by the time he left America. |
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Strictly speaking, a crossette star should split into 4 pieces which fly off symmetrically, making a cross. |
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Workmen should never use open flame near thatch, and nothing should be burnt that could fly up the chimney and ignite the surface of the thatch. |
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In 820 the Bishop of Lyon and others repudiated the belief that witches could make bad weather, fly in the night, and change their shape. |
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The prevailing wind direction is westerly, so normally aircraft fly from northeast to southwest. |
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If the design goal is achieved, it should be ready to fly again within two days. |
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In 2014, due to defense budget restrictions, there were only 12 pilots to fly the 15 Eurofighters in Austria's service. |
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Before long we'll start to see some arrivals too, such as the flocks of redwings that fly south from Scandinavia and Iceland. |
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The sulfite cake is usually blended with fly ash to produce a landfillable byproduct of low permeability. |
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Phlebotomine sandflies are vectors of some diseases including leishmaniasis, bartonellosis and sand fly fever to human. |
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Nevertheless, the Me 262 could fly far faster than allied planes and had very effective firepower. |
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The diversion of heavier bombers to the Balkans meant that the crews and units left behind were asked to fly two or three sorties per night. |
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The German bombers would attach themselves to either beam and fly along it until they started to pick up the signal from the other beam. |
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The cult comedy's characters Will, Simon and Neil fly to Australia to visit layabout Jay on his gap year. |
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Operating over home territory, British aircrew could fly again if they survived being shot down. |
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Troops, defenseless and exposed to all the weapons of the enemy, are more disposed to fly than fight. |
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Midnight lake birds fly soap white in the city's freeway billboard klieg light showers. |
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It's so he can fly off in a swirl of self-justification to Um-beseir and his huge bed and his Russian hotsy-totsies. |
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On 13 August 1909, his wife would be the first woman in the UK to fly in a plane, also at Farnborough. |
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Flagpoles on many tors in and around the ranges fly red flags when firing is taking place. |
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The expelled nations take heart, and when they fly from one country invade another. |
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Ballooners will fly over the heart of the Julian Alps with starts in beatiful valleys of the Alps. |
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This was so not gonna fly with Raquel, a card-carrying member of the grudgeholder's guild. |
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The black rooks will fly away, my son, and you'll come back as brown as a berry, and as merry as a grig. |
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No more then if you should lay a fly vpon a smooth Cartwheele, or a pinnes head vpon a greate globe. |
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A guy came to my door selling some weird coupon subscription. I told him to go fly a kite. |
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Mamoni's father was suggesting that both houses should fly an Assamese gamosa like a flag and Moni's father wouldn't hear of it. |
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In addition, flights will also fly to Labuan Bajo, a home to Indonesia s Komodo dragons. |
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What she realized, in short, is she could go with her funk and quirk, be who she was and fly the freak flag high. |
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The fly personae in these films influenced a wave of black contemporary youth who resurrected flyness and its continuum in hip-hop culture. |
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Once the chick has hatched, the parents take turns foraging for their young and sometimes fly long distances before finding prey. |
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Since chicks do not have the ability to fly nests close to sea provide easy access when leaving the colony. |
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At noon we had lunched off fly biscuits and apricots by the side of a swampy creek. |
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A solar-powered unmanned aerial system could fly long, lonely missions that conventional aircraft would not be capable of. |
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To possession here any fly erighting, Then, without more words by mouth or enditing. |
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Species complexes occur in insects such as Heliconius butterflies, vertebrates such as Hypsiboas treefrogs, and fungi such as the fly agaric. |
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Seabirds fly low over water but gain altitude when crossing land, and the reverse pattern is seen in landbirds. |
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The more active ash minerals become concentrated in the fly ash precisely because they do not burn well. |
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In 1910 Prince Heinrich had learned to fly and supported the cause of naval aviation. |
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Insects drift along with the prevailing wind, while birds are able to fly more independently of it. |
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On another occasion, the naval hospital at Halifax requested some flags to fly for the Queen's birthday. |
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Galland decided that the aircraft should fly high and low cover, the low groups flying under British coastal radar. |
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Unlike migratory birds which fly during the day and feed during the night, nocturnal bats have a conflict between traveling and eating. |
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Microbats rarely fly in rain, it interferes with their echolocation, and they are unable to locate their food. |
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They fly back to their roosts to eat the fruit, sucking out the juice and spitting the seeds and pulp out onto the ground. |
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They swim well and fly adequately but are almost helpless on land, because their legs are placed towards the rear of the body. |
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They soon develop feathers and can fly shortly before they are two weeks old. |
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Most owls share an innate ability to fly almost silently and also more slowly in comparison to other birds of prey. |
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The mountains are dry and brown and so remote that not even helicopters fly overhead, spraying their poison over papaverous hillsides. |
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Cruise ships and pleasure craft regularly sail through the region, and commercial and private aircraft routinely fly over it. |
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Small pieces of fly ash may be somewhat thick, and too brief an exposure to high temperature may only degrade dioxin on the surface of the ash. |
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Incineration produces fly ash and bottom ash just as is the case when coal is combusted. |
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These clearances contain details of the route that the aircraft is expected to fly after departure. |
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This allows the helicopter to take off and land vertically, to hover, and to fly forward, backward, and laterally. |
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The resulting aircraft would be large enough to carry sufficient fuel to fly long distances and could berth alongside ships to take on more fuel. |
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This fly took its name from the ingenious Lady Glanvil, whose memory had like to have suffered for her curiosity. |
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The impact of the Industrial Revolution was first felt in the manufacture of fly lines. |
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The introduction of new woods to the manufacture of fly rods made it possible to cast flies into the wind on silk lines, instead of horse hair. |
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Darts are missile weapons, designed to fly such that a sharp, often weighted point will strike first. |
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For example, a delicate dry fly hook is made of thin wire with a tapered eye because weight is the overriding factor. |
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These different shapes contribute in some cases to better hook penetration, fly imitations or bait holding ability. |
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Double hooks are used on some artificial lures and are a traditional fly hook for Atlantic Salmon flies, but are otherwise fairly uncommon. |
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The lure may require a specialised presentation to impart an enticing action as, for example, in fly fishing. |
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Although most anglers keep their catch for consumption, catch and release fishing is increasingly practised, especially by fly anglers. |
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Also the ostrich is a ground bird and cannot fly to find water sources, which poses a further challenge. |
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The Closer Economic Relations agreement allows Australian air carriers to fly domestically and internationally from New Zealand and vice versa. |
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The cockpit offered a full array of instruments which the pilot used to fly the simulated aeroplane. |
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Much of this water is privately owned, with catch and release and fly fishing only. |
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Nose bots are fly larvae that inhabit a sheep's sinuses, causing breathing difficulties and discomfort. |
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However, this design criterion was in conflict with the ease of coining new compound or derived words on the fly while speaking. |
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From around 1885, the Viceroy of India was allowed to fly a Union Flag augmented in the centre with the 'Star of India' surmounted by a Crown. |
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Finally, by actual trial, I have found that I can catch more rainbow by using one fly than with a two or three-fly cast. |
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At these celebrations doves are released to symbolise peace and fighter jets fly over and the national anthem is sung. |
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I was watching the little birdies fly in front of my eyes, so it took me a second to re-combobulate myself. |
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The slowly turning doffer removes the fibres from the swift and carries them to the fly comb where they are stripped from the doffer. |
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Some of the materials used are clay, shale, sand, iron ore, bauxite, fly ash, and slag. |
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Pozzolans include powdered brick, heat treated clay, silica fume, fly ash, and volcanic materials. |
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Hampshire and Company, the chemists, moved into the premises to make fly papers and cough medicines. |
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These violent explosions produce solid chunks of material that can then fly from the volcano. |
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Escaping prey in terrestrial pitchers have to climb or fly out of a trap, and both of these can be prevented by wax, gravity and narrow tubes. |
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The Roman writer Pliny the Elder reported that parent ospreys made their young fly up to the sun as a test, and dispatched any that failed. |
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Danish news media first appeared in the 1540s, when handwritten fly sheets reported on the news. |
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The eggs are incubated for 19 to 25 days, the chicks can fly after 12 to 13 days after hatching and are fully grown after 30 to 35 days. |
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These cylindrical rods fly through the air at incredible speeds and can only be picked up by high-speed cameras. |
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They were not sleakit and did not knife ye, that was one thing. They were not fly men cheaters. |
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The fly is an intruder, and a common smell-feast, that sponges upon other people's trenchers. |
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Ingestion of Spanish fly causes burning in the throat and sloughing of the upper gastrointestinal tract. |
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The aim was to fly down, run the half, do a quick tiki tour of the company's salmon fishery and then fly home. |
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Mind you, if they fly in downstairs, they are quite happy to settle for unblue mangoes. |
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The illustrious Bruce and others imagine, that in the zimb of Abyssinia they recognize the fly plague which afflicted the Egyptians. |
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You mean you can't fly after you've had a few beers? You can drive, can't cha? |
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A Fruit fly B Spider mite C Water flea D Bloodworm All puzzles in this supplement are supplied by Sirius Media Services. |
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He always had a keen interest in aircraft and learned to fly in his early 20s at Newcastle Aeroclub on small Piper Cherokees. |
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He didn't fly in on Nike's private jet, which landed in Hawthorne before heading to Phoenix as part of the Whistle Stop Tour. |
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Landscaping and Whitefly treatment with the included equipment to do white fly treatments and truck. |
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The wider powers could be used for dog fouling and control of dogs as well as litter, fly posters and flyers, skips and A-frames. |
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The special effects are excellent, especially the whomping willow, which attacks Harry and Ron when they fly a magic car into it. |
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Apparently up to 30,000 Barnacle Geese are expected to fly in from Svalbard, with Whooper Swans whizzing in from Iceland. |
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Apparently up to 30,000 barnacle geese are expected to fly in from Svalbard in Norway, with whooper swans whizzing in from Iceland. |
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The Civil Aviation Authority has allowed the Dakota to fly over Lime Street at aheight of just 1,000 ft. |
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This might be a bad joke for you and to the people able to fly back to Miami but this is not a joke at all to me. |
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You are such a male chauvinist oink, oink. You think that you are the only one who can drive a car or fly an airplane. |
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The flight launched from Page, Arizona, one of the locations from where World View plans to fly Voyagers to the edge of space. |
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Michael Tonge, 28, and Lee Yarrow, 30, were forced to fly to Greece to face justice for an incident seven years ago. |
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Edwards disappeared on 1 February 1995, on the day when he and James Dean Bradfield were due to fly to the US on a promotional tour. |
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