The people who inhabit this neighbourhood appear strikingly similar to one another. |
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This can be very important since some fish will inhabit silty area in preference to hard bottoms. |
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During migration and winter, they inhabit beaches, mudflats, shallow estuaries, and inlets. |
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Three inhabit Indo-Pacific waters, and one populates the eastern shore of North America, from the Yucatan peninsula to northern Maine. |
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If both types inhabit the same place in the field, they usually interbreed. |
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It is only through ongoing debate and contestation that any nation that I want to inhabit will be produced. |
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He had found a persona that he could comfortably inhabit and that would attract customers here and abroad. |
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Green-rumped Parrotlets are small psittacines that inhabit forest edge, savanna, and pastures in northeastern South America. |
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These characters could inhabit an early Waugh but not a later one, where dipsomania is not a joke but a debilitating disease that wrecks lives. |
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As their name suggests, they inhabit shallow coastal waters and inflict damage on unwarily placed feet. |
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The story goes that the opia once lived in the mountains of Costa Rica but began to inhabit the islands offshore as well. |
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Cichlids inhabit fresh waters, and many species are endemic to isolated lake environments. |
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Great Blue Herons inhabit sheltered, shallow bays and inlets, sloughs, marshes, wet meadows, shores of lakes, and rivers. |
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They inhabit all tropical and warm temperate seas, from the surface to moderately deep levels. |
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This film delivers blockbuster action, but its blistering pace leaves the story as soulless as the monsters that inhabit it. |
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Even the bleeding-heart liberals that inhabit the SoHo area are forced to admit that this has been his finest hour. |
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His characters appear to inhabit a parallel universe, a twilight world, a way-station between past and present. |
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Knots and turnstones are both medium-sized waders that inhabit intertidal coastal areas outside the breeding season. |
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The works of these authors inhabit the domains of neo-realism, modernism, postmodernism and magical realism. |
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They inhabit some idiosyncratic space between harmony and modality, neither more one than the other. |
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Due to the shortness of our visit, we wanted to revisit the site to try and find more of the birds that inhabit that particular area. |
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The deep-sea species inhabit the ocean shelf around 100 miles off the north-west coast of Scotland. |
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It's not long before we hear the bellbirds that inhabit this end of the gardens. |
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During the breeding season, Prairie Falcons inhabit dry, open areas with cliffs and bluffs for nesting. |
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Do mysterious and presumably endangered manlike creatures inhabit swamplands of the southern United States? |
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Koalas inhabit eucalyptus woodlands where they feed on eucalyptus leaves, stems, flowers, and bark. |
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It appears unlikely at this stage and it is difficult to imagine him wanting to inhabit the rather obsessive world that managers must live in. |
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Their right-handed partners would inhabit a world existing alongside ours, but interacting only gravitationally. |
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But how do the birds, insects and animals that inhabit our countryside perceive their world? |
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Anhingas inhabit quiet bodies of freshwater and, while found statewide, are much more numerous in central and south Florida. |
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For, in the final analysis, our most basic common link is that we all inhabit this small planet. |
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Speakers of Yupik inhabit a region consisting of southwestern Alaska and Siberia. |
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They inhabit every terrestrial ecosystem on earth, from rainforest canopies to alpine mountains, from lakes and rivers to hot dry deserts. |
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Marsupials live underground, on land, in trees, and in water, and inhabit rainforests, deserts, and temperate regions. |
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They inhabit swift streams, the backwaters of large rivers, brackish lagoons, and potholes. |
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While birds such as the korhaans and bustards inhabit the open grassland, other species reside in the adjacent woodlands. |
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Anatids inhabit aquatic habitats such as lakes, ponds, streams, rivers and marshes. |
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Balance and harmony are two primary assumptions of the Keres people who inhabit the Laguna and Acoma Pueblos of New Mexico. |
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We inhabit an expanding universe of news and journalism, flowing faster and more freely than ever before. |
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White-tailed eagles, which inhabit the same territory, may struggle for hours merely to pry an opening around a fish's gills or front fin. |
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During migration and winter, they inhabit rocky coasts, reefs, jetties, and breakwaters. |
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His characters inhabit a society that is not quite ours, but which is familiar all the same. |
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A major distinction in the social organization of ant societies is the number of queens that inhabit a colony. |
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In Heidegger's Being and Time, Biro reminds the reader, beings usually inhabit the world inauthentically. |
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In New York City, where perhaps 750,000 people inhabit food deserts, officials are just beginning to find ways to help. |
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Physically we may inhabit the present, but in our minds the past and the future are comfortably cohabiting with it. |
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Does the creator of these twisted tales inhabit dank, cobwebby rooms with dusty velvet curtains and candles everywhere? |
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Cowbirds inhabit most parts of North America, and they have been reported to parasitize many different species in almost any type of habitat. |
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Spotted and spinner dolphins inhabit tropical seas around the world along with yellowfin tuna. |
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Nocturnal animals like panthers, owls, porcupines, snakes, lizards, night czars, deer, etc., inhabit the region. |
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I don't rightly know how these panthers and cheetahs and tigers came to inhabit the park in the first place. |
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They inhabit posts in front of road signs pointing to directionless highways. |
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Needless to say, when that goal becomes personal salvation, the people who inhabit this earthly, tainted, and mortal world become dispensable. |
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Tomato clownfish are known to inhabit lagoon reefs, particularly with embayments. |
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The remaining birds, whether on the breeding or wintering grounds, mostly inhabit public or undeveloped beaches. |
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With the devil given the chance to inhabit a body and repent, the mood is strictly Clerkenwell cabaret. |
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The Plains leopard frog, western green toad and Mexican hog-nosed snakes inhabit the area. |
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Seventy-two herptile species inhabit the state, 17 of which are listed as Endangered or Threatened. |
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I've seen the way pigs are kept in Sweden and believe me, they inhabit the porcine equivalent of luxury hotels of the world. |
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It is considered holy by the Buddhists who inhabit the town and is decorated with prayer flags and a small temple. |
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Suicidal sheep and comic book heroes inhabit this beguiling collection of far-fetched fables. |
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Several species of woodpeckers and owls also inhabit the gallery forests during the entire year. |
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Mammals inhabit diverse habitats, radiation of specialized groups such as bats, whales, cursorial mammals, hominoids. |
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They inhabit salt marshes near the sea, and are able to seal the shell with the operculum and so survive dry periods buried in mud. |
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The focus here is not the city hard-shell shock of such as of Larry Clark's Kids, who inhabit the same realm. |
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The Kurds in the north, the Sunni Arabs north and west of Baghdad, and the Shiite Arabs of the south and center inhabit vast swaths of territory. |
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For those unfamiliar with the design of the cursed building I inhabit, I live in the converted attic. |
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What world does the CBC inhabit where happenstance or tragic accident are always already made sense of through the lens of political calculation? |
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Males will mate with females that inhabit their territory or seek out estrus females if no territory is established. |
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He has his cast so involved in the film and in their roles that they seem to inhabit the parts they play. |
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The stalked forms inhabit the deep oceans, while stalkless forms are commonly found in shallower depths. |
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Growing to about 12 feet, bull sharks inhabit the east coasts of the Americas and are known to swim many miles up rivers. |
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Cheilanthes is a genus of small, evergreen, lithophytic, perennial ferns that inhabit warm, dry and rocky regions. |
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We do not inhabit a fixed or even firm milieu, the poem suggests, while enacting polyvalence and parataxis. |
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With the advent of bridewells, convicts begin to inhabit separate punitive institutions for the first time. |
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Although bearded vultures were nearly eliminated from Europe and northern Africa, they continued to inhabit their range in Asia in good numbers. |
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We will miss her wonderful worlds and the marvelous characters she created to inhabit them. |
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Wild tigers mainly inhabit Asia, whereas the lion's current natural habitat is almost entirely in Africa. |
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However, many species inhabit timbered country, with abundant food and regular rainfall. |
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Pine voles inhabit timbered areas, preferring a subterranean life in the soil. |
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The dicyemid mesozoans are obligate parasites that inhabit the cephalopod renal appendage. |
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You may catch a glimpse of deer, beech martens, red squirrels or even wild boar which inhabit the surrounding area. |
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Fungal endophytes are microfungi that inhabit living plants, but which are cryptic and asymptomatic in their hosts. |
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Many plant species accumulating betaine inhabit saline and arid areas and accumulate the compound in response to drought and salinity. |
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Eleven species of bichirs inhabit shallow floodwater areas in tropical Africa rivers, where they feed on worms, insect larvae, and small insects. |
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The cameras also follow the antics of spectacled bear cubs the only bears to inhabit South America. |
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The Motu inhabit a region which now includes the capital city, Port Moresby, and the Hula live about 110 kilometres to the east. |
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This group includes the blue whale, the largest animal ever to inhabit the planet. |
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There wasn't nearly as much frippery on Gideon's dress, she could inhabit that dress. |
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Ancestors and parents inhabit Paul's anecdotal poems, which also pay close attention to local creatures, mythic and otherwise. |
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While God reigns in heaven, human beings inhabit an inferior and comparatively worthless vale of tears. |
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The Dinka inhabit a vast region in the south of the Sudan that forms a seasonal swampland when the Nile River floods. |
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These ghosts are a breed apart from the usual homeless types who inhabit such dwellings. |
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He heard the same flatness and lack of detail in the 3D audio world he loved to inhabit. |
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Big conger inhabit a number of environments, including deep water rock marks, harbours, jetties, piers, breakwaters and the odd sandy beach! |
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However, there are also a number of shameless careerists who inhabit New Labour, often former Tories. |
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Yellowing paper files line the carport, more inhabit boxes on the floor, documents fill his rumpty office out back. |
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Glover, who has a penchant for playing strange individuals, uses this opportunity not to inhabit a genuine character, but to create a caricature. |
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Well, there is another fish that inhabit many of the still waters which are open for fishing. |
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These songs inhabit a brutal world of sin, stoical suffering, death and redemption. |
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But other good beetles, like the soldier beetle and the common ground beetle, inhabit local yards. |
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Bald eagles, snowy egrets, great blue herons, otters, muskrat, and deer inhabit the banks of the Pocomoke River. |
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These birds inhabit coastal rainforests and wooded areas where they can easily fly, hop or climb from tree to tree. |
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They inhabit tundra, alpine meadows, coastal plains near salmon runs, and rivers and valleys. |
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It is also highly unusual to discover these Paleozoic relics associated with decapods as they normally inhabit different environments. |
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Luna appeared in Nootka Sound just days after Maquinna's father expressed a deathbed wish for his spirit to return to inhabit a killer whale. |
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If ever you need proof that the equity markets inhabit a parallel universe then look at the way they treat technology. |
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About 100,000 inhabit northern circumpolar waters in at least 29 separate stocks, with the largest concentration in Canada's Hudson Bay. |
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For example, the sand field cricket and the southeastern field cricket look nearly identical and inhabit the same geographical areas. |
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The real perversity is the fact that democratically elected leaders now inhabit a different space from those who elected them. |
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What they do manage is to build and inhabit an intimate space which is quite enthralling. |
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It's as if, when God was making the animals that inhabit the Earth, he dumped here anything he got a bit wrong. |
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At the Auberge Basque, Cédric and his 6 team members inhabit perfectly their roles as innkeeper-cooks. |
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These recommendations are a balance between the ideal situation and the real world that we inhabit. |
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Canada has jurisdiction over the actual bottom of the ocean and the critters that inhabit the bottom of the ocean, the crustaceans. |
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One hundred and thirty at risk northern bottlenose whale inhabit the deepest part of the Gully year round. |
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An evil spirit is making ready to inhabit the boy's body, and I am not powerful enough to stop it. |
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Hundreds, even thousands, inhabit each nest, which typically hangs from a high place. |
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Or the dualistic nature of the will, Dionysian, antipode of Apollonian, which inhabit the music as well as the human spirit? |
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The tribal groups are animistic, constantly making offerings to the myriad spirits believed to inhabit the village, houses, trees, paths, mountains etc. |
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Others inhabit their suburban milieu with occasional exasperation, recognising the imaginative energy it incites. |
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They inhabit the highest peaks and share rocky slopes and high meadows with mountain sheep, mountain goats, and hoary marmots. |
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The diamondback terrapins inhabit salt marshes and coastal waters of North America from New England to the Gulf of Mexico. |
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It is common for physids that inhabit wave-swept areas to become more globose so they are better able to adhere to the rock surface. |
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English sole are flatfish that inhabit the Pacific Ocean, from the Aleutian Islands down to Baja California, Mexico. |
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The river provided water to drink for all the inhabit ants and domestic animals. |
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In you it has come to pass, the men and women who inhabit this world in this time. |
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Five fun-loving restless spirits who died at the camp 20 years earlier also inhabit the camp, held there by Aunt Erin. |
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The electromagnetic spectrum is not visible to the human eye and yet we inhabit a world that is surfeit with spectrum. |
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It's home to numerous birds and wildfowl as well as fish, which inhabit it throughout the year. |
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Samantha Cameron may reluctantly inhabit the Westminster bubble in a literal sense, but intellectually she is very far removed from it. |
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Perhaps the frighteningly vivid imagination that he can crawl into and inhabit so completely for such long periods originates here. |
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The contempt with which our pleadings have met leads me to think that most of the rest of you must inhabit a different planet. |
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I also want to remind you that we inhabit a world that has become very small. |
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This area is also of special importance for the protection of common seals, which mainly inhabit the southern tip of the tidal plains. |
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More and more today, vulnerable individuals or groups from different cultures inhabit the same territory. |
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So we don't look at the lake per se, but the fish that inhabit that lake use the rivers in certain parts of their life cycle. |
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The project itself always builds on a detailed description of communities by the youth who inhabit them. |
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It is also the reason we have chosen to inhabit this small piece of planet earth. |
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Children inhabit the same world of achievements and failures as the adults who run it. |
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After it was proved that the bird began to inhabit in Korea, it has been formally registered as an inhabitant in the country. |
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These factors impose a number of constraints on the plants and animals that inhabit the St. Lawrence. |
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Animals usually inhabit the island until the first snowmobile is capable of traversing the channel between it and English Point. |
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He will also inhabit mainly the place where the Shuar before dying had vision. |
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It is believed that the Twa were the first people to inhabit the area. |
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In addition, most vascular plants could not grow without the symbiotic fungi, or mycorrhizae, that inhabit their roots and supply essential nutrients. |
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So much of the world we inhabit is virtual already, hallucinatory already. |
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Large artiodactyls such as the caribou inhabit subarctic forests. |
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But the friendships they are concerned with are not those that develop among humans, but rather those of the chacma baboons that inhabit southern Africa's Zambezi region. |
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Rare species of bird inhabit the higher branches of the trees. |
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In recent habitats, Lyreidus does not inhabit shallow, inshore environments but, instead, is found in outer shelf and slope environments, generally on soft substrata. |
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This family of fish almost all inhabit tropical or subtropical waters. |
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This secularizing process is a complex one, for many Igbo masquerades partake, in some degree, of the extant energies of the ancestors or spirits that inhabit the world. |
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Common Planigales inhabit rainforest, eucalypt forest, heathland, marshland, grassland and rocky areas where there is surface cover, and usually close to water. |
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The Nuristanis, who speak Western Dardic, inhabit an area of some 5,000 square miles in Laghman, Nangarhar, and Konar provinces, north and east of Kabul. |
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Actors can inhabit the person through the sheer force of their assimilation. |
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Most arrestingly, he also reveals the grace that can miraculously inhabit affliction. |
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This symposium marks a pioneering effort to bring together biologists engaged in research on organisms that move through and inhabit the aerosphere. |
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There are more than 5200 species of rhodophytes, and although some rhodophytes do inhabit fresh water, red algae are most common in tropical marine environments. |
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In common with Hindus, Buddhists believe in reincarnation and that the soul of the human being may have inhabited, or may inhabit in the future, an animal. |
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Members of the genus Cryptocercus are subsocial, xylophagous cockroaches that inhabit damp, decaying logs of temperate forests in the Palearctic and Nearctic. |
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A circumtropical family of eight species, including two in the New World, jacanas inhabit freshwater swamps, lakes, lagoons and seasonally flooded pastures. |
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There is relatively little information on trophic relationships among nearshore Antarctic peninsula organisms that inhabit the most productive areas in the Antarctic. |
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I'm fascinated by the period of early romanticism, when the composers of the time continued to inhabit some classical conventions but work outwards from within those. |
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Now they are more likely to inhabit the political and media arenas. |
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The living dead emerge from a lake to inhabit a deserted house. |
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They inhabit dense forests, open sagebrush country, and alpine parklands. |
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Though wild Bactrian camels and bears tend to inhabit its more inaccessible areas, the Gobi has enough diversity of habitat to be teeming with life. |
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To try to do your best to inhabit a character, you judge them to the extent that you judge yourself. |
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But beyond their meek and bland exterior the Smalls inhabit another world. |
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Nonetheless, to the extent that criteria for self-selection are subjectively determined, populations that inhabit the frontiers are also random and spontaneous. |
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It's the kind of topsy-turvy world we inhabit in our sleep, but creating these unusual clothes has been anything but sweet dreams for the young designer. |
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Instead, these characters inhabit a sexless preadolescent world where the strongest emotion seems to be mindless rage against an unseen parental figure. |
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Often inseparable from their association with world-class mountaineering, the Sherpas of Nepal inhabit much of the Solu-Khumbu or Khumbu regions of the Himalayas. |
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Bushtits inhabit mixed coniferous and deciduous areas with shrubby growth. |
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Bare silver tree trunks beckon you into the lost world of hooded cormorants, stone curlews, crimson dragonflies and rare herbs that inhabit the Bolata marsh. |
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The bokmakieries, canaries and a colony of vivid European bee-eaters that I spotted gave me just a glimpse of the nearly two hundred bird species that inhabit the reserve. |
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Second, the five core features do not inhabit separate universes. |
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Josephson's recent landscapes pale beside those Metzker has been making since 1985, which inhabit a largely unmapped world on the other side of this jagged line. |
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In Baywatch, the crews inhabit beach towers the size of a small house. |
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Snake Mackerels are found worldwide in tropical and subtropical waters. Snake Mackeral inhabit water from the surface to a depth of at least 600ft. |
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A group of vagabonds and derelicts inhabit a shelter in Moscow, presided over by a fanatical leader who preaches the love of everyone for everyone. |
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Various departments inhabit a ramshackle collection of buildings up and down Holloway Road, ranging through arts and crafts, neo-Georgian, brutalism and postmodernist junk. |
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Well, it is about time we had some celebrities honoured and it is about time that the self-seeking nonentities who inhabit City Hall acknowledged this and honoured some. |
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The Burmans, the dominant ethnic group, inhabit the Irrawaddy River Basin. |
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Because catbirds inhabit such dense shrubby areas and are more likely heard than seen, I am often surprised by how many people tell me that their favorite bird is the catbird. |
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From the beginning, Linux has been something of a hermit crab operating system, because it tends to inhabit boxes designed first for other operating systems. |
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Not generally known for their sense of humour but generally good-natured these lefties are always happy to tease the champagne socialists that inhabit Islington. |
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When spirits inhabit inanimate objects, they cease being inanimate. |
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The Arawak Indians are the people first known to inhabit French Guiana. |
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They also have a companion animal, in this case a bird, that stays on the back of them and eats small insects that inhabit the rhino's leathery hide. |
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Their response to legitimate questioning is name-calling, personal abuse, and invoking the bogeyman of the various isms and ists that seem to inhabit their hysterical world. |
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Inland populations inhabit lakes, open swamps and marshes, and rivers. |
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They included two Gaboon vipers, snakes that inhabit the rainforest floor in the equatorial belt of tropical Africa, and can swallow prey as large as a rabbit, whole. |
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Deep sea denizens such as the feather star inhabit caves in the wall. |
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I feel I am one step closer to fully grokking the reality I inhabit. |
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These aquatic larvae, often ephemeropterans or dipterans, are readily available in the lower water column and interstitial spaces that these juveniles inhabit. |
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When astronomers study all those exoplanets and the systems they inhabit, it is natural to look to our own solar system as a template for other planetary systems. |
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These characters, their authors, and the discursive worlds they inhabit, consciously and unconsciously search for fellow sufferers and past miseries as a way to metaphorize their condition. |
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Approximately 180 caecilian species are known to exist, and up to 5 species have been found to inhabit the same area in the Amazon rainforest. |
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Clouds of glassfish and upside-down fish inhabit shaded corners. |
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Those who inhabit it in that time will feel my love palpitate in all creation, and will continue preparing to inhabit a better world. |
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To fully inhabit one's delusions, to give in to every kooky aspect of one's freakishness — it's a handy survival strategy. |
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What Mitchell has in common with Foulds is his ability to inhabit — to inspirit, to use an old verb — an entire culture, with consummate skill. |
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Because many desert rodents that footdrum, such as kangaroo rats, inhabit open habitats and tend to forage in areas with little cover, locomotion for escape is well developed. |
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We inhabit the parched places in the wilderness, in a salt land not inhabited. |
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Different colored lichens may inhabit different adjacent sections of a rock face, depending on the angle of exposure to light. |
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Everything is authentic, from the Dinka wrestling, the ash-covered faces in a cattle camp, to the floating villages that inhabit the Sudd swamps. |
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Life forms which inhabit the aphotic zone are often capable of movement upwards through the water column into the photic zone for feeding. |
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In big, once handsome houses, thirty or more people of all ages may inhabit a single room. |
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Benthopelagic fish inhabit the water just above the bottom, feeding on benthos and benthopelagic zooplankton. |
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Dinosaurs today inhabit every continent, and fossils show that they had achieved global distribution by at least the early Jurassic period. |
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The Tuareg nomads continue to inhabit and move across wide Sahara surfaces to the present day. |
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A few species of Euryhaline fish, such as European seabass, mullet, and eel, inhabit the Danube delta and the lower portion of the river. |
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Freshwater mussels inhabit permanent lakes, rivers, canals and streams throughout the world except in the polar regions. |
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It was not determined, however, if the remains were directly related to the Algonquin people who now inhabit the region. |
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A more effective method of fox control is to deter them from the specific areas they inhabit. |
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About sixteen ethnic groups inhabit Sierra Leone, each with its own language and customs. |
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Species of caimans, that are related to alligators and other crocodilians, also inhabit the Amazon as do varieties of turtles. |
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Recently, metagenomics has provided answers to what kind of microbes inhabit the river. |
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The name Malawi comes from the Maravi, an old name of the Nyanja people that inhabit the area. |
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Moreover, there is a small population of Vedda people who are believed to be the original indigenous group to inhabit the island. |
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The Indians who inhabit the hill country also claim that Herakles was one of them. |
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Pollution is a great risk to the Chinese white dolphins that inhabit the area. |
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Only members of the Anguilla regularly inhabit fresh water, but they, too, return to the sea to breed. |
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The Mi'kmaq were the first people to inhabit the area around the Minas Basin. |
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Nose bots are fly larvae that inhabit a sheep's sinuses, causing breathing difficulties and discomfort. |
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In the world that humans inhabit there is a continual tension between these two modes of Dhamma. |
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Dolphins, seals and otters inhabit the loch, and basking sharks can appear in its waters during the summer months. |
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These birds inhabit arid regions from the Canary Islands along the rim of the Sahara through the Middle East to Central Asia and Mongolia. |
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Indigenous nations and peoples living in isolation and out of contact shall enjoy the right to continue to live in that manner and to the legal delimitation and consolidation of the territory which they occupy and inhabit. |
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Peg Powler is a hag in English folklore who is said to inhabit the River Tees. |
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In addition, squirrels may inhabit a permanent tree den hollowed out in the trunk or a large branch of a tree. |
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Spiritlings are tiny fey creatures no bigger than half an inch across that inhabit various wild places throughout Norrath. |
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Who has informed us that a rational soul can inhabit no tenement, unless it has just such a sort of frontispiece? |
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Roberts works with the deficiency of human language to describe what is not human-made and views language as a jumping off point toward a truer understanding of the world we inhabit. |
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As a result, the island is shaped like a crocodile and the boy's descendants are the native East Timorese who inhabit it. |
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There is no sign of the beefy NHL players who usually inhabit the place. |
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Some animals are named after the kelp, either because they inhabit the same habitat as kelp or because they feed on kelp. |
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In excess of 170,000 birds inhabit Fowlsheugh at the peak breeding season between April and late July. |
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Hundreds of animals, such as sea anemones, barnacles, and hooked mussels, inhabit oyster reefs. |
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Forlorn and diminishing, these pathetic gods still inhabit the American mythscape. |
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Some types of periwinkles, Neritidae and detritus feeding Isopoda commonly inhabit the lower supralittoral. |
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The frames inhabit the composition sufficiently to allow for large fields of the ambrosial colors of the sub-tropics where she grew up and which are celebrated in her works. |
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Many species inhabit specific latitudes, often in tropical or subtropical waters, such as Bryde's whale or Risso's dolphin. |
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A few yards off the northeastern coast is Seal's Rock which is so called after the seals which rest on and inhabit the islet. |
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But the alcidine family of birds, such as the rhinoceros auklet, that inhabit in rocks, are difficult to find. |
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The pressure difference between the surface and depths they inhabit will inflate the swim bladder to the point where it will push the fish's stomach out its mouth, thereby killing the fish. |
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Reptiles which inhabit or frequent the sea include sea turtles, sea snakes, terrapins, the marine iguana, and the saltwater crocodile. |
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Commonly, alderfly larvae are associated with muddy bottoms of ponds and slow-moving streams, whereas dobsonfly larvae inhabit fast-flowing streams or rivers. |
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Most species inhabit coastal areas, though some travel offshore and feed in deep waters off oceanic islands. |
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Diatoms inhabit not only oceans, seas, lakes, and streams, but also soil and wetlands. |
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Living pinnipeds mainly inhabit polar and subpolar regions, particularly the North Atlantic, the North Pacific and the Southern Ocean. |
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For him, the inscrutable seems to inhabit facticity, even though facticity wants to debunk it. |
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The rainbow-backed Pacific herring inhabit shallow waters from San Diego, Calif. |
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Approximately 400 bird species inhabit Denmark and about 160 of those breed in the country. |
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These species have long been associated with the continent of Europe, but also inhabit Asia Minor, the Caucasus Mountains, and Northwestern Iran. |
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They identify incest, patricide, rage, familial dysfunction, even homoeroticism as the key social issues that inhabit Gothic spaces. |
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Currently, three lizards and one toad are known to inhabit Diego Garcia, and possibly one snake. |
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This has been reported for the pea crabs that also inhabit the mantle cavity of bivalves. |
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It also inhabits the Atlas Mountains region between Morocco and Tunisia in northwestern Africa, being the only species of deer to inhabit Africa. |
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The Loch Ness Monster is a cryptid that is reputed to inhabit Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. |
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Water deer inhabit the land alongside rivers, where they are protected from sight by the tall reeds and rushes. |
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Torrent Ducks inhabit lotic habitats across the South American Andes range from Venezuela to southern Argentina. |
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Most obviously, the human sciences study the world that human beings create for themselves and inhabit, while the natural sciences study the physical world of nature. |
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The Kalaallit are the indigenous Greenlandic Inuit people who inhabit the country's western region. |
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The punctured giant lacewing, Polystoechotes punctatus, the largest lacewing to inhabit the Great Lakes region, is quite rare. |
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Several species of warm water hydrozoan cnidarians inhabit body folds of bivalve molluscs as inquiline symbiotes. |
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How much do we revert to and inhabit the imperfect tense, an index of what is never finished, always in process? |
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They inhabit the Mediterranean Sea, but not the Black Sea, while their presence in the Red Sea is uncertain. |
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Specialization of prey species may be more common in whales that inhabit temperate areas due to higher food productivity. |
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Small mustelids frequently inhabit the ancient stone graves, and the sites' bone records may to some extent reflect their diet. |
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Planktic Cyanobacteria inhabit diverse aquatic environment from Antarctic lakes and nutrient-poor oceans to highly nutrient-rich lakes and ponds. |
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In presenting these beautiful and moving images in this way Earth becomes a moving lament for the beaten and blasted globe which we inhabit as well as a compelling argument for action. |
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At the same time we must recognize our grave duty to hand the earth on to future generations in such a condition that they too can worthily inhabit it and continue to cultivate it. |
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The North American jackrabbit and the South African springhaas inhabit pens next to the central aviary. |
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The germ of inspiration, that really freeing sense that this was an image of human life that I could inhabit, turn inside out and make my own, was right there in Sacks's essay. |
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Jarrett is the first person to fully inhabit this newly dominant role. |
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Under the 1988 Federal Constitution, the indigenous territories are seen as the space necessary for the peoples that inhabit them to exercise their identity rights. |
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The adults usually inhabit shallow lagoons, feeding mostly on various species of seagrasses. |
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Learning to recognise finer nuances of movement we are able to more fully inhabit our bodies and to experience pleasure, our body's natural state. |
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Enveloping and preserving its host in a refined way, avoiding any suggestion of technology, NYMPHEA is inspired by nature to inhabit the world of plants with poetry. |
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The people who inhabit the towers of Bay Street have no idea of the suffering their faceless corporate decisions have on working people and their families. |
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Officials are hoping that the bluegills will inhabit the crappie condos until they reach catchable size. |
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North American Myrmecophilus species are inquilines that inhabit the nests of many ant species. |
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The Western stock of Atlantic horse mackerel is by far the most important of the three horse mackerel stocks which inhabit the Community's continental shelf. |
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The absurdness and ultimate futility of this experience point to the secret, guilty thrill of obsessive fandom, and how it creates a second reality in which one can inhabit. |
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These species largely inhabit whitewater and clearwater rivers within the Amazon Basin, with rare reports in tannic blackwater rivers. |
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As conservationists, we have an implicit belief in the importance of nature for nature's sake and a recognition that humanity is simply one member of a vast array of species that inhabit this planet. |
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You do not know if after this time you will return to inhabit this planet. |
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Scotland was too guid for those that inhabit it, and too bad for others to be at the charge of conquering it. |
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To inhabit the jurisdiction is to submit to its sovereignty. |
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The rich may own them, but not inhabit them. |
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The two races seemed to inhabit separate but parallel universes. |
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The world we inhabit is a process within which the traces of divine causality can be limned in theophanies that have their own logic and order. |
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Connecting with a natural landscape, and with the people who inhabit it, is a tonic for the world-weary, and fosters spiritual and emotional health. |
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Most jellyfish are marine animals, although a few hydromedusae inhabit freshwater. |
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Erethizontids inhabit a broad variety of habitats, from tundra to the tropics and from dense forests to open settings. |
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The Mishmi occupy the northeastern hills, and the Wancho, Nocte, and Tangsa inhabit the southeastern district of Tirap. |
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I must tell you that as long as you inhabit the earth you should make an effort to make your existence here as amenable as possible, it is not necessary to weep, suffer, and bleed infinitely to merit peace in the beyond. |
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