Naturally, given the spiteful nature that those good-for-nothings have, it follows that they would wrest what little strength we have from us. |
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Since electrostatic forces are superposable, it follows that electric fields are also superposable. |
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Maybe they are, but don't believe for a second that it follows that you'll understand them, or that you're actually speaking the same language. |
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It was where I grew up, and so it follows that it must be a place that at least partly shaped who I am today. |
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Therefore it follows that the path length corresponding to the coherence time is called the coherence length. |
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What with all the government awareness campaigns, it follows that they do so knowingly and willingly. |
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To get within reach of this plea, it follows that self-deception is almost always integral to the act of lying. |
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Since amniote intromittent organs are hydrostatic, it follows that the wall of their erectile structures must be reinforced with inextensible fibers to prevent aneurysms. |
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And thus it follows that there is no scientifically sure way of devising a product against the hangover. |
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Since the genes for sex-linked traits are carried only in the X chromosome, it follows that a female would have twice the chance of receiving a sex-linked gene than a male would. |
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If we have compassion for the vulnerable, it follows that we will seek justice for our neighbor. |
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In the context of the PA's scheme it follows that the government must have an opportunity to proceed ex parte. |
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As the RRT did not find this claim credible, it follows that all further claims arising from this premise are implausible. |
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If one therefore bore ill will towards someone then it follows that we would wish to injure them, and our intention towards them would be destructive or evil. |
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Once one accepts this piece of judicial overreaching, it follows that physical evidence obtained in the absence of a Miranda warning is inadmissible. |
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Since the mean corpuscular volume is the same for the two samples it follows that the macrocyte must shrink more in the act of drying than does the normocyte. |
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One must differentiate voices within any dynamic, so it follows that supporting lines in fortissimo passages likely will not be played above mezzo forte or forte. |
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So it follows that where there is a pulse, there can be a dal, and in India some of the most popular are those made with pigeon peas, chickpeas, mung beans and red lentils. |
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Since clerical dress and address are subjects remitted by universal law to particular law, it follows that these norms of Baltimore on clerical dress remain in effect. |
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Since a loxodrome is not a great circle, it follows that by tracking a loxodrome a longer distance must be traveled compared to a great circle line. |
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So it follows that in order for a trap to operate properly, the trap inlet pressure must be higher than the trap outlet pressure. |
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Having established that a plan identifies the objectives of management, it follows that it must also identify, describe, and estimate the cost of the action required. |
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It no more follows that a spirit is on a level with the most advanced beings of Jupiter because he inhabits that planet than it follows that an ignoramus is on a level with a philosopher because he inhabits the same town. |
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No legal positivist, however, argues that it follows that the law is therefore to be obeyed, no matter what. |
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From this it follows that for plane grinding, an abrasive must be used which, whilst producing a high rate of material removal, causes only minimal surface deformation. |
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Therefore, from the results of section 2 it follows that these properties are matrically invariant. |
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Indeed, because they make different assumptions, only one of which can be correct, it follows that at most only one approach will yield an unbiased estimate of program impact. |
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In either case, it follows that in most circumstances, it would be next to impossible to claim that MBIs are solely responsible for the positive or negative results. |
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So, it follows that when he went on a fishing expedition to find out who had sent it and who had not, the odds for success were one in two, were they not? |
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On the assumption that the request for proceedings is received on the eighteenth day after his arrest, it follows that he may still be detained for a further 15 days, i.e. 33 days in toto, in accordance with his Convention. |
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From this it follows that the general level of industrialization of a country determines the possible speed of the collectivization of its agriculture. |
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From here it follows that the common good is not a simple concept but a way of acting that is positive and active and one that involves the responsibility of all, from which no one can feel excluded. |
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And because it would not be illegal for that pooch to kill, peradventure, a fox, it follows that if the hounds veer onto a real scent and make a kill, no law has been broken. |
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Since force is the time derivative of momentum, it follows that. |
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From this it follows that limitless time, space, power, etc. |
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It follows that on August 17, 1979, the plaintiff's action was not barred by the effluxion of time. |
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It follows that the quantum of damages in private nuisance does not depend on the number of those enjoying the land in question. |
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It follows that a debt may only be released by an agreement for valuable consideration or by an agreement under seal. |
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It follows that on the earth's surface there is an equilateral triangle with all its angles equal to a right angle. |
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It follows that there is a duty on the applicant to present the case against each respondent fairly. |
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It follows that in cyberspace the intended victim of a verbal assault is also at least less likely to become disarmed, debilitated, and silenced. |
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It follows that detection of oxidative modification of biomolecules is dependent on the assays to measure such damage. |
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It follows that in the present case the first and main question is whether the direction of erasure was justified. |
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It follows that vulnerability to occasional, but severe, financial crises could be mitigated if countries were to abolish their own currencies. |
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It follows that biternate leaves are doubly ternate, with the ternate divisions again ternately divided. |
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It follows that a continuum is neither a unity nor an aggregation of unities. |
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It follows that if you want an authentic border collie, you must get one that was bred for livestock work. |
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It follows that high or low probability are contrary to necessity of opposite polarity, and subcontrary to possibility of opposite polarity. |
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It follows that hydrophobic organic compounds have high adsorption coefficients and high bioaccumulation factors. |
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It follows that if parents mess up in any way, there can be no second chance, and their offspring will be on the fast track to a blighted life. |
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It follows that religious liberty rights are not in question and that the Pledge policy fully comports with the Constitution. |
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It follows that these extraordinary sculptures are more than studies in popular culture. |
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It follows that every event may be described on two levels and according to two causes. |
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It follows that foreign trade would be cut back to a fraction of what it is at present. |
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It follows that the account in terms of status functions is not a rival of the account in terms of deontic power. |
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It follows that the charge over the book and other debts was a floating charge until it crystallised on that date. |
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It follows that the Leibnizian theory of innate ideas is substantially correct. |
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It follows that the music is a hybrid of rock, disco, acid, house techno and downtempo, but always with an upbeat and driving energy that keeps the crowd moving. |
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It follows that from a purely economic point of view there is no magic distinction between the activities of a bank and those of other financial or lending institutions. |
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It follows that awareness that one of D's confederates might commit murder is sufficient to convict D as an accomplice, with a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. |
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It follows that the principle as enunciated in Sharp is that both the inculpatory and exculpatory parts of a mixed statement are admissible as evidence of their truth. |
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It follows that the Secretary of State does not act incompatibly with Article 6 rights if he declines, as he did in this case, to call the case in for his decision. |
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It follows that you don't have to reduce yourself to utter penury. |
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It follows that the problem could arise only in the case of bills payable on demand, or where a bill payable at another usance is discharge before its maturity. |
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It follows that she has misconceived the scope of section 116 of the Act. |
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It follows that we need specific, tailored sets of initiatives for these groups and, crucially, for minorities. |
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It follows that the plants themselves and depictions in botanical prints, fabrics, wallpapers, and on china suggest traditional English country decorating. |
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It follows that the mountains of Wales and Eastern Ireland must also have been submerged beneath thick glacier ice at the time. |
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It follows that somewhere antiworlds consisting of antiparticles are bound to wander. No traces of these antiworlds have as yet been found. |
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It follows that the seah must equal the urna, and the hin equal 2 Attic choes. |
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It follows that Parliament can change the constitution simply by passing new statutes through Acts of Parliament. |
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It follows that electrode potential is proportional to pH when pH is defined in terms of activity. |
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It follows that ff state laws give irrigators vested rights in water supplied by a water distributor, the Secretary must proceed in conformity with those vested rights. |
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It follows that these texts are not reliable either as providers of independent information or as corroborators of statements in the two basic sources. |
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