The Stars Wheel, bumper cars, jumping boats, labyrinth, two-storey roundabout, crazy house and musical express are another part of the park. |
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When you were fielding in the wall-less labyrinth of cricketers and pitches, you often forgot which wicket your match was being played on. |
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Inside the shallow part of the labyrinth if he so wanted to see his prize, but not where some Rune could waltz in and find him. |
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The labyrinth of pores that characterize a family of inorganic crystals known as zeolites gives the crystals catalytic and adsorbent powers. |
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Visitors are also quickly drawn into the labyrinth of willed amnesia through interactive displays. |
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Still other families of the labyrinth fish, such as the kissing gouramis, allow their eggs to float along the surface of the water. |
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The red-brick complex in Pottsville, Pa., built just two years after the original factory burned down, is an aging labyrinth. |
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The original center piece has been removed and other areas of the labyrinth have been restored. |
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Artress led the effort to reintroduce the labyrinth into the world as a spiritual tool. |
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The lanes and alleys of the Marrakech medina twist and turn through a labyrinth where excitement and mystery await you around every corner. |
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He seemed to know the labyrinth by instinct, only bothering with a lamp when the others began to stumble in the dusk. |
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His investigation reveals a twisted labyrinth of deception and betrayal, with remorseless vixen Kitty Collins at the center. |
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I had just completed the process of studying business administration and journeyed into the labyrinth of corporate power. |
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The few seemingly simple slips of paper turn out to be a confusing labyrinth of coupons, even if colour coordinated. |
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The likely result of this is a labyrinth of intricate employment and childcare arrangements that families may find harder to juggle, not easier. |
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These fusions divide the bony labyrinth into two chambers called scala vestibuli and scala tympani. |
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If the membranous labyrinth ruptures, the endolymph mixes with another inner ear fluid called perilymph. |
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The last part contains the portion of the membranous labyrinth that is involved in hearing perception. |
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Within each semicircular canal of the bony labyrinth is a semicircular canal of the membranous labyrinth. |
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Most labyrinth fish are robust and easy to keep, and on the whole can be expected to do well. |
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The actual courtship and spawning are not at all violent or rough compared to some other labyrinth fish. |
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Although labyrinth fish have gills, they also have a special organ which allows them to also breathe directly from the air. |
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Inside, the old town wiggles and winds in on itself, a labyrinth of narrow alleys and high walls, hiding dark courtyards. |
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We are taken through a labyrinth of puns, amphibolies, alliterations, symmetries, inversions, analogies, and in a variety of tones. |
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The architect squeezed a labyrinth of wood-paneled corridors at odd angles within the already-small rooms. |
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So does this have something to do with Theseus in the labyrinth, having slain the Minotaur, retracing his steps with Ariadne's thread? |
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The labyrinth is a maze-like path similar to those patterned on to the floors of European cathedrals in the Middle Ages. |
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Halfway up we became lost in a labyrinth of widemouthed crevasses and leaning seracs, and had to rope up and slow down. |
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Set in a tightly wound labyrinth, this is where the film's insights about human endeavour are finally brought to light under a luminous moon. |
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They have added more taxes and more concessions, so that the taxation system is now a labyrinth. |
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If the labyrinth is working normally, the eyes will flick rapidly from side to side. |
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So the building is metaphorically pinned to its place with a shaft of light from the sky that illuminates the whole labyrinth of knowledge. |
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A labyrinth is a single path or unicursal tool for personal, psychological and spiritual transformation. |
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The labyrinth with a unicursal topology has one path, from the outside to the centre, never crossing itself. |
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Law is one such labyrinth, a concept or abstraction like time, space, or identity, devised to create order out of chaos. |
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Without getting caught up in the labyrinth of Cambodian politics, what is wrong with the way the country is trying to run itself? |
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The otic capsule contains, in addition to the otic region of the brain itself, the labyrinth and inner ear. |
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Houses of pale limestone rise higgledy-piggledy from the harbour, connected by a labyrinth of stepped alleyways. |
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A meandering labyrinth of cool white space forms a suitably neutral canvas for the carefully orchestrated display of designer objects. |
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During the course of my extraordinary journey through the labyrinth of parapsychology I played the part of both psychic and researcher. |
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Mazes and a range of labyrinth designs are found all around the world in many cultures and civilizations. |
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Thereafter, the reader penetrates further and further into a disturbing labyrinth of changing or indeterminable gender. |
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People walk the labyrinth slowly, as an aid to contemplative prayer and reflection, as a spiritual exercise, or as a form of pilgrimage. |
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Guy never allows the labyrinth of plots and counterplots to muddle his story. |
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To answer this is, however, to wander into a Daedalian labyrinth of conjectures. |
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Liam led me along an amazing and seemingly endless labyrinth of passages, hallways, corridors and galleries. |
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A stone staircase leads to the deep cave labyrinth, 2500m of underground galleries. |
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The labyrinth is based on sacred geomancy and is often used as a spiritual tool. |
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Blue Gouramis are among those fish who possess a labyrinth organ, which allows them to breath air directly. |
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There are drugs that can help reduce the rate at which endolymph is secreted in the labyrinth. |
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When you walk through a labyrinth, you often have a feeling of disorientation or even fear, because you don't know where you're going. |
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Though the labyrinth has been explored for decades, the persistence of archaic survey techniques has led to only rudimentary maps. |
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Houses shared walls and one could hop from one house to the next with ease, or disappear into the labyrinth from under one's nose. |
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This park, tucked away in the hills and hollows of central Kentucky, protects the longest cave system in the world, a five-level labyrinth with more than 365 miles of tunnels. |
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Sonia nods, and Walt's gaze follows hers to the labyrinth in the floor. |
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The driver pushed on the gas pedal and proceeded west through the labyrinth of downtown streets. |
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For several days we lost ourselves in the labyrinth of the old centre. |
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The mechanism seems to be that noise energy is transmitted from the stapes footplate into the vestibular part of the labyrinth, especially to the sacculus and the utriculus. |
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It was a ponderous labyrinth of bolts, locks, and steel doors, making it an almost impregnable fortress. |
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Trangmar's starting point was the Greek myth of Ariadne, who sent a ball of thread twisting through pathways to enable Theseus's safe passage from the Minotaur's labyrinth. |
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Rather than enter into the labyrinth of that debate, I would prefer to argue that it shows what a tangled web we weave whenever we import private profit into a public service. |
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That we seldom saw a snake was probably due to the noise we made cooeeing and ululating to each other through a labyrinth of tunnels under the wiry branches. |
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Theseus killing the Minotaur in the labyrinth of Crete, and labyrinths in general, were favorite subjects for church pavements, especially among the Gauls. |
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As Fox explains in Making Time, a labyrinth of aging pipelines and forgotten wells crisscrosses the city. |
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As Margalit Fox says at the outset of The Riddle of the labyrinth, the story of Linear B is well known. |
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It is situated in the intricate labyrinth of the Niah Caves. |
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Macerata was built on a hill with fortress-like walls and internal streets as confusing as a labyrinth, and today it still has many of those outer walls intact. |
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Ariadne is this character in Greek myth who accompanies Theseus on his dangerous expedition to the heart of the labyrinth to kill the dreaded Minotaur. |
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Within lies a modern labyrinth arranged around the physical remains of ancient Roman town houses, together with more conventional exhibition spaces. |
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In this game, the player must navigate a devilish labyrinth fighting many evil turbanized sword wielding fiends and avoiding razor sharp spikes of death. |
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Like the Minotaur in his labyrinth, you set up a maze others must work through to get to the true you. |
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This is a place of high anxiety, a labyrinth where the protagonists become so confused by being mistaken for someone else that insanity threatens. |
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The pathways of the labyrinth are constructed from paving stones recycled from other New York city parks and lined with grass, clover and mugwort. |
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An amazing labyrinth of underground tunnels that lie beneath the surface of Liverpool's Edge Hill district has been intriguing the city's population for generations. |
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Evidently they still had a whole labyrinth of corridors and antechambers to negotiate before they reached the forgotten chamber with its prized relic. |
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The classical theatre-temple as paradigmatic architectural work crystallises the nature of chora and the labyrinth as a condensed symbol of human life. |
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You get inside, and you're in a murky labyrinth of dead ends and sloping walkways and spaces that might be rooms, but then again might just be spaces. |
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The spike-tailed paradise fish is a labyrinth fish, and like all such fishes they extract atmospheric oxygen with the help of a vessel-lined cavity above their gill arches. |
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The Gourami is a labyrinth fish, so their places are the top levels. |
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The labyrinth of perplexities that Abigail surveyed best summarized the vexations of the delegates in Philadelphia. |
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He took us on a tour of the labyrinth which was a maze of many small tunnels interconnected randomly and the Britishers had had a tough time capturing the place. |
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The cemetery became a labyrinth, as family and friends slowly filed between the graves and tombstones to visit their departed loved ones on All Souls' Day. |
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This allows exposure of the entire length of the superior compartment of the internal auditory canal without injury to the cochlear and vestibular labyrinth. |
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The moment you enter the gates you're swallowed up in a labyrinth of latticed houses where tailors embroider silken hangings and silversmiths work on glittering jewellery. |
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The reverse is dominated by a pattern resembling the labyrinth formed by adjacent ice floes. |
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The Conglomerate itself was a pulsatile labyrinth of muscle, gelatinous pockets and hanging ganglion. |
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Theseus himself is the bridegroom of the play who has left the labyrinth and promiscuity behind, having conquered his passion. |
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Late in gestation DNMT1o-deficient placentas had greater spongiotrophoblast content and reduced labyrinth vascular surface area. |
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But that would be to travel quite a labyrinth of mental associations. |
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It is a challenge for the poet to confront the irrationality he shares with lovers and lunatics, accepting the risks of entering the labyrinth. |
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Dylan O'Brien is a teen who arrives in a mysterious community of boys, all trapped by a lethal labyrinth populated by the spooky Grievers. |
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We walked to the second platform and took even more interior angles of the labyrinth of ironwork. |
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Then, feeling like a giant sopaipilla, I walk out in my robe to the Boulders' labyrinth. |
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William Toney, to gather some tips on finding my way through the labyrinth. |
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No former king had involved himself so frequently in the labyrinth of continental alliances. |
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It lies in a similar shaped cavity of the temporal bone known as bony labyrinth filled with perilymph. |
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The Hampton Court maze..may serve as the type of a compact and the Versailles example..that of a diffuse multicursal labyrinth. |
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The Finnish landscape is covered with thick pine forests and rolling hills, and complemented with a labyrinth of lakes and inlets. |
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A labyrinth of intricable questions, unprofitable contentions, incredibilem delirationem, one calls it. |
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The labyrinth of the Palace of Knossos was the setting for the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur in which the Minotaur was slain by Theseus. |
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How if there were no centre at all, but just one alley after another, and the whole world a labyrinth without end or issue? |
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A civic park named Wilfred Owen Green was opened in the town in 2010 by his nephew Peter Owen and has a 40m labyrinth, one of the largest in the world. |
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The seal chamber is protected from pumpage by labyrinth rings and lipseal. |
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That is why Steinmeier is more willing to find ways out of the current labyrinth, as long as he does not openly contradict Merkel's undecidedness. |
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A circumstance in which the ostia of the ethmoid bulla connect through the basal lamella into the posterior ethmoid labyrinth is an unusual finding. |
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As gas flares burn vibrantly in the sky offshore northern Persian Gulf, weathered Iranian workers slog in a labyrinth of pipelines, storage tanks and workshops. |
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At his first rendezvous, De Marsay is blindfolded and driven endlessly through the streets, an estranging device which makes his native city a sexual labyrinth. |
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Not peace through the medium of war, not peace to be hunted through the labyrinth of intricate and endless negotiations, not peace to arise out of universal discord. |
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And in the darkest, seediest corners of that labyrinth, where only the like-minded go, lurk the kind of people who don't deserve to share the earth with decent people. |
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A few other fish have structures resembling labyrinth organs in form and function, most notably snakeheads, pikeheads, and the Clariidae catfish family. |
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A labyrinth composed of green paths lies beyond the park's ponds. |
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Even though it has the biform monster at its centre, this is not a labyrinth as mythical threat, but a labyrinth as mode of contemplation, and as metaphor for life itself. |
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The membranous labyrinth is filled with a liquid known as endolymph. |
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