Mark had a fantastic run of form scoring net 66, 69 and 67 on the last day, to lead the field by a large margin. |
|
Large valgus and extension moments lead to tensile stress on medial structures, compressive force laterally, and shear force posteriorly. |
|
The principal limitation on the use of lead as a structural material is not its low tensile strength but its susceptibility to creep. |
|
Since none of the above are going to happen, it therefore falls to one of the four of us to lead the Tories on to victory. |
|
The government wants to see the baht stabilize, even if it will lead to a slight drop in exports. |
|
Walking is a many-sided pleasure and essential for those who lead a sedentary life. |
|
Despite a six-point lead at half time, the Clan narrowly escaped defeat with a final score of 76-72 in the exhibition game. |
|
This latest fly is based on an earlier marabou tailed damsel nymph that was weighted down with lead wire. |
|
The debutant scorched away from the Bedford defence to put the Bees into a 25-3 lead. |
|
An anode terminal is electrically connected to the portion of the anode lead wire extending from the anode body. |
|
Double doors lead to a sitting room with antique marble fireplace and polished timber floor. |
|
Double doors to the right lead to a large drawing room with polished oak floor and marble fireplace. |
|
He liked to chase fire engines, lead parades and play marbles under the stands between innings of games. |
|
McGiver was also a deadly marksman during the preliminary round of play scoring 10 goals to lead all scorers. |
|
Sheet metal, lead, copper, zinc, tin plate, terne plate, and galvanized iron have all been used as roofing materials. |
|
Its balconied facades lead into overcrowded rooms and flats where there is often not enough water or electricity. |
|
He is standing at the foot of the stairs that lead up to the balcony seating, surrounded by the rest of the gang. |
|
During courtship, the female often takes the lead, staking her breeding territory and fighting with other females over potential mates. |
|
Many are forced to leave their families and lead a precarious existence living on the margins of society. |
|
And then in the sixth it was a balk again, allowing Georgia Tech to take the lead. |
|
|
So Bustamante has a three-point lead in a poll with a five-point margin of error. |
|
Those figures showed a very marginal lead as you note and we can take that back. |
|
It was tough on Pres Milltown who gave it everything but they just gave St Pats too big a lead and had little luck with marginal decisions. |
|
This in turn may lead to possibly having to make more products later at higher marginal costs. |
|
The United States has taken the lead role in confronting tyranny and terror. |
|
I have several teams of men out scouting for information that might lead us to him. |
|
Eight of the lead musket balls have been flattened from impact, while others show mold lines, indicating that they had never been used. |
|
But history books fail to impart the human toll, whereas this series forces the reader to see the bodies run through with bayonets or lead balls. |
|
The young defender almost gave Thistle the lead as early as the sixth minute, but his header from a corner was scrambled clear by Gordon Russell. |
|
But lying on the ballast, where the ship's ammunition store was located, were quantities of stone, lead, and iron shot. |
|
It's almost twice as heavy as lead, so it's great for armour plating, radiation shielding, ballast in missiles and aircraft counterweights. |
|
To answer your question, I think that we should all be very grateful for the modern technology of lead ballast. |
|
Table scraps and human food can lead to excess weight that is a detriment to your dog's overall health. |
|
The thieves strip lead from the roofs, which they can sell to scrap dealers, cashing in on high metal prices. |
|
Big bucks can make for a big bang, but they can all to easily lead to a big bust. |
|
And the move towards digital and flat-screen TVs is likely to lead to millions of TVs being thrown on the scrap heap. |
|
It is testimony to how persistent efforts of residents could lead to visible and desirable changes in the neighbourhood. |
|
Like a ballet dancer on pointe, stillness is part of the lead up to falling. |
|
Schuettler, it was, who put down the first marker, ripping a forehand past Agassi in the first set to take the lead. |
|
Two men were sleeping there, one on either side of the fire, and one horse was tethered on a lead rope. |
|
|
This may lead to a decision based on economics or potential crop marketability. |
|
The advantage of tetraethyl lead was that it allowed auto manufacturers to use lower quality materials in the production of engines. |
|
In fact, tetraethyl lead in unleaded gasoline is replaced with a mixture of benzene and its homologues. |
|
Competitive players, efficient training and cozy ballparks lead to good baseball. |
|
Suddenly he heard the whining sound of the lead balls, like so many hornets screaming past his ears. |
|
They increased their lead after 50 minutes when John Butcher released a screamer of a shot that flew into the net from 20-yards out. |
|
Villa took a first minute lead when Seamus Kinsella ran on to a loose ball on the edge of the area and sent a screamer to the net. |
|
Don't let a few trolls who mistake an Internet screencap as a sufficient substitute for viewing the entire film lead anyone astray. |
|
More frequent screenings with mammograms and MRI imaging can lead to early diagnosis. |
|
Most of the world's populations live in abysmal poverty, our governments are corrupt, and we lead meaningless lives of banality. |
|
She's far better at a lead role like this than as a second banana, and that's probably the key to why So Close is such a good film. |
|
We interpret this as evidence that the desire for boys lead some husbands to marry another woman if his first wife delivers a girl. |
|
However they could not breach a well organised defence well marshalled by Thomas and Jason and Kill retained their lead up to the break. |
|
And off to the right, you can see all the wetlands and marshlands that lead to the Lakes. |
|
But no sooner had Bryansford raced into that lead, than the champions got back into their familiar routine. |
|
Ignition harnesses were prone to succumb to the damp British weather and the failure of the harness would also lead to the engine stopping. |
|
His health has improved so much that thankfully he is able to lead a normal life, going about his work as usual. |
|
Some were roofed with lead sheets, and some with thatch, and some with a mixture of both. |
|
Even enjoying someone's company becomes loaded with expectation and social convention, fears that this will lead to that, and then, bang! |
|
Lightly chucking verse, big banging chorus, periodically insert lead guitar hook and presto! |
|
|
This film introduces Jaya Ahsan, a Bangladeshi film star, in the female lead. |
|
Mental tension can lead to constipation in some individuals. |
|
Her twin masts come from the forests of Austria and she is ballasted with lead rather than the great stones used by the Spaniards in their galleons. |
|
The blood dyscrasias that most commonly lead to leg ulceration are sickle cell disease, thalassaemia, thrombocythaemia, and polycythaemia rubra vera. |
|
It was a frustrating loss for the Eagles, who let a third quarter time lead evaporate and have now lost their opening two games by margins of less than two goals. |
|
Over-exposure to thallium may cause nerve damage, emotional changes, cramps, convulsions and eventually coma which can lead to death caused by respiratory paralysis. |
|
In Class 3 ballast became a problem early on as light pilots filled their harnesses with lead so they could fly the same size wings as the bigger guys. |
|
He will be the team mascot and will lead the players out onto the pitch. |
|
In adults, lead overload can lead to miscarriages and birth defects, as well as sterility. |
|
Rarely, severe infections can lead to inflammation of the brain or meningitis. |
|
In the southeastern boreal forest, large canopy openings caused by spruce budworm outbreaks may lead to a cyclical replacement of mature stands of balsam fir. |
|
Roofing materials were thatch, turf, timber, tiles, slates, and lead. |
|
We have started the ball rolling, now others can take our lead. |
|
Michael Taylor says lead musket balls were made on the site and the team has found spills of molten lead that have formed small hollows in the ground. |
|
Pressure built up to invest more in tertiary education so that they could occupy themselves in more advanced courses which might lead to better jobs. |
|
However, if several embryos do progress, it can be dangerous to implant them all, since that can lead to multiple pregnancies. |
|
Scott McKinney, the lead author of the study, is the informatics manager at Massachusetts General Hospital sleep laboratory. |
|
The division of peoples along national, ethnic and religious lines can lead only to a Balkanisation of the continent, with the most terrible consequences. |
|
This can lead to the very heart attack that placing the stent was trying to prevent. |
|
That lead narrows as you screen out those who are most likely to vote. |
|
|
Sometimes the aftermath, which can lead to stigmatization and harassment from peers and leaders, is equally painful for victims. |
|
I resolved early on that I would become an aeronautical engineer and test pilot and as I progressed through school I took courses that would lead to that goal. |
|
In addition to helping us power our cars, imitating sharks could lead to swifter ships and more advanced underwater sensors. |
|
Being a stressed-out single mother can lead to this critical lack of nurturing. |
|
However, the game was effectively over as a spectacle when Baker received his marching orders, as Dagenham were quite content to sit back on their lead. |
|
Inflated figures lead to ineffective policies and breed panic and over-reach. |
|
The researchers enlist the help of local Pygmy people known as the Baka as trackers to lead them through dangerous and near-impenetrable rain forest. |
|
This can lead to timeous development of effective technologies and models that can be used to utilize maize cobs. |
|
Rod Barajas laid down a sacrifice bunt but Morales had the presence of mind to throw out the lead runner. |
|
Virtually every catcher tries to throw out the lead runner in this scenario. |
|
If you have a petrol mower, run down the fuel before storing it and disconnect the sparkplug lead. |
|
In reality we mainly focus on the bottom surfaces of the packages, as the side sections of the lead frame are often not solderable. |
|
Although lead is occasionally used for curing chloroprenes, the use of thioureas in this polymer group is still extensive. |
|
No, Little hasn't officially decided whether newly signed center fielder Juan Pierre or holdover shortstop Rafael Furcal will lead off. |
|
Thumbsucker is a cautionary tale of over-dependence which warns thumb-sucking can lead to dysfunctional behaviour in adulthood. |
|
A Finnish serial entrepreneur Mr Taneli Tikka has been appointed to lead Tieto's Industrial Internet business as of 12 May. |
|
But even he couldn't have anticipated the thunderflash Rafael unleashed to give United a 22nd-minute lead. |
|
Finally, it has been well documented that anterolateral thoracotomies in infants can lead to breast and pectoral muscle maldevelopment. |
|
Its lead candidate, ulimorelin, is an intravenously-administered treatment for GI motility problems that occur after abdominal surgery. |
|
Implementation of these findings could lead to improved kickback control systems on chainsaws. |
|
|
Presumably, the government is always engaging in intentional acts, even if it hopes an act will not lead to liability as a taking. |
|
At the lead was a flat-bed sound truck decorated with colorful campaign signs that drivers could read as they sat through the delays. |
|
The Tory poll lead was just one point in Castle Point, three points in Boston and Skegness and six points in South Basildon and East Thurrock. |
|
The decrease in the quota will lead to absorbing the surplus in supplies and thusly push the price to USD 75 pb, said Bodai. |
|
Peritumoral brain edema is the lead indication for the program to develop CRF for the treatment of cerebral edema. |
|
And the OSCE was given a lead role in implementing the accord. |
|
A DISPLACED cervical vertebra can lead to a pinched nerve, and you may end up with a neck ache. |
|
Istomin saved two break points to lead 5-4 in the first set then cruised through the tiebreak 7-1 with the aid of two double faults from Querrey. |
|
The Cestrians shocked the First Division side by taking the lead after 64 minutes. |
|
Smith was red carded for mouthing off then the Ayrshire side took the lead through Stewart Kean. |
|
The tined atrial lead remained in post implantation position. |
|
And champion Gary Carroll re-established a lead in the race for the apprentice championship when Solar Sail bolted up in the finale, his 33rd win of the season. |
|
The fractures may lead down to a part of the moon that is tidally heated by the moon's repeated flexing, as it follows an eccentric orbit around Saturn. |
|
When they discover traces of an aphrodisiac called Spanish Fly in the murder victims, Buchan digs out the files of the Marquis de Sade and it seems they at last have a lead. |
|
The percutaneous permanent tined lead was released in 2002 and is now the most commonly used procedure performed prior to a patient receiving a permanent implant. |
|
From the get-go with The Vortex, the first track from their new album, frontman James Smith lead the exhilarated young crowd into a mosh which was on a monumental scale. |
|
That lead to a timidness in their programme for government and a mindset that said it was more important to kick problems into touch than address them. |
|
Woking would have extended their lead but for a string of fine saves by goalkeeper Kevin Poole after the visitors had been forced to throw caution to the wind. |
|
For instance, it lead to the League of Nations Class C mandate over South West Africa, upon the insistence of General Jan Smuts, in the years immediately following the war. |
|
As South Africa was a dominion of the British Empire, Botha was asked to lead his country on a campaign against the Germans across the border in South West Africa. |
|
|
The Sooners, after jumping to a quick lead, spent the rest of the night taking blow upon blow from USC, which battered them out, 55-19, before 77,912 at Pro Player Stadium. |
|
Jan Mucha has been Everton's Carling Cup specialist this season, but a horrible 38th minute howler gifted Andre Villas-Boas' side an unexpected lead. |
|