There is just so much to know about cellular respiration, which is vital to the survival of many living species. |
|
The cell theory is one of the foundational tenets of biology and explains the relationship between cells and living things. |
|
The cell theory states that cells are the basic unit of structure and function of living things. |
|
A brick veneer property boasting a large back yard, spacious living and a verandah as private as you need; this is the perfect place to chillax. |
|
The book includes a wealth of detail on living conditions aboard ships at that time. |
|
These people have been living with terror and the threat of terror for many years. |
|
He's been living in England for several years but he's returning stateside next month. |
|
Many of their health problems were caused by unclean living conditions. |
|
We wanted him to have the typical college experience of living on campus. |
|
He is living under the delusion that he is incapable of making mistakes. |
|
Unless you have the space to set up a mini IMAX in your living room, your best bet is to get a decent 2.1 or 5.1 speaker set. |
|
He believes that people can find peace and contentment in living simply. |
|
Flooding is a perennial problem for people living by the river. |
|
The limpid glass doors reveal the living room clearly from the dining room. |
|
They separated and have been living apart for the past year. |
|
If you think the work will be easy, you're living in a dream world. |
|
The walls of the living room had a delicate vine stencil drawn on them. |
|
The women talked in the living room while the men were otherwise occupied. |
|
An important additional practice is a kind and compassionate attitude toward every living being and the world. |
|
That path is explained as being built upon the motivation to liberate all living beings from unhappiness. |
|
|
The Komodo dragon is the largest living species of lizard and inhabits the islands of Komodo, Rinca, Flores, and Gili Motang in Indonesia. |
|
A higher quality of educational provisions for children living in rural areas will be another goal for the Chinese government. |
|
George wanted to move into the Ranger's House by the castle, but his brother, Henry was already living in it and refused to move out. |
|
The fictional heroine of BBC1 archaeology thriller Bonekickers was depicted as living in the Crescent. |
|
Giants are rough but generally righteous characters of formidable strength living up the hills of the Basque Country. |
|
The elves of Norse mythology have survived into folklore mainly as females, living in hills and mounds of stones. |
|
Smaller trolls are attested as living in burial mounds and in mountains in Scandinavian folk tradition. |
|
His deeds are recounted for their uniqueness, not only among living knights but of all men who have ever lived. |
|
Lard is used in some living industrial history museums, such as the Black Country Living Museum. |
|
In 1759, Gainsborough and his family moved to Bath, living at number 17 The Circus. |
|
By the end of his career, Moore was the world's most successful living artist at auction. |
|
It also suggests that he was well above average height, and made a living reciting prayers for the dead. |
|
When she was 30 and living at home, Julian suffered from a serious illness. |
|
Miss Cushman's Romeo is a creative, a living, breathing, animated, ardent human being. |
|
In such a state, people fear death, and lack both the things necessary to commodious living, and the hope of being able to toil to obtain them. |
|
Feeling guilty about living on Tetty's money, Johnson stopped living with her and spent his time with Savage. |
|
For a decade, Johnson's constant work on the Dictionary disrupted his and Tetty's living conditions. |
|
Brean Hammond focuses on Pope's singular achievement in making an independent living solely from his writing. |
|
Keats may have seemed to his friends to be living on comfortable means, but in reality he was borrowing regularly from Abbey and his friends. |
|
One of the party's first tasks on arriving in Italy was to hand Alba over to Byron, who was living in Venice. |
|
|
In 1804, while living in Bath, Austen started but did not complete her novel, The Watsons. |
|
For the next four years, the family's living arrangements reflected their financial insecurity. |
|
Woolf admired Chekhov for his stories of ordinary people living their lives, doing banal things and plots that had no neat endings. |
|
Christie's inspiration for this stemmed from real Belgian refugees who were living in Torquay. |
|
Pratchett gave up working for the CEGB to make his living through writing in 1987, after finishing the fourth Discworld novel, Mort. |
|
The wants of a native living with his tribe and cultivating mealies or Kafir corn are confined to a kaross or some pieces of cotton cloth. |
|
Baines, whose wife is far away in England living a separate life, is taken by the transformation in Ada when she plays her piano. |
|
The series was a historical milestone as the first weekly television series to feature animated versions of real, living people. |
|
Married in 1928, the couple had two sons and two daughters while living in Scotland, and then they moved to Highgate. |
|
I woke up at dawn covered from head to toe in a living fur blanket. Some meerkittens had discovered the warmer parts of my body. |
|
They began living together, as their respective spouses had each refused to grant either of them a divorce. |
|
Komisarjevsky directed, which made rehearsals difficult as Ashcroft, with whom he had been living, had just left him. |
|
On 3 April he had married Patricia Haines at Lothingland Register Office whilst living in Cleveland Road, Lowestoft before moving on to London. |
|
The first Turner Prize was awarded to Malcolm Morley, an English artist living in the United States. |
|
Experienced journalists including Richie Benaud rated the series as the most exciting in living memory. |
|
Ronnie the Rhino visits schools as part of the Leeds RLFC Community project, with the intention of promoting sports and healthy living. |
|
However, for many decades it remained difficult if not impossible for golfers to earn a living from prize money alone. |
|
When living in Wallasey he attended Liscard Primary School and Wallasey Grammar School. |
|
Will thought of the shadowy miasmic forest they would all soon move into, a way of living that was an inversion of all their values. |
|
Some players became frustrated by the lack of opportunity to make a living professionally. |
|
|
Most newer vessels are air conditioned, soundproofed from noisy machinery, and equipped with comfortable living quarters. |
|
Mariners report that extended periods at sea living and working with shipmates who for the most part are strangers takes getting used to. |
|
Besides improving sailing skills, all the other normal needs of everyday living must also be addressed. |
|
When Julius Caesar invaded Gaul, there were nine different Celtic tribes living in Normandy. |
|
Blake lived in London for most of his life, but wrote much of Milton while living in the village of Felpham in West Sussex. |
|
A state is a type of polity that is an organized political community living under a single system of government. |
|
Danes enjoy a high standard of living and the Danish economy is characterised by extensive government welfare provisions. |
|
As the population grew, with labour costs remaining low, living standards began to rise steadily. |
|
Irish social dance is a living tradition, and variations in particular dances are found across the country. |
|
The monarch is the living embodiment of the Crown and, as such, is regarded as the personification of the state. |
|
In 1891, Brazil granted naturalization to all aliens living in the country. |
|
Or was I a broken-down college professor living out a spasm of middlescence on the golden coast of Califomia? |
|
Competitors at earlier Games born and living in Ireland are thus counted as British in Olympic statistics. |
|
Another influential factor is the high proportion of expatriates and ethnic minorities living in certain countries. |
|
The majority of the estimated 5,000 Muslims and 200 Hindu families living in Northern Ireland live in the Greater Belfast area. |
|
The following is published by the OECD and is presented in PPPs so to adjust for costs of living. |
|
The major advantage of GDP per capita as an indicator of standard of living is that it is measured frequently, widely, and consistently. |
|
It can be argued that GDP per capita as an indicator standard of living is correlated with these factors, capturing them indirectly. |
|
Child benefit payments could still be made overseas, but these would be linked to the cost of living in the other country. |
|
As a Millerite living within one block from the beach, Miller Beach is truly a hidden treasure in Northwest Indiana. |
|
|
Sometimes they were owned by individuals and sometimes they were the common property of those living round the ferry. |
|
These Romans also used other names to refer to tribes living in that area, including Verturiones, Taexali and Venicones. |
|
As with most peoples in the north of Europe in Late Antiquity, the Picts were farmers living in small communities. |
|
In Ancient Egypt, the Pharaoh wielded absolute power over the country and was considered a living god by his people. |
|
During the 16th century, the French spelling Stuart was adopted by Mary, Queen of Scots, when she was living in France. |
|
Militiamen found that living and working on the family farm had not prepared them for wartime marches and the rigors of camp life. |
|
Early experiments in communal living failed until the introduction of private farm holdings. |
|
Americans on average have over twice as much living space per dwelling and per person as European Union residents, and more than every EU nation. |
|
Protection would have been highly unpopular among the newly enfranchised urban working classes, as it would raise their cost of living. |
|
From 1894 to 1896, between 100,000 and 300,000 Armenians living throughout the empire were killed in what became known as the Hamidian massacres. |
|
The north bore the brunt of the depression, and the '30s were the most difficult time in living memory for people in these areas. |
|
Germany is a developed country with a very high standard of living sustained by a skilled and productive society. |
|
Poor living conditions led to high rates of sickness, injury, and death, as well as sabotage and criminal activity. |
|
There, they found themselves living out in the open under torrential rains in extremely unhealthy circumstances. |
|
The Attlee Government increased pensions and other benefits, with pensions raised to become more of a living income than they had ever been. |
|
India has the highest number of people living in conditions of slavery, 18 million, most of whom are in bonded labour. |
|
Bobby Sands began the 1981 strike, saying that he would fast until death unless prison inmates won concessions over their living conditions. |
|
In February 2007, Thatcher became the first living British prime minister to be honoured with a statue in the Houses of Parliament. |
|
He says this stagnation forced the population to borrow to meet the cost of living. |
|
The eastern part of North Wales contains the most populous areas, with more than 300,000 people living in the areas around Wrexham and Deeside. |
|
|
The SA1 Waterfront area is the latest development for living, dining and leisure. |
|
Despite the comparative wealth of Victorian Dundee as a whole, living standards for the working classes were very poor. |
|
There is marked poverty among native people of the islands, as well as pressure to maintain a standard of living inconsistent with their means. |
|
The station offers a wide selection of music and news within the island and also on the internet for Montserratians living overseas. |
|
In 2004, charges were laid against seven men living on Pitcairn and six living abroad. |
|
As of April 2017, there are four living former Prime Ministers, as seen below. |
|
It's more of a curious interest I have into the workings of those living in Mondo Bizarro. |
|
In his novels, he outlined an England divided into two nations, each living in perfect ignorance of each other. |
|
Good people, if you're ever short of a job, don't take up monking for a living. |
|
British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens living in Scotland who were aged 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote. |
|
British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens living in Wales aged eighteen or over on election day were entitled to vote. |
|
This seems to be a common problem I have been encountering against mono-brown decks, oath of ghouls, living death decks. |
|
A Royal Marine works with his team in the field and shares accommodation if living in barracks. |
|
Between 1965 and 1995, growth rates averaged around 6 per cent per annum, transforming the living standards of the population. |
|
Over 200,000 were living in New York by 1860, upwards of a quarter of the city's population. |
|
This trend has begun to slow due to ongoing population growth in Tokyo and the high cost of living there. |
|
Greater inequality correlates with greater percentage of people living in poverty. |
|
No business which depends for existence on paying less than living wages to its workers has any right to continue in this country. |
|
In 1975, the United Kingdom had fewer people living in poverty than Germany, Italy, Belgium, and Luxembourg. |
|
One third of UK households are living below what is considered an adequate income according to the JRF research. |
|
|
Employment is important but if wages do not rise substantially in relation to living costs it will not provide a route out of poverty alone. |
|
Six specific surveys of low standards of living in the UK have made use of this method. |
|
In America as our standard of living rises, so does our idea of what is substandard. |
|
In 1965, Rose Friedman argued for the use of relative poverty claiming that the definition of poverty changes with general living standards. |
|
Contrary to a popular image of drug sales as a lucrative profession, many of the employees were living with their mothers by necessity. |
|
The study of their properties is known as organic chemistry and their study in the context of living organisms is known as biochemistry. |
|
Henry Cavendish was born on 10 October 1731 in Nice, where his family was living at the time. |
|
In living organisms, DNA does not usually exist as a single molecule, but instead as a pair of molecules that are held tightly together. |
|
This reversible and specific interaction between complementary base pairs is critical for all the functions of DNA in living organisms. |
|
Australia's 60 Minutes reported that people living along the gulf coast were becoming sick from the mixture of Corexit and oil. |
|
In the hills of Appalachia, in a cove that no living man will ever find, is a Mountain Ash unlike any other in the world. |
|
Years of consistent economic growth meant that living standards generally increased, but Leicester was a stronghold of Radicalism. |
|
It seeks to identify and support agents who have unique visions with the potential to transform the lives of millions living in poverty. |
|
There is also the story of the brave young man who makes his living mudwrestling with anacondas. |
|
They also hold that the congregation of the Church comprises both the living and the dead. |
|
In Britain, the Public Health Act of 1875 was passed, which significantly improved living conditions in many British cities. |
|
In 1950, the UK standard of living was higher than in any EEC country apart from Belgium. |
|
In all, he wrote half his poems while living at Cwmdonkin Drive before moving to London. |
|
Although the British standard of living was increasing, the standard of living in other countries increased faster. |
|
In ten years, from having had a much higher standard of living than the continent, they have slipped right back. |
|
|
He lived the last years of his life in Vevey, on Lake Geneva in Switzerland, the same town Charlie Chaplin was living in at this time. |
|
Moore felt that he was not being fulfilled by this job, and so decided to try to earn a living doing something more artistic. |
|
He met his first wife, Mary McGrath, while she was studying Scientology and living in a house in East Grinstead that was owned by his father. |
|
Around 1200 there is a list of the names of men living in the area of Peebles. |
|
Thomas came to be appreciated as a popular poet during his lifetime, though he found earning a living as a writer difficult. |
|
Sales of both books were poor, resulting in Thomas living on meagre fees from writing and reviewing. |
|
By late September 1945 the Thomases had left Wales and were living with various friends in London. |
|
He soon obtained the living of Laracor, Agher, and Rathbeggan, and the prebend of Dunlavin in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. |
|
By the end of April he was in Venice, living over a bakery near the San Vio bridge. |
|
While living at Church Walk in 1912, Pound, Aldington and Doolittle started working on ideas about language. |
|
And it seems to me that a definition of any living vibrant society is that you constantly question those stories. |
|
After World War II traditional music in Scotland was marginalised, but remained a living tradition. |
|
I'm a musicaholic. Losing my hearing is one of the worst things I can think of. I'd have a lot of trouble living in a world without sound. |
|
For his last year at Leipzig, his father scraped together the money for living expenses, and the conservatoire assisted by waiving its fees. |
|
And change is the clearest sign that the musical is still a living, growing genre. |
|
In September 2009, Kapoor was the first living artist to have a solo exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts. |
|
Since 2005, Ofili has been living and working in Trinidad and Tobago, where he currently resides in Port of Spain. |
|
Ethel is a mysophile. She derives her gratification from the dirt in which she is living. |
|
For people living in the Channel Islands and Isle of Man, TV licensing law is extended to their areas by Orders made by their own Governments. |
|
One of the reasons given is the licence fee criminalises poor people, in particular women with children living on welfare. |
|
|
While living in London's Saville Street, he took part in efforts to create a home for the city's abandoned children. |
|
In the case of the adult, the focus is on perceiving, but with the child it is on receiving of the sensations in their living nature. |
|
At that time there would have been about 270 persons living there, of whom about 80 would have been friars. |
|
In order to make a living, Wollstonecraft, her sisters, and Blood set up a school together in Newington Green, a Dissenting community. |
|
According to this model, living organisms themselves have goals, and act according to these goals, each guided by a central control. |
|
It is as though I had before me nothing more than a long stretch of living death. |
|
In the fifth century BC, Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the head of the Danube and also in the far west of Europe. |
|
People living in the Roman province of Britannia were called Britanni, or Britons. |
|
Aircraft noise is a major cause of noise disturbance to residents living near airports. |
|
A foreign citizen without driving skills living in Denmark can not get such documents. |
|
A foreigner living in Denmark will have a residence permit with their personal identification number and a photo. |
|
Polish citizens living permanently abroad are entitled, but not required, to have one. |
|
Natural lakes provide a microcosm of living and nonliving elements that are relatively independent of their surrounding environments. |
|
As early as 2000 BC, other Semitic speakers were living in Ethiopia and Eritrea where Ge'ez developed. |
|
They're protesting against land grabs, reparations, stolen elections, the rising cost of living, many things. |
|
The second period of growth was from 1967 to 1975 when rural populations migrated to urban centers seeking work and better living conditions. |
|
As in other parts of Africa, there has been a steady migration of people towards the cities in hopes of better living conditions. |
|
A massive exodus to the cities ensued as their ability to provide a living from the land dwindled. |
|
This dynamic of life and death is extended by the fact that Caravaggio often painted the same agasp expression in many of his living faces. |
|
Whether one's surroundings were anticked up or not, one often felt one was living in another century at Roque. |
|
|
I mentioned Britain's antiroad protesters, and they were tickled pink at the idea of people living in treehouses to stop a road. |
|
Despite efforts to prevent it, officials say, the radicalisation of young Muslims living in Europe proceeds apace. |
|
The gleam of the land is in its rocks, the fine-grained argillaceous rocks, here, not purple or grey, but green of living stone. |
|
He was forthwith conveyed to the nearest hospital, and there pronounced to be still living, although in an asphyctic condition. |
|
Daily he became more atrabiliary, sinking into a state of melancholy that eliminates the joy of living into the sadness of living. |
|
I was living in Baltimore, teaching art and sleeping with an artist when, out of nowhere, I was swept away in a tide of baby fever. |
|
The infection does not spread from one to another among the troops, and barcoo rot affects men living in solitude. |
|
I was living at home at her age, by and large doing what my parents told me, apart from beaking school. |
|
Here, student, some man or woman kills living beings and is murderous, bloody-handed, given to blows and violence, merciless to living beings. |
|
And every living substance that I have made will I blot out from off the face of the earth. |
|
Bodacious living is evident everywhere, but it's easy not to notice the remarkable people and happenings that are present all around. |
|
His father, grandfather and countless generations before him had obtained a living from chair bodging in the solitude of the beech glades. |
|
Rocard, whose two marriages had failed during his long years as the left's boy scout, was reported to be living with a psychoanalyst. |
|
Other species are recognized pests, and various buprestids attack either living or dead trees. |
|
The builders were carpeting in the living room when Zadie inspected her new house. |
|
Warren J. Tyler, son of Joel, was born in Byron, July 28, 1828. He married Cassandra Tyler, of Stafford, and has four children living. |
|
We are now living and obeying celestial laws that will make us candidates for celestial glory. |
|
Rustlings and cheepings came to him across that still, moonlit yard. A concourse of living beings sent the hum of their activity into the night. |
|
All my life I was an underdog who was now finally living out my Cinderfella story. |
|
Anyone who thinks the ANC will form the government of South Africa is living in cloud cuckoo-land. |
|
|
Members are living on cloud nine if they think that playing the stock-numbers game is doing anything for the farmers or the country. |
|
He commissioned a replica of the Mona Lisa for his living room, but the painter gave up after six months. |
|
Since we were now living so close, at least those couple hours of talking together helped boost our spirits. |
|
Paul's cremains arrived by limo service less than an hour before the living room memorial. |
|
I wiped the crusties from my eyes, threw on a sundress, and wandered out into the living room. |
|
After he left baseball, Rhodes stayed in New York, living on Staten Island and working as a steerer, a deckman and a cook on tugboats. |
|
Poor children suffer permanent damage due to deplorable living conditions and deplorable treatment by law enforcement. |
|
I just feel so disconnected from people living on the other side of the world. |
|
There are creators who really make money and earn living from doujin, but those who can do so, are minority. |
|
Didn't I tell you? As true as I'm drinking this porter if he was at his last gasp he'd try to downface you that dying was living. |
|
Every living creature has a driving force that pushes him in the direction of certain goals. |
|
By living as a drone, to be an unprofitable and unworthy member of so noble and learned a society. |
|
I can't believe a month ago I was living my life as usual, and now I'm a dudette about to become a pioneer traveling on a wagon train. |
|
She enjoyed the ease of living in a house where the servants did all the work. |
|
People whose provinces receive equalization payments are largely in denial about living in have-not regions, a poll suggests. |
|
We tug our hammer-headed mules along the tourist trails of Petra, the fabled Nabataean capital cut from rock the color of living muscle. |
|
The position may have been different when your client was living in the house with the flatmates. |
|
Shall wee force the general law of nature, which in all living creatures under heaven is seene to tremble at paine? |
|
In this case the living room attempts to address both the forespace or the virtual court, on the one side, and the valley-panorama on the other. |
|
Who! he serve? 'sblood, he keeps high men, and low-men, he! he has a fair living at Fullam. |
|
|
Engage in funfilled activities like rearranging the living room furniture, putting up storm windows, and wallpapering the bathroom ceiling. |
|
I am reading Herodotus, who describes in detail and with great fidelity these same galactophagous Scythians among whom I am living. |
|
He felt elated. Till now he had been living too much in the past, he decided. Time to get my eye in again. |
|
Mariana would rather not ghostwrite for a living because she finds it a thankless task. |
|
For those who have glory-worthy goods, the temptation is sliding from real striving after virtue into living off their past reputation. |
|
Oh, then what gushings forth of living water are seen to flow out from the smitten Rock! |
|
Students are generally entitled to student loans to cover the cost of tuition fees and living costs. |
|
There are many more people with Scottish ancestry living abroad than the total population of Scotland. |
|
Scilly has been inhabited since the Stone Age, and until the early 20th century its history had been one of subsistence living. |
|
These were all living behind ramparts of rivers and woods and therefore inaccessible to attack. |
|
Aboriginal peoples were living in North America at this time and still do today. |
|
Some industrialists themselves tried to improve factory and living conditions for their workers. |
|
Close to Richmond Park is Kew Gardens which has the world's largest collection of living plants. |
|
Supporters of CAP argue that the economic support which it gives to farmers provides them with a reasonable standard of living. |
|
The room itself was no larger than an ordinary living room, but it appeared to be a Home Depot of modern weaponry. |
|
In the freshly hoovered living room of her house in Wokingham, Thelma Dawnton was distinctly miffed. |
|
Consequently, the Dumnonii probably retained a greater degree of political autonomy than the forcibly conquered tribes living to the east. |
|
The family Elephantidae is known to have existed six million years ago in Africa, and includes the living elephants and the mammoths. |
|
Some local people claimed to have seen a living mammoth, but they only came out at night and always disappeared under water when detected. |
|
Overall, this is the first HP game to even get near to living up to the quality of JK Rowling's books and the accompanying films. |
|
|
It is still unknown if the actual cloning of a living woolly mammoth is possible. |
|
Given the similarities with readings from people living on loess soils, the general direction of the local movement according to Price et al. |
|
He suggests that the area around Durrington Walls Henge was a place of the living, whilst Stonehenge was a domain of the dead. |
|
These were made in enormous quantities for elite burials, and also used by the living for ritual offerings. |
|
In the fifth century BC Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the head of the Danube and also in the far west of Europe. |
|
In 88 BC, Mithridates ordered the killing of a majority of the 80,000 Romans living in his kingdom. |
|
The hypocaust was an invention which improved the hygiene and living conditions of citizens, and was a forerunner of modern central heating. |
|
Thompson however proposed that based on the evidence it is more likely that Coroticus was a British Roman living in Ireland. |
|
Tacitus portrays a people called the Eudoses living in the north of Jutland and these may have been the later Iutae. |
|
Little is known about the everyday spoken language of people living in the migration period. |
|
I half slept and half woke and enjoyed for several hours that dreamy, in-betweeny state of living that hovers between consciousness and sleep. |
|
Maintenance loans are available for living costs, and these are means tested. |
|
Sikhism has approximately 3,000 adherents, with most living in Oslo, which has two gurdwaras. |
|
The father of a woman living in the incommunicado world of the Big Brother house in Australia has died but his daughter has not been told. |
|
Their new residents were English migrants, with the local Welsh banned from living inside them, and many were protected by extensive walls. |
|
Samaneras live according to the Ten Precepts, but are not responsible for living by the full set of monastic rules. |
|
Long believed to be extinct, the purple-bellied speckled turtle was sighted for the first time in living memory in a remote pasture near Chicago. |
|
From there, it was most likely carried by Oriental rat fleas living on the black rats that were regular passengers on merchant ships. |
|
Ockham was living in Munich at the time of his death, on 10 April 1347, two years before the Black Death reached that city. |
|
They seem to be so interfused with the emotions of the soul, that they strike upon the heart almost like the living touch of a spirit. |
|
|
The most important humanists living in Matthias' court were Antonio Bonfini and the famous Hungarian poet Janus Pannonius. |
|
The Latin language, for instance, had evolved greatly from the classical period and was still a living language used in the church and elsewhere. |
|
In 2015 the Church of England admitted that it was embarrassed to be paying staff under the living wage. |
|
His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. |
|
British citizens living abroad are allowed to vote for 15 years after moving from the United Kingdom. |
|
Up to 52 fellows are elected each year and in 2014 there were about 1,450 living members in total. |
|
Samuel Pepys observed the conflagration from the Tower of London and recorded great concern for friends living on the bridge. |
|
It was nominally to protect the living and working conditions for African slaves. |
|
Based on these similarities, he proposes the idea that the Moon would house living beings, the Selenites. |
|
The Russian enlightenment centered on the individual instead of societal enlightenment and encouraged the living of an enlightened life. |
|
He pulled on a pair of jogpants and sat in the dark of the living room taking long pulls at his cigarette. |
|
Especially for women living in rural areas of France, the closing of the churches meant a loss of normalcy. |
|
In addition, there are many more people with Scots ancestry living abroad than the total population of Scotland. |
|
Britain escaped the 'Malthusian trap' because the Industrial Revolution had a positive impact on living standards. |
|
On 19 February 1942, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, interning about 100,000 Japanese living on the West Coast. |
|
By a margin of approximately 55 percent to 45 percent, people living in Scotland rejected the proposal. |
|
As of April 2017, there are four living former Labour Party deputy leaders, as seen below. |
|
Boy, the fellows said he just knocked the living daylights out of him, bounced him six feet across the ground. |
|
The party also believes strongly in nonviolence, basic income, a living wage, and democratic participation. |
|
No living thing moved upon it, not even a medicine wolf to kyoodle to the invisible moon. |
|
|
The landless younger sons of the gentry often entered the military as the only way to make a living. |
|
The problem is to get the peasants used to living in a landlordless world. If you can't make the farmer productive, leave him alone. |
|
There is evidence of human habitation living off the river along its length dating back to Neolithic times. |
|
In the late 18th and 19th centuries people known as Mudlarks scavenged in the river mud for a meagre living. |
|
In 2002 there were 100,000 people living within the AoNB area of the Chilterns. |
|
The Exmoor National Park is primarily an upland area with a dispersed population living mainly in small villages and hamlets. |
|
In 1251, a survey showed an increase to 345 households with the start of urban living although still largely rural. |
|
There are about 22,000 jobs available in Truro, compared to only 9,500 economically active people living in the city. |
|
The government avoided indirect taxes because they raised the cost of living, and caused discontent among the working class. |
|
There are a number of reasons that different measures do not perfectly reflect standards of living. |
|
At this point, I felt this man was a leech. I suspected that he had spent a lifetime living off the good will of women that he met. |
|
By 1901, nearly 120,000 people were living in Preston, now a booming industrial town. |
|
John Osborne wrote his play Look Back in Anger in 1956 while living in Derby and working at Derby Playhouse. |
|
Nastasha shrilled and went into her and Walter's room, just off the living room, and slammed the door as hard as she Lilliputianly could. |
|
Limy muds accumulated there as sediments, and entombed the remains of the animals living on the sea-floor. |
|
Since this central unit is usually located outside the living area, no dust is recirculated back into the room being cleaned. |
|
Also it is possible on most newer models to vent the exhaust entirely outside, even with the unit inside the living quarters. |
|
She advertised the lipoid virtues of what he had heard called junkfood, presumably food for junkies, whom, living in Tangiers, he knew all about. |
|
Also, the molecular machinery which runs living cells is often based on linear and rotary electrostatic motors. |
|
In July 2016, scientists reported identifying a set of 355 genes from the LUCA of all organisms living on Earth. |
|