When animals were pitted against each other, the Romans often tied them together with a chain to make sure that they would fight. |
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The guide is designed to help make divorce less confrontational and to encourage a more conciliatory approach. |
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It needs to make up its mind because investors like to see a clear and concise strategy. |
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The inkle is to make one long thin band isn't it, like a bag handle, or a belt or thin sash. |
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The book is peppered with concisely written case studies of actual adoptive situations, which make it an even easier read. |
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The consensus is that there were eight ballots, which would make that one of the longer conclaves of the 20th century. |
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On the contrary, its abdication from the realm of the mind can make it seem another form of fideism. |
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Once an acceptable offer is received for your property, our policy is to conclude missives and make the contract binding without delay. |
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To make the caterpillar, use pinking shears to cut a leaf shape from green felt. |
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A temporary filling is placed to protect the tooth while the laboratory uses the mould to make the inlay or onlay. |
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Those elements are a potent concoction and they make editorial cartooning a singular and indispensable part of American journalism. |
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The large pipelines, built since the 1970s, linking Soviet oil and gas fields and western Europe, make their way across Ukrainian territory. |
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I wondered if my classmates and I could make such a sacrifice for our country on the field of battle. |
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The women were able to make their pin money from eggs and chickens and milk. |
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He can sacrifice, forcing the first or third baseman to field the ball and make a play away from the lead runner. |
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Therefore, the idea is to make the field artillery a one-round, one-kill combat arm. |
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Where humour and rational explanations do not produce concord about judicial activism, a parable may make the point. |
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The following year the Regensburg master mason Matthaus Roriczer published a short treatise on the proper way to make finials and pinnacles. |
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It would open up a can of worms to make the previous strike talks look like pinochle. |
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The umpires make the determination as to whether or not a fielder intentionally drops a fly ball. |
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Does it make you uncomfortable that people can read your innermost thoughts? |
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The earliest formed neurons make the innermost cortical layer, while neurons formed later make successive outer layers. |
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But less than a decade after the agreement was reached, the new meadow is being concreted over to make way for yet more cars. |
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Depending on the make and model of the play structure it may need to be concreted into the ground. |
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It rewrote its rules to make sure outsiders weren't admitted to the inner sanctum so it could keep control of which way the medium went. |
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Berlin is pocked with meaningful erections that make the cranes and concrete mixers look aesthetic. |
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The tourists improved to make 352 in their second innings, with four batsmen reaching half-centuries. |
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Bevan hit only seven fours in his innings, and to make a big score at more than a run a ball with so few boundaries is very rare. |
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Harder than even the 4 inches of reinforced steel below it, it served to make Allied shells, even AP rounds, bounce off like pinpricks. |
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This campaign helps make a difference to ease the suffering of so many innocent people languishing in prison. |
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Read about how to buy condemned properties or a fixer-upper and make it worth your time and money. |
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Burned shells of the field pea were mixed with cornmeal to make blue dumplings. |
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Its immense studio interiors coupled with its detailed concentration also make it innovatively filmic. |
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And, in their laddish way, they will make lewd and disparaging remarks and innuendos. |
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And even if you're still undecided about pet insurance, make sure to take your dog in for regular inoculations, boosters and screening tests. |
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I think there's a tendency in American art to really condescend to children, and make sure that the message is laid on thickly. |
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I want to make a skirt that has rows of pin-tucks, arranged in groups of three. |
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O'Brien failed to escape three times and unluckily went in-off when he did make contact. |
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Since God does not coerce, human efforts and prayers invoking divine aid make a difference in the workings of chance and necessity. |
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Dana's attorneys did try to make this argument, invoking a federal statute that allows damages awards for constitutional rights violations. |
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And if that weren't bad enough, a picture intended to make Stern's condescending message unmistakably clear accompanies the article. |
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There will be condign punishment for any MSP who fails to make at least one long and tedious speech a month about a minor constituency matter. |
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His unflagging dedication to device companies and to the government make him a true pioneer in the industry. |
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Researchers at the University of Bradford hope to make life easier for dementia sufferers and their carers through a pioneering study. |
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In order to diagnose this condition, I am going to have to make a lot of assumptions based on e-mail. |
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Soldiers make low salaries and in many cases live in quite poor conditions. |
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But while the seeded status accorded Alex McLeish's men should make this monumental tie easier to swallow, it could still give them the pip. |
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Then the tabloids will read about Rita Lin and all that pagoogle and make me out as some raving drug fiend and make my life more interesting. |
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The heartless wife suggested that she should make her husband's bath so fiercely hot that he would not survive after entering it. |
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I decided my input would involve cooking enough rice to make the stew go far enough to feed the troops. |
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These strengths make them ideal for certain IT work, such as computer programming or data input, which many people find boring, she said. |
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It's a phrase that could apply to how corporate leaders make decisions as readily as it does to the results of computer-data input. |
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The site has been sold, and will be razed to make room for condos and upscale shops. |
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When I'm old and can't make it up the stairs you can stick me in one of those condos downtown that overlooks the ancient river. |
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I can therefore make the submission that the pre-trial procedure in the Hong Kong Magistrate is inquisitorial. |
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Granted the terms of Article 40 of Table A Mr Watson has the ability to make any general meeting of Arias inquorate. |
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As women continue to make inroads into previously male-dominated areas, a trio of men have shown it can work both ways. |
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This Montreal-based band has a cult following in Canada and is just beginning to make inroads into the British jazz scene. |
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And that, fifthly and finally, is exactly the chief offering that monastics can make to the wider world. |
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A backdrop of mountains and glaciers, and condors soaring high overhead, make this the perfect antidote to the bustle of every day life. |
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Honestly, I don't see how I could make my social life dependent on just one person without going insane. |
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Find a crazy low-budget horror director, shove insane amounts of money and creative control at them, and just let 'em make movies. |
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There might exist some natural foods or minerals that could help to make the body more conductible. |
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There are some sauces that make the Enormous Omelet, calorie-wise, look like a pipsqueak. |
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These mobile charges should make the surfaces conductive, but past experiments have failed to show any conductivity. |
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If everyone keeps their promise this will also make a real difference to all sorts of wildlife from insects to birds. |
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The loose electrons make it easy for electricity to flow through these materials, so they are known as electrical conductors. |
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Without the ordinary user being able to make reasonable decisions about risk avoidance and risk acceptance, computers and networks are insecure. |
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This piques my scientific curiosity and I make a mental note to ask my rather strange-looking hostess about it. |
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People go to the mosque to pray and light candles and also visit the tombs of pir to make a wish. |
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Archaic ungulates were long known to be among many eutherians to make their first appearance and proliferate in the Paleocene. |
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Therefore, a male's ability to inseminate females is probably limited enough to make choosing pay. |
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I watched five more birds fly into the tree and make themselves at home with a figgy snack. |
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But manufacturers still use up to two coney rabbit pelts to make each of the new-style hats. |
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He was a piscator, and would make a huge parade of his rod, line, and green-painted tin-can. |
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Sheila had heard of a gastric bypass operation from one of her clients, where titanium staples were inserted into the stomach to make it smaller. |
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The BBC Radio Cumbria bus attended and the RAFARS was able to make several live inserts on the Saturday morning shows describing the event. |
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The only way to make them say yes is to collect the people in a movement that is seen as a fight for the basic rights of individuals. |
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Now we need to wait and see how strategies and the race itself unfold, but we are in a good position to make a fight of it. |
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Instead they trailed 22-0 but even then coach Lee Crooks held out hope they could make a fight of it in the second half. |
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When Quinn grabbed his chance just after the break it looked as though Sunderland could still make a fight of it. |
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Defining the fighting arenas, it went to show how much a great soundtrack can make a game more memorable. |
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The film serves up a sugarcoated confection that will make anyone with a taste for Nabokov gag. |
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She's going to make me some yummy blue PVC pants and a matching top, with black mesh insets down the sides. |
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Each caravan looked the same, so we decided we had to make the outside look appealing before we set about the inside. |
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There's nothing quite like journalists in a flap to make a cold-ridden Tuesday afternoon more enjoyable. |
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Miriam left for school an hour early because she figured the peace protesters would make it hard to get to class. |
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I figured this idea could make me a millionaire, but it looks like someone beat me to it. |
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I don't understand why anyone would make their mercs a pistachio green colour. |
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One skier on her first day on the piste did not even make it as far as the ski lift. |
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One of her favourite tricks was to turn a pair of her husband's trousers inside out and use them to make other garments. |
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Even though there were a few 'insidery' things that he missed, it didn't make him feel left out or excluded from the overall story. |
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The parties may wish to make oral submissions by way of a telephone conference call. |
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And then she mentioned her marble mortar, the prerequisite tool to make pistou. |
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Even now, many traders make electronic trades on handheld devices when they're in the pits. |
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For example she made me swing my arms around in a figure of eight to make my voice come alive. |
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Draw inspiration from this collection and maybe make your own banner for the next protest! |
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With an insincere apology, she shuffled off, furtively glancing over her shoulder to make sure no one had seen her colluding with a stranger. |
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The near-opaque video quality and confessedly basic skill level don't make this an extra you'll get a lot of mileage out of. |
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Lest the Gods of Indie strike me down, I have a confession to make that could well ruin the few hip credentials in my possession. |
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Perhaps a bootlegger will make something interesting out of these insipid ditties. |
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And that's probably enough albums, links, and weird personal confessions to make a point of some sort, so I'll stop there. |
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The machine will make quite a loud noise, which will probably vary in pitch and volume during the scan, but the magnetic field cannot be felt. |
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Its variations in height, pitch, and transparency make the roofline a canopy that casts a dappled light on the forest floor. |
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The way to take wickets on these pitches is to force batsmen to make mistakes, and the South Africans did that. |
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He was determined to go after hitters rather than trying to make the perfect pitch. |
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When practicing pitches and chips, make sure the length of the follow-through matches the length of the backswing. |
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A consultant can make the pitch that he offers greater expertise and experience for less money. |
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What, then, is one to make of Moore's insistent theme that readers of his books are doomed to squalor? |
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His trips there and back were spent praying for protection, praying he'd make it there safely and back in the pitch-dark night. |
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Only later, when she was on the expressway, would she make confetti of the lab paper and toss it out the window. |
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Others keep confetti and other small decorative items on hand to make a table look special. |
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The very stylish decor and layout could unfortunately not make up for the very expensive bar prices and the rude and insolent staff. |
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It seems the man just needed to find the confidence to assert those qualities that make him one of Canada's most unique film-makers. |
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Ultimately, in fact, the young person, whose medical practitioner must keep the matter in confidence, gets to make that choice. |
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Then, after handing the ball over, the pitcher has to make that same march back to the dugout alone. |
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Smaller and weaker he may be, but he still has the capacity to make a crowd feel he is taking them into his confidence. |
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I'm confident that Kevin is working hard to make sure that that's something that we deal with. |
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Obviously he can't make any promises but I am confident that he will look at the arguments carefully. |
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Also, make sure the slowdown is due to the software, not user configuration or possibly hardware mishandling. |
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We are looking at ways of configuring our breweries to make them more efficient. |
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These efforts make inspiring reading, which is why I have mentioned them in some detail here. |
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I protested, trying to make my way out of the confines of the restricting hospital sheets. |
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Everyone who sends in a vote will go into a hat to win two VIP tickets to the game plus the chance to make the pitch-side presentation. |
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Instead, after interviewing Juliette, her life story and philosophy inspired us to make it our feature story. |
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The 16 to 20 oz. plastic cups used for cold drinks make ideal pitfall traps. |
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Slugs are fond of the white pith inside empty grapefruit skins, which make good traps, and wilted comfrey leaves are also a good bait. |
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The clarity of ideas and the interlacing of pithy quotes make this a readable, thought-provoking book. |
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Asante's decision to make her central character an 18-year-old racist white girl was inspired by the rise in girl gang crime a few years ago. |
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When will the Magisterium learn that it is there to confirm us in our prejudices and a priori assumptions, not to make us think? |
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Hollywood argues that filesharing will lead to a shortage of movies, because nobody will make movies they can't sell. |
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A few imperfect specimens are about, people who make a living out of their pitiable condition. |
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I'm sure I make an appropriately pathetic, pitiable picture, sitting here with tears in my eyes, crumbs on my face, in this awful red dress. |
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Will she manage to make an honest gentleman out of the paragon of confirmed bachelors? |
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You can totally take inspo from these incredible videos next time you want to cover a zit or make under-eye circles look less noticeable. |
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Try to understand what people are talking about so as not to make pitifully uninformed comments. |
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Their bosses are putting on free yoga classes for all workers in a bid to make pitmen more alert and flexible. |
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The use of the pit saw required that men work in teams of two, one to handle the up-stroke, the other to pull down on the saw to make the cut. |
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In fact the conflict is so serious as to make the evidence of a witness retained on that basis inherently suspect and perhaps even valueless. |
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I redid it again, this time with footnotes to make it easier to understand some terms in Filipino. |
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It is these qualities we need to understand if we are to make sense of this conflicted representation of New York. |
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You will be expected to make a significant down payment, with the balance by agreed instalments over a short period. |
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The contribution is to be paid when they file their income tax return or make installments payments, where applicable. |
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They make a similarly ironic point about the confluence of minimalist forms of art and the larger imperatives of social and economic power. |
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PorkWatch says there are instances of imported pork and pork products being labelled in ways that might make shoppers think they are British. |
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If it is unlikely to make its founder a fortune, the venture at least fills a need among a certain group of professional women. |
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He's not there to make moral judgments on how you live, but to fill your prescription. |
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They added fill by the house to make a fairly level garden up top, and then nudged and added stone to build retaining walls and steps. |
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Guitars crunch, drums play fills that would make Terry Bozio proud, and if muscle is your mode, it may work. |
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Hence again I have stayed in my hole, because up above there's an increasing passion to make men conform to a pattern. |
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Cork or other conformable coverings make the handle more comfortable and easier to grip. |
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However, if conformers that make good hydrogen bonds to ionized sites are unavailable, the calculated ionization free energy will be wrong. |
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The technology must be developed to make the transacting of money instantaneous. |
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These techniques work at the level of the pixels, the minute areas of illumination which make up images. |
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I don't think she'll fall instantly in love with him again and make the same mistake. |
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And 30-second skip and 7-second instant replay features make it even easier to move around your favorite TV shows. |
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To really appreciate what's happening on the field make use of the instant replay. |
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It's not up to the council to make the decision except to instate the will of the people. |
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So again like a good politician I shall try to tailor my ideology to make it sound more attuned to a reality that surprises and confounds me. |
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He doesn't do it every day because sometimes his wife will make him pick up a hammer instead. |
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I need to either find a way to make this clearer, or put complete entries on the page instead. |
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I'd make it for a whole year instead of the eight weeks it had turned into by the time it stopped. |
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The blade is somewhat flexible, better to make the turns necessary when filleting a fish. |
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The best thing is therefore to fillet any fish you are going to put in the curry, and use all the heads and skeletons to make the stock. |
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He could then, very easily, make the confrontation with the Centre an issue and go back to the people. |
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We make life manageable by creating social institutions that do for us what instincts do for other animals. |
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I grew up on a filling diet of traditional handmade Italian food cooked by my father, and learned to make such dishes myself. |
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However, in order to make something that constitutes a filling, edible meal, some creativity is still needed. |
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This could make for clearer conversation and remove the instinctive impulse to shout into a phone when the line is very noisy. |
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Before the game their players arranged a private meeting in which they pledged to make amends for a disappointing league placing. |
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Second, institutional repositories aim to preserve and make accessible digital content on a long-term basis. |
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Part of the preparation is to make sure you are loaded with film and all the exposure settings on your camera are correct. |
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Krishna had instructed the officials to make use of the land to avoid encroachments. |
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Only there does the noise seem to congeal with some solid structure and make for a truly pleasing listen. |
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Knowing that the book is devoted to obscenity, the viewer strives to make these recalcitrant shapes congeal into something naughty. |
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With such a goal, formative classroom assessment requires the gathering of the information needed to make instructional improvements. |
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This will make a fine selection for any academic film library, public or private. |
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For example, it didn't make any sense to talk to math instructors about salary raises. |
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Medical doctors, a retired principal and university instructors make up the rest of the commission. |
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The mock-up behind the move was to make the Act more congenial to the economic development needs of Zambia. |
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Together with their cousin, the Marburg virus, they make up the family of viruses known as filoviruses. |
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Brueghel fils may never have reached the heights of his dad, but his Kermesse of St George should still make a pleasing stocking-filler. |
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The silver bodies of predatory fish like congers make them virtually invisible head-on. |
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To make matters worse, thick, fibrous adhesions are often formed anchoring the congested, fatty tissue to the muscular layer below. |
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This was a three-mile dual carriageway designed to make traffic congestion a thing of the past. |
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Sensory and instrumental measurements are used together to draw conclusions and make assumptions about quality. |
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The beautiful vocals and instrumentals make memorable moments in each piece, whether a honky-tonk, a love ballad or simply a swinging tune. |
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I might make conglomerate collage-type-things where I just paste sketches onto a single document and upload it as the character picture. |
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And you have to run the car to make the oil hot before you drain the oil and take the filter off. |
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You'd think that not having to add a filter would make the cigarette cheaper, but that doesn't seem to be the case. |
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Include a nice napkin in the bag, and keep a place mat or small tray and other accoutrements at your desk to help make the meal a pleasure. |
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Haley can occupy two blockers, allowing linebackers to filter from behind to make plays. |
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Those who couldn't make the special event sent cards, flowers and messages of congratulation. |
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People should also avoid getting between a cow and her calf as the maternal instinct could make otherwise placid animals aggressive. |
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The fear of leaving home and the retreat behind familiar walls make for a short walk to insularity. |
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That's an awful lot of money and while filthy lucre alone doesn't make a golf tournament, it doesn't do any harm! |
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If I play my cards right, I can make myself useful to her and get some of that filthy lucre she generates thrown my way. |
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Diabetes occurs when the body cannot make enough insulin, the hormone needed to convert food into energy. |
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The stress of worrying about how she was going to afford the insulin would make her condition even worse. |
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But when you wear fins, your kick improves enough to make kicking worth the effort and you end up using use your legs more. |
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Back then, many companies were finagling their numbers to make the results seem better. |
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Don't make that turn to final approach too steep or you might lose the airflow over the high wing. |
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The plane continued to circle up to the northeast and then banked back to the south to make its final approach. |
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The insupportably low numbers earned by the Enquirer make sense when you compare them with those garnered by People magazine. |
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This probably is not a Final Four team, but it could make it to the Elite Eight. |
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Next, you want to get very specific about what you're going to market on your webpage and make sure that it's congruent with our next step. |
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Or, if you can't make your own notes, photocopy your mate's, or at a push, ask the teacher to go over them during lunchtime. |
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But Mr Lamb said he was unable to make assurances about the long-term safety of jobs. |
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When members of the public make a complaint, they are classed as low priority and have to wait until more serious crimes are dealt with. |
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Woolfe is an assured performer, and both the music and direction make for a brisk if light confection. |
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Are real estate agents encouraging lowball offers, because their take doesn't change much and they just want to make a deal? |
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However, while many people are on a low-carb diet and are avoiding bread, I'm trying to make bread. |
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Keep it simple and, if you can, make the time the week before to have a practice run-through. |
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He moved to make the rule for a six a hit over the boundary not out of the ground and he pioneered the use of sawdust for bowlers run-ups. |
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This was such a low-down comment to make, that he stared up at him in shock. |
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Their ideal habitat is in long grass or scrubland where they make pathways or runways for feeding and escape if disturbed. |
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The district administration has pumped in crores of rupees to make the falls attractive. |
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The following plants can be woven together with large hostas and astilbes to make an ordinary shade garden look stunning. |
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Eric thought he could make out some noise coming from the man, but the air rushing across his ears dampened it. |
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The darkness and heat descend upon you like a heavy black cloak and the mosquitoes suddenly make a rush for any exposed bits of skin. |
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If he can keep his attitude up, the Cards could really use his ability to make the opposing quarterback worry about the rush. |
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He would phone dear Harold in the middle of the night to make sure the rushes had arrived. |
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On the course students learned how to make papers from plant fibres such as bog rushes, straw, cotton and banana leaf known as abacca. |
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Granted, it is a lower-class area, but the majority of the people living there make no effort to improve their lives. |
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Putting cool compresses soaked in an astringent liquid on the blisters and sores might also make them hurt or itch less. |
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The deep green, hairy leaves make a slightly astringent tea that's similar to a mild, fragrant China tea. |
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The throttles were twisted to the stops, and everyone stayed in the low gear to make as much noise as possible. |
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Every shade of auburn, russet and tan shone through and seemed to make him look almost angelic. |
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However, Napoleon's invasion led the Russians to make peace with the Turks. |
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So rather than just chase the big innovations all the time, we should also make sure we unleash the smaller quick hits, the low-hanging fruit. |
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After sliding to a ninth-place finish in doubles luge at his second Olympics, he had a confession to make. |
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This is an area of astronomy in which amateurs are able to make vital contributions to our knowledge base. |
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The owners painted the ceiling off-white and applied a stain to the rustic beams to make them look like driftwood. |
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They build flower boxes, make picture frames from knotholes, and create rustic benches and tables. |
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If officers have to make decisions for the Council, they need to be visionary and commercially astute. |
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The reason is the metal's become so rusty that it's too thin and people's weight would make the leaks worse. |
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The CA-15 alloy contains the minimum amount of chromium necessary to make it essentially rustproof. |
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How does the EU make the distinction between an illegal migrant and an asylum seeker? |
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Long incubation periods and frequent asymptomatic infections, make it difficult to rely on diagnosis. |
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All were ruthlessly moved on by the authorities, who then smashed up perfectly good houses to make them uninhabitable. |
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Drugs such as speed and cocaine are often mixed together to make a lethal concoction that can destroy lives. |
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Discuss the house plans with your builder, and make sure each of these spaces is insulated to the recommended R-values. |
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Glare ice is nearly impossible to ride on with any bike, but studded tires make it easier than walking. |
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Every single person I know can make fancy stuff like Thai green curry or at a push, stuffed peppers. |
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To make matters worse, Mr. King was in the hospital, possibly at death's door. |
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Sometimes I'll make furtive pilgrimages to the Carnegie Deli to dine on that whopper classic, the hot pastrami on rye. |
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The ultimate Hawaiian food event will always be the luau, so families should make a point to attend one on any island. |
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The notional addressee is likely to want to use materials readily at hand to make essentially the same thing as is disclosed in the prior art. |
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We're all little kids at heart and yet the place has the ability to make people build very hard exteriors and ruin lives. |
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A layered and truffled potato cake, and a strangely matched champagne sabayon sauce, could not make the dish click. |
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Seeing that tomorrow is the first day of another month I must make some real resolutions for February. |
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By day the sunshine and palm trees can make it seem like paradise, a true City of Angels. |
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The final straw is when, in a scene that makes even the most innocuous Hindi movie seem lubricious to the extreme, they finally make out. |
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He had been dawdling with the ball on the halfway line as if he had all day to make up his mind. |
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We all work long hours these days, but many men try to make up for it when they get home. |
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The aim is not to make the athletes comfortable but to make them champions. |
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Darling, if you are a fit thirty-year-old, a sleeveless vest will indeed make you look sporty and athletic. |
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We do not make a Sabellian error simply for the fact that Sabellian modalism is Unitarian, and not Trinitarian. |
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Harrogate Town could make it ten UniBond League premier division wins on the trot when they take on Eastwood Town at home. |
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I'm going to be late for work, again so just make yourselves at home until I get in. |
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Of course, I did as I was instructed and tried to make myself at home with this new rhythmic concept. |
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The Athonites were able to make use of their financial assets to change the nature of land-holding. |
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We were in luck, my test was negative, so again I did not have to make the horrendous choice. |
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Its huge windows offer sweeping views of the fields, flowers and Atlantic waters that make Seil so tranquil. |
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He couldn't make out the name on the pump because of dust, but luckily a drop of water fell on it, and he could make out the name. |
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He and his family lived in abject poverty until a lucky break enabled him to make a comeback. |
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Now, they worry about damage to the celebrity profiles that make their careers so lucrative. |
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Tariffs make it lucrative for Europe and America to process coffee instead. |
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The air was stale and the dusty atmosphere was enough to make all of them hesitant to breathe. |
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Fish make the popping noises by sending air through different chambers of their swim bladders, the inflatable sacs that help fish float. |
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The ink sac can make cleaning the squid a bit messy, but all it needs is a good rinse and it's gone. |
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There are at least 1000 islands in the chain of 19 atolls which make up the Maldives. |
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Seldom did his journalist's nose and his artist's eye make for such ludic harmony. |
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The idea that every garment would have internet access is so patently ludicrous you couldn't make it up. |
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I like how ludology can be applied to other areas of human behavior to make them more entertaining. |
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Scientists at the European Center for Nuclear Research want to use their atom smasher to make mini-black holes to study Hawking Radiation. |
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The atom smasher at CERN, outside Geneva, is barely able to make tiny samples of anti-hydrogen gas. |
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Mithra was slain upon a cross in Persia to make atonement for humankind and take away the sins of the world. |
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Put simply, Christ was an innocent substitute, sacrificed to make atonement for sin. |
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Her gentle voice can lull you into a state of meditation and nostalgia and then another song will make your toe start tapping. |
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Nevertheless, physicians have an obligation to make their at-risk patients aware of the options. |
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The big birds have slow wing beats that make them appear to be lumbering along. |
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However, European Commission regulators attached conditions that were considered too restrictive to make the deal worthwhile. |
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For its part, Britain has to demonstrate that it considers the project so important that it, too, is prepared to make sacrifices. |
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An entrepreneur must be prepared to make a sacrifice in terms of finances and overall quality of life. |
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Sometimes we have to make sacrifices, in order to continue with more important things. |
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That dynamic is important because it spurs the individuals to make sacrifices for the good of the team. |
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Other veterans spoke about serving our country during peacetime and how important it is for citizens to make sacrifices for their freedom. |
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Who understands that sometimes you have to make short-term sacrifices for long-term gains? |
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Expert players are often able to judge exactly when to make a sacrifice bid. |
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Your child may also develop a strong emotional attachment to a real friend and it's wrong to make fun of this. |
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Asiatic lilies make up for having little or no scent with the beauty of their huge upturned flowers in luminous colours. |
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She suggested that site notices be issued in a luminous colour to make them more visible. |
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Several treatments are available to help make the attacks shorter and less severe. |
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Solid defending from Kate Bugg and Amy Bowler kept attacks on the goal to a minimum with Emma Rowley having to make only two saves in the match. |
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It is no fluke both teams at the World Cup final know how to make an attacker of a defender. |
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To make these stamps the students fashioned a small lump of clay into a shape like a small rubber stamp. |
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On paper, it does sound like sacrilege for this screen goddess to wear a silly hat, get drunk, and make a public scene. |
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She seriously doubted a lumpy mattress would make for a good night's sleep. |
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To be fair, over the next few days my true love did at least attempt to make an effort. |
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