It seems like you had to make the Before trilogy first in order to achieve something like Boyhood. |
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Taking an absolutist view on temporary cuts would rapidly make the whole pledge untenable. |
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I had to keep adjusting the radio dial to make the station come in clearly. |
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The novel was abridged by the author to make the audio recording a more manageable length. |
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The addition of five more items to the agenda will make the meeting unbearably long. |
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Appointed in 1780 to the position of agent-general of the clergy, he determined at once to make the most of the appointment. |
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The headmaster wondered what an appropriate measure would be to make the pupil behave better. |
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In situations like this, beginners often make the mistake of giving an atari, which strengthens only the opponent. |
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Susan beeped Jessica, and then Jessica called her back, because Susan didn't have enough credit on her phone to make the call. |
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In the process, he managed to make the Republican tax cut sound like a blast from the past. |
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I tell you he's the stuff that will take 'em over the top and make the boches feel cold in the pit of their fat tumtums when they see him coming. |
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We need boots on the ground to make the border a real barrier. Ten thousand new Border Patrol agents have been authorized by Congress. |
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Mothers very often make the baby and themselves unhappy by setting the child on the potty every hour. |
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We're confident she has the moral fiber to make the right decision. |
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The Chicago Cubs finished ten games over.500, but still didn't make the playoffs. |
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This led to a standard settlement period of 14 days, which was the time it usually took for a courier to make the journey between the two cities. |
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Further reforms to make the Mathematics syllabus more popular have been met with mixed opinions. |
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Valves on opposing reeds of each note are used to make the instrument's reeds sound louder without air leaking from each reed block. |
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Rimet eventually persuaded teams from Belgium, France, Romania, and Yugoslavia to make the trip. |
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However, there is a movement on the World Curling Tour to make the games only eight ends. |
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There's also a greater chance that the shot will miss the guard entirely because of the greater accuracy required to make the shot. |
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By 1938, Lynch's drinking lifestyle meant that he could no longer make the weight for the flyweight division. |
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To make the fullest use of the bridge, several new railway connections were built, bringing main line routes to the bridge. |
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The English sources generally give very low figures for Harold's army, perhaps to make the English defeat seem less devastating. |
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Caernarfon Castle's design was partly influenced by a desire to make the structure impressive as a symbol of the new English rule in Wales. |
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In many ways, coalition warfare serves to make the crafting of a peace more difficult than the winning of the war itself. |
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She said that the British Government would reinforce its commitment to make the arrangements work effectively. |
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She was considered a very fast ship, able to make the passage to Australia via Cape Horn in under 60 days. |
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Other seaweed pills exploit the same effect as gastric banding, expanding in the stomach to make the body feel more full. |
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Like the exterior of the building, the principal internal spaces are designed to make the best use of natural materials in their natural state. |
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I was given them by a delightful Cornish lady who was quite taken with me and used to make the most delicious tiddy oggy pasties. |
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These species all have different tolerances that make the different zones along the marsh best suited for each individual. |
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These evolutionary modifications make the spine more flexible but weaker than the spines of terrestrial vertebrates. |
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These widespread carbonates and other sedimentary deposits make the Cretaceous rock record especially fine. |
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They are prepared raw or boiled, then they are ground with some vinegar, chopped onions and chopped cilantro to make the hot sauce. |
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For the German state, to make the river more predictable was to ensure development projects could easily commence. |
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Tidal flows make the neck of Jade Bight the deepest natural channel near Germany's North Sea coast. |
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To make the voyage possible, she was escorted and supported by the Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Simon Fraser. |
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In the summer of 2000, two Canadian ships took advantage of thinning summer ice cover on the Arctic Ocean to make the crossing. |
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For base words already ending with n, the final n sound is often prolonged to make the suffix clear. |
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Partnerships with Pakistan and India have concluded to make the construction term at home. |
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She underprices to make the sale, gives away product, provides extended warranty services at no charge, and personally overservices her accounts. |
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Always use a layer of wadding or cotton overstuffing to make the work smooth. |
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Both thought that air superiority was needed first, and could make the invasion unnecessary. |
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I worked nonstop to make the house safe. Periodically I ozoned the first-floor bathroom, but it still made us sick. |
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Also, the additional protocols of 8 June 1977 were intended to make the conventions apply to internal conflicts such as civil wars. |
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In 1953, legislation to make the ground squirrel the state emblem was voted down in the state legislature. |
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The precipitated minerals form a cement and make the rock more compact and competent. |
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Heavy infestations may make the land completely impenetrable and will require cutting first just to access the stems. |
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Large animals such as some cetaceans and birds make the round trip annually. |
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Coriolis effects are therefore present, and make the atoms move in a direction perpendicular to the original oscillations. |
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Also, nutriments from agricultural fertilizers and wastewater from the cities, that end up in the sea, could also make the algae bloom. |
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Shells have a high calcium carbonate content, which tends to make the middens alkaline. |
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Upon Cabral's return, King Manuel I began planning another fleet to make the journey to India and to avenge the Portuguese losses in Calicut. |
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This list excludes sea turtles, however, both the leatherback and the Kemp's ridley would make the top 25 list. |
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The third attempt was to make the River Ant navigable from Dilham to Antingham. |
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In fact, until its fall embassies from Carthage would regularly make the journey to Tyre to worship Melqart, bringing material offerings. |
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Other landowners also encouraged the Earl to make the pilgrimage and agreed to go with him, and preparations began for the trip. |
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In 1986 President Ronald Reagan signed legislation to make the rose the floral emblem of the United States. |
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Payees are generally required to provide to the payer or the government the information needed to make the determinations. |
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Initial tests showed that the ship was able to make the turn described by eyewitnesses without capsizing. |
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Road bikes tend to have a more upright shape and a shorter wheelbase, which make the bike more mobile but harder to ride slowly. |
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The characteristics of a sail are due to design, construction and the attributes of the fibers, which are woven together to make the sail cloth. |
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The rim is folded over to make the nozzle, so it overlaps and is then pinched to make the wick hole. |
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Some works make the claim in passing, perhaps citing someone else's claim of a copyist's error as justification. |
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Those characteristics make the cultural aspects of a community or a society. |
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James thought it was cruel for the fraternity members to make the pledge think his father had died suddenly and refused to play along. |
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The structure and flexibility of junk sails make the junk fast and easily controlled. |
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Healing rites performed by shamans frequently identify social disorder as the cause, and make the restoration of social relationships the cure. |
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Some historians note that Christopher Columbus was among those to make the voyage to the Gold Coast with this fleet. |
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Going against his promises made in September, Henry tried to make the marriage a reality. |
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Cabral promises to make the Trimumpara Raja of Cochin the ruler of kingdom of Calicut, upon the city's capture. |
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One year later, he published a card game, Grammatica Figurata, to make the grammatical rules of Donatus', Ars Minor, more appealing to children. |
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Both are what are called pozzolans, reactive materials that help make the concrete stronger. |
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Elcano and a small group of 18 men were actually the only members of the expedition to make the full circumnavigation. |
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This method was eventually to fail as the localized variations from general magnetic trends make the method unreliable. |
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Under the skirt is a slip designed to fluff the skirt and make the waist look smaller. |
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This would make the port more important than it had been, and led to increased prosperity for the inhabitants. |
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Cebu's industry helps make the Philippines the 5th largest shipbuilding country in the world. |
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Evidently, such an approach would make the resulting agreement worthless, as only Spain possessed any troops. |
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The narrator claims that the king, wishing to win the favour of Switzerland, offers to make the country the godmother of his son. |
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In response to the plant closures, towns throughout the region sought to make the region attractive for technology companies. |
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Humans and certain other animals require vitamin C in their diets to make the building blocks for collagen. |
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Many people make the adventurous, but rewarding, drive to the tip of Cape York, the northernmost point of mainland Australia. |
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In the long run, the weapon could make the user permanently hard of hearing. |
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In some cases, phonological or semantic developments make the pairs difficult to recognise. |
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The provisions were intended to make the Reichswehr incapable of offensive action and to encourage international disarmament. |
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Its simpler word structure and syntax, while detracting from the raw information standpoint, can make the information easy to understand. |
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Therefore I hope that you will make the utmost effort, so that this language of Esperanto may be widely spread. |
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Small caps are sometimes used to make the run of capital letters seem less jarring to the reader. |
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Our peasants, however, want to make the goods of other men common, and keep their own for themselves. |
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Not only did they make the Church more effective, but they also reaffirmed fundamental premises of the Medieval Church. |
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The award should make the plaintiff whole, sufficient to put the plaintiff back in the position he or she was before Defendant's negligent act. |
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Morgan had pursued an expansion policy by acquiring many of the line's competitors to make the New Haven into a single unified network. |
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On May 21, 2009, the Japanese government introduced new legislation which would make the PRC's decisions binding. |
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Scottish curler Eve Muirhead was left facing a race against time to make the first European Tour event of the season after being stung by a wasp. |
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Bill Brock wins in 1970 helped make the Republican Party competitive among whites for the statewide victory. |
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The King was slow to agree, and Asquith and his cabinet informed him they would resign if he did not make the commitment. |
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Also, Hansard sometimes adds extraneous material to make the remarks less ambiguous. |
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Through the training and experience, the leader gains different traits to help make the organization functional. |
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Reconfiguration will require a while, but then the new form will make the computer much faster. |
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Some cupolas are fitted with cooling jackets to keep the sides cool and with oxygen injection to make the coke fire burn hotter. |
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The location of the coalfields helped to make the prosperity of Lancashire, of Yorkshire, and of South Wales. |
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This edition was heavily revised by Mary Shelley, partially to make the story less radical. |
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This is an example of framing to make the process of charging some people higher prices more socially acceptable. |
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The town, along with Walney Island, is unparished and forms the bulk of the wards which make the entire borough's area. |
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Tuff from Rano Raraku was used by the Rapa Nui people of Easter Island to make the vast majority of their famous moai statues. |
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As a result, increasing the investment will not make the plant grow better. |
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Slate is found in the Arctic, and was used by Inuit to make the blades for ulus. |
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Chris Jesty undertook the revisions, using an imitation of Wainwright's hand lettering to make the alterations look as unobtrusive as possible. |
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In golf, the terrain on golf courses is often made more rugged and hilly to make the holes harder to play. |
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Many do not make the distinction, but one is still recognized, however uncertainly, by the Italian park service. |
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This misplacement relied on William Roy's attempt to make the map of the peoples of ancient Scotland fit De Situ Britanniae. |
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Work is also being undertaken to make the many weirs on the river easier to negotiate for fish. |
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The script was intended to follow elements of the horror genre and make the episode scary. |
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An example will best make the matter clear, and throw light, perhaps, on many cases of apparently mysterious rustings. |
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Both companies make the upright, grand, semigrand, and baby-grand pianos, and in such styles as colonial, empire, antique, etc. |
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Regardless of where the show flat is, developers have come up with techniques to make the flats look a lot larger than they actually are. |
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But the thought that he would finally be able to complete his mother's shraadha would make the son emotional. |
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Obey the spur of the moment. These accumulated it is that make the impulse and the impetus of the life of genius. |
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Someone had attempted to make the foul ambience less offensive by liberal squirtings with a sickly sweet freshener. |
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These sterigmata are retained and make the twigs rough for several years after leaf fall. |
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We should make the printing direction sticky so the user doesn't have to keep setting it. |
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He said he would pay them a cent for every two loads of stones or gravel which they should wheel in to make the causey. |
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They attempted to make the house childproof by covering all sharp corners with soft foam. |
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The funny part of it all is that the starling appears to make the chippies do whatever it pleases. |
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They will make the transition from being unskilled in thinking to being nanowly, closedmindedly skilled. |
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Whether an early collegegoer, a late one, or right on the mark, you want to make the most informed choice you can. |
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Who is here, who has been de-ranked and who has been up to no good in the eyes of those that make the rules. |
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We used a sale of the business at a ridiculously high multiple to make the numbers work, a deus ex machina. |
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They not only forswore dopping themselves, but also contrived to make the National Party forgo a dop. |
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Often used with the studio is the egg-crate, which minimizes side spill and does make the beam a bit more controllable. |
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And they shall make the ephod of gold, of blue, and of purple, of scarlet, and fine twined linen, with cunning work. |
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If you make the animal angry, walk slowly backwards and avoid making eye contact. |
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A kind of fine Norwegian hay, used as packing in the finnesko to keep the feet warm and to make the fur boot fit firmly. |
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The single-barrel, freehanded drill guide is then used with the 2.5 mm drill bit to make the pilot holes in the inner vertebra. |
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These loud-piping frogs make the mantlet to ring. It seems to be the very metropolis of frogdom. |
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It was the task of the fusters, or joiners, to make the wooden saddlebows while the painters were employed to decorate the completed saddles. |
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It's all part of a move toward ghettoization, they charge, an attempt to make the poor feel so shamefully unwanted that they will leave the area. |
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To make the most of your golden years, study the points enumerated above and then resolve to do just the opposite. |
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Cosmetic imaging helps my patients see for themselves how gum lifts can make the difference between a satisfactory case and a great case. |
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Word reached the ear of the prosecuting attorney of the only testimony that could establish a motive and make the crime a hanging offence. |
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It was able to make the journey across the Straits of Dover in around three hours. |
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To make the game more interesting, let's create a personal score display that matches the global high score display. |
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Bede hoped to visit Ecgbert again in 734, but was too ill to make the journey. |
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Longer forks make the bike more cumbersome, but you will be able to huck off of more stuff. |
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It can be filled with oil to make the proprietary Oilite and similar material for bearings. |
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Bell bronze is used to make the tone rings of many professional model banjos. |
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Unlike his predecessors, Constantine neglected to make the trip to the Capitoline Hill and perform customary sacrifices at the Temple of Jupiter. |
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Soy flour is often added to bread as an improver. It helps the dough texture and can make the bread quite soft. |
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Germany feared that the fiscal indiscipline of countries like Italy and Greece could make the new euro currency unstable. |
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The desired effect was to make the patient sweat violently and thus purge all corruption from the blood which was caused by the disease. |
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You need to click on the button in the top-left corner in order to make the image interactable. |
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To make the journey northward, Quinn believed that they used the pinnace and other small boats to transport themselves and their belongings. |
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Muldoon felt that the dissolution would be immediate and he would later introduce a bill in parliament to retroactively make the abolition legal. |
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Some people say I make the best joe in town. But you know there's a kiosk over on Eighteenth Avenue, not that far from here. |
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Even how a child picks up and handles the cat can make the kitty begin to fear the very sight of the youngster. |
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He tried for the Kensington and Chelsea seat after the death of Alan Clark, but did not make the shortlist. |
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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. |
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Also created at this time were the vast underground reserves of water that make the water table higher than average in the Vale of Aylesbury. |
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We always, it seems, are provided with a glut of material on the next big thing and not enough on how to make the last big thing actually work. |
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Some buildings have been taken over and now make the old part of Enfield Industrial Estate close to the town centre on Hewell Road. |
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The Times has also reported that such an arrangement will make the UK purchase of its Tranche 3 commitments more likely. |
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Nearly 30 percent of test flights required more than routine maintenance to make the aircraft flightworthy again. |
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The main problem to which Papin had given no solution was how to make the action repeatable at regular intervals. |
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The simplest valve gears give events of fixed length during the engine cycle and often make the engine rotate in only one direction. |
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The infinitesimal approach fell out of favor in the 19th century because it was difficult to make the notion of an infinitesimal precise. |
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Guru Gobind Singh makes it clear that human birth is obtained with great fortune, therefore one needs to be able to make the most of this life. |
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However, programs leading to Staatsexamen did usually not make the transition to Bologna degrees. |
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But with the home side likewise unable to make the most of a period of first-half ascendancy, Villa were swift to make amends on the restart. |
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I got a big lump of cash up front and a lifetime of alimony checks that would make the angels blush. |
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The doctors at the hospital check on the patients when they make the rounds at nine o'clock. |
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On new buildings, a solid fire retardant barrier over the rafters can make the thatch sacrificial in case of fire. |
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Additional seasonings are sometimes used, such as additional brown sugar or mustard to make the sauce more tangy. |
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For some years past I have managed to make the capitalist class pay me several pounds a week for writing books against capitalism. |
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The piece was a great success and it encouraged Handel to make the transition from writing Italian operas to English choral works. |
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At this time Jelka was too ill to make the journey across the Channel, and Delius was temporarily buried in the local cemetery at Grez. |
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Recognising that their shows were no longer about the music, they decided to make the August tour their last. |
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On the site is a confluence of the two small streams that make the Whitelake River. |
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Once the screenplay is finished, I'd just as soon not make the film at all. |
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Nolan initially intended to make the film as early as 2003, postponing the project after agreeing to make Batman Begins. |
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Jiang Zemin has almost managed to make the event disappear down an Orwellian memory hole. |
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Martin Amis, an important novelist in the late twentieth and twentieth centuries, carried into fiction this drive to make the familiar strange. |
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In unofficiated matches, a ball is out only if the player entitled to make the call is sure that the ball is out. |
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A new format featuring shorter matches with modified rules was designed to make the game more appealing to spectators and television audiences. |
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Instead of three clubs expanding the division, five were added to make the number to fifteen. |
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At a meeting which followed the World Cup, the International Cricket Conference agreed to make the competition a quadrennial event. |
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The basic problem was that the older players were past their peak while younger replacements did not make the progress expected. |
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When Juan Antonio Samaranch was elected IOC president in 1980 his desire was to make the IOC financially independent. |
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A new South stand was built in 2005 and 2006 to make the stadium into a complete bowl. |
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England then went on to make the final to face Australia again after losing to them by 10 points a week earlier. |
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They failed to make the final of the tournament for the second year in succession. |
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The three metapoems of L'Allegria make the point that poetry is concerned with transcending the real, and representing the Ideal. |
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To make the ad, the engineers at Honda constructed a Rube Goldberg Machine made entirely out of car parts from a Honda Accord Touring. |
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To capitalise on its investment, the channel introduced a number of new techniques to make the coverage more interesting for armchair fans. |
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The League Council examined the dispute, but then passed on their findings to the Conference of Ambassadors to make the final decision. |
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The city's two airports have helped make the city one of the most visited weekend destinations in Europe. |
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In practice, however, measurement errors will make the two figures slightly off when reported by national statistical agencies. |
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This would make the use of GDP more attractive for politicians in countries with increasing national debt and decreasing assets. |
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For another example, for companies wishing to make the most profits, they must ensure they open their stores in the correct location. |
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To make the mirliton, in a bowl, break the eggs, add both the sugars, the double cream, almond meal, lemon zest and melted butter. |
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The original plans for an attack around the river Somme were modified to let the British make the main effort. |
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When the government failed to make the reparations payments in January 1923, French troops occupied German industrial areas along the Ruhr. |
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The Americans were under no obligation to make the test site available for subsequent tests. |
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It took Campania and Plym eight weeks to make the voyage, as they sailed around the Cape of Good Hope instead of traversing the Suez Canal. |
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When the creator came across the characters, created by an animator who specializes in MMD styling, MMDSatoshi, they decided to make the video. |
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The water used to make the whisky comes from the Allt a' Mhuilinn, the stream that flows from Ben Nevis's northern corrie. |
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Many people choose to make the small diversion to include it on their traverse. |
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The first is that it must have adequate powers over legislation to make the government think twice before making a decision. |
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Boeing expects these developments to make the 787 significantly quieter both inside and out. |
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After World War II, Australia was the first country to make the drug available for civilian use. |
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The Crown Estate did not make the list public and most of the consortia also remained silent. |
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The Treaty of Lisbon will also make the Union's human rights charter, the Charter of Fundamental Rights, legally binding. |
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A career in the Church was rejected because a stammering clergyman might make the family appear ridiculous. |
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It also failed to make the BBC's playlist, which the band attributed to the song's depiction of prostitution. |
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Cameron framed the romance with the elderly Rose to make the intervening years palpable and poignant. |
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Jackson wanted a gritty realism and historical regard for the fantasy, and attempted to make the world rational and believable. |
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After behaviour has changed radically, small but quick changes of the phenotype follow to make the organism fitter to its changed goals. |
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The benefits of such a service are held to be demonstrated by the buyer's willingness to make the exchange. |
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Those are the necessitous things you must do to make the farm a going concern and make it attractive to the farmer to buy it. |
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Despite its Alpine location, prevailing southerly winds make the climate of Liechtenstein comparatively mild. |
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These cues make the message clearer and give the listener an indication of what way the information should be received. |
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The goal is to reduce costs as quickly as possible and thus make the wind parks more economically viable. |
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He was advised by them not to make the journey to Fife because of weather conditions, but he travelled anyway. |
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However, he thought Whitehouse no fool and suspected that he might have the practical skill to make the existing design work. |
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This in turn is expected to make the area more attractive to investors and families. |
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If the contractor whom he is appointed for defaults it is the naidm's responsibility to attempt to make the contractor pay. |
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I think this summer's IJA, with its line-up of guests, is going to be quite good as well. I know I'm working my bullocks off to make the workshops line-up sparkle and shine. |
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Mammals need two genes to make the taste receptor for sugar. Studies in various cats showed that one of these genes has mutated and no longer works. |
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If it make the indictment be insensible or uncertain, it shall be quashed. |
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But, as luck would have it, scarcely had he started to row his boat again when an oarlock broke, and so it took him the best part of an hour to make the trip. |
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Locals are campaigning to make the area a registered village green. |
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Rose entered the week on the playoff bubble at 34th in the standings, knowing that he needed a good finish to make the final event at East Lake Golf Club. |
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Changing abbreviations does not make the dating any less Christcentric! |
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Watson hit a tremendous iron shot from the right hand rough to within ten feet, but could not make the resulting putt, leaving Rose to celebrate the biggest win of his career. |
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However, the ambiguous way the ITF described the Grand Slam in their Constitution led to journalists continuing to make the same assumption as Vecsey over two decades later. |
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Although they failed to win the title in 1967, by the end of the season, the Lotus 49 and the DFV engine were mature enough to make the Lotus team dominant again. |
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Hay that was too wet at cutting may develop rot and mold after being baled, creating the potential for toxins to form in the feed, which could make the animals sick. |
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The dipsomaniac and the abstainer are not only both mistaken, but they both make the same mistake. They both regard wine as a drug and not as a drink. |
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He needs to put on his big boy pants and make the tough choice. |
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He called the ebony mistress of the establishment to him, and speaking to her kindly and winningly, as any dutiful husband should, told her to make the change, which she did. |
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Ecclesiastes, who sometimes seems to cast himself as the Eeyore of the Old Testament, would simply shrug his shoulders and tell you to make the best of what you had. |
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As in Old Irish and traditional literary Welsh, the verb can be preceded by a particle with no real meaning by itself but originally used to make the utterance easier. |
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Due to Shai Hulud being unable to make the rearranged dates, Raging Speedhorn and Creeper played as the main support bands on the 20 and 21 May respectively. |
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Hence you will make the piebald Church more piebald than ever. |
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To paraphrase the critic of the Times, if one may make the facsimile of a human being out of bronze, why not the facsimile of a Brillo carton out of plywood? |
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That parameter setting is just a fiddle to make the lighting look right. |
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The two ministers were unwilling to follow Bern's lead and delayed the use of such bread until a synod in Zurich could be convened to make the final decision. |
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It was enough, Johanna said, to make the sely children forstraught. |
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Bacteria such as Mycobacterium leprae and Treponema pallidum can be grown in animals, although serological and microscopic techniques make the use of live animals unnecessary. |
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Another estimate, however, puts the total death toll at around 70,000, which if true would make the conflict proportionately deadlier than the American Civil War. |
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He was out of pancake mix so he had to make the batter from scratch. |
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We will ornament the windows with trim to make the room seem brighter. |
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A generation of innocent young men, their heads full of high abstractions like Honour, Glory and England, went off to war to make the world safe for democracy. |
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The whole point of the laws as drawn is to make the scrum a contest whereby the put-in side has the advantage of timing the feed and having its hooker closer to the ball. |
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It links with LGV Nord on the border with France, allowing Eurostar trains heading to Brussels to make the transition between the two without having to reduce speed. |
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He can hack like no one else and make the program work as expected. |
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The BMA has criticised the STPs, maintaining they are unworkable and will not make the NHS securely sustainable but threaten to reduce services drastically. |
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These great banks and others make the North Sea particularly hazardous to navigate, which has been alleviated by the implementation of satellite navigation systems. |
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He now saw a chance to make the United States a valuable economic partner. |
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The crown was added to make the badge a specifically royal symbol. |
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Liberal Democrats will continue to make the case for alternatives. |
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Workington was thought to make the best quality rail track in the world. |
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The four great monarchies make the subject of ancient story. |
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The warm temperatures of the Caribbean Sea and the fact that Cuba sits across the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico combine to make the country prone to frequent hurricanes. |
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Both Convocations make the appointment if an Archbishop is prosecuted. |
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Good riverside paths make the whole route accessible to walkers. |
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Every time I want to make the West scream, I squeeze on Berlin. |
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In October 2016, Salmond said Liverpool or Manchester would be an ideal site to rebuild the Houses of Parliament, to make the economy less dependent on London. |
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The challenging 1 in 3 gradients make the route popular with cyclists. |
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Orville, then recuperating from serious injuries sustained in a crash, replied telling him not to make the Channel attempt until he could come to France and assist. |
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However, there is one railroad that connects Chile with Argentina via the Andes, and there are others that make the same connection via southern Bolivia. |
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We need to find a way to make the system more approachable for survivors. |
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Harkin had become convinced his allergies were cured by taking bee pollen pills, and was urged to make the spending by two of his influential constituents. |
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Wake up Saturday morning, and look at a map. The gig's halfway down to Brighton. Itshay. But I've given my word, so I leave early, make the gig, they love me. |
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The revisions were made by Chris Jesty, and the publishers used an imitation font of Wainwright's hand lettering to make the alterations look as unobtrusive as possible. |
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An effort was also made to make the layout of the buildings easier, consolidating all the offices on one floor, Fellows' Rooms on another and all the accommodation on a third. |
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In 1997, Rafsanjani was succeeded by moderate reformist Mohammad Khatami, whose government attempted, unsuccessfully, to make the country more free and democratic. |
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They ringed the trees to make the clearing easier next year. |
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It was released more than a year later in the US, and, although it did not make the Billboard Hot 100, it reached number 28 in the Alternative Songs chart. |
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Techniques exist to jam mobile signals or make the phones unusable. |
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If the site is forced to send a mesage against its will,...we make the site go to an error state, and remain there. Note that the site can fail for other reasons. |
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All the colours of poetry, however splendid, can never paint natural objects in such a manner as to make the description be taken for a real landskip. |
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The kingdom simply lacked the money to make the entire fleet seaworthy, so it was decided in February that the heavy ships would remain laid up at Chatham. |
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The term compact was coined in the 1970s by the Daily Mail, one of the earlier newspapers to make the change, although it now once again calls itself a tabloid. |
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The chalky soils make the area similar to the Champagne region. |
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By accepting a stock option for compensation, an employee invests his or her own trust in the belief that he or she will help make the company acquire a higher value. |
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The various clan societies make the Highland games one of the main focus of their seasonal activities, usually making an appearance at as many such events as possible. |
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Icebergs, especially in May to October, make the area even more dangerous. |
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Its pure white sands, sun and warm weather all year long, and a sea ideal for water sports, make the beach of Punta Sal one of the finest on the Peruvian coast. |
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Mine owners were also reluctant to make the annual payments, viewing the engines as theirs once erected, and threatened to petition Parliament to repeal Watt's patent. |
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The new Treaty also set out to simplify the Community Treaties, deleting more than 56 obsolete articles and renumbering the rest in order to make the whole more legible. |
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They are also responsible for ensuring that the curriculum is suitable so as to make the transition into compulsory education as easy as possible. |
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The patron of the living who had the right to nominate a particular priest might make the choice, but the living was actually granted by the local bishop. |
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In December 2012, Centro stated that they intended to build the line in phases to make the scheme more affordable, with the first stretch running from Wednesbury to Dudley. |
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Carthage was a maritime power, and the Roman lack of ships and naval experience would make the path to the victory a long and difficult one for the Roman Republic. |
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We have records of the monastery needing a new grant of land to raise two thousand more cattle to get the calf skins to make the vellum to make the manuscript. |
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Cultural shock and the lack of understanding a new language make the initial stage of moving to a different country be difficult but they are eventually bettered. |
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Sceptics of fiscal policy also make the argument of Ricardian equivalence. |
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Some research shows that the remittance effect is not strong enough to make the remaining natives in countries with high emigration flows better off. |
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