We tried some Valsalva manoeuvres, followed by carotid sinus massage, each with no effect. |
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He added that the mine could also have been washed out to sea from recent Royal Navy manoeuvres in Scottish coastal waters. |
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It is a much larger bird than the waterhen and it is intriguing to watch it as it conducts its underwater manoeuvres. |
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The large air brake, which is used in landing and in combat manoeuvres, is located on top of the fuselage. |
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They printed photos of the defence minister trying to watch military manoeuvres through binoculars with the lens caps still on. |
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Strategically, too, Napoleon dazzled and overwhelmed his opponents with a series of brisk, bold manoeuvres. |
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The technique was pretty much the same as in a Phoenix, although he had to remember that he couldn't do manoeuvres like a loop-the-loop. |
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We join Duncan astern in the wheelhouse and watch as he carefully manoeuvres into the first of the five locks. |
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Driving instructors and parents will no longer be able to use the traditional method of teaching manoeuvres, even with L-plates. |
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It is also important to remember that political manoeuvres and machinations can fail. |
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Deals and manoeuvres are still being made, and there has been no final determination of international axes and power blocs. |
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You are not afraid of taking on difficult tasks or ventures that call for skillful manoeuvres. |
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Such manoeuvres, however, are perhaps the inevitable consequence of scientists who are backed into a corner. |
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He saw possible moves, manoeuvres, and attacks Alsonte could make, each motion replaying in his mind. |
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Somehow, the complex high-speed manoeuvres and fluid movements seem to come naturally to a small child. |
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Even if we do draw the line somewhere and ban certain eugenic manoeuvres, the financial incentive may play a prominent role. |
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The agreement ensures the Plain is protected despite increased military manoeuvres. |
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This year's parade was unique since it involved military manoeuvres for the first time in 17 years. |
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Some of the payouts were quite clearly linked to accidents that took place during military manoeuvres. |
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The networks have focused on details of tactics, weapons and military manoeuvres. |
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But its demands for regime change and its military manoeuvres are increasing tensions at the same time. |
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The real reason is that she is ashamed of New Labour's backstairs manoeuvres to starve the nursery nurses back to work. |
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All learners have to do these manoeuvres to be able to pass the official driving test. |
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But space restrictions at the terminal will force drivers to undertake tricky reversing manoeuvres in and out of tight spaces. |
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As bad luck would have it, nine German U-boats stumbled across the manoeuvres and torpedoed the ships, sinking two ships and damaging a third. |
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Dazzling mid-air manoeuvres were a feature of some of the more dramatic otherworldly episodes. |
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The centre has a small car park, which makes manoeuvres difficult for pupils, and it leads out on to the hazardous mini-roundabout on Dock Road. |
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Twice the fish is close, the tuna boat far behind, bemused fishermen watching our manoeuvres with some trepidation. |
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He says the key is keeping tension on the string and progressing from basic tricks to more complicated manoeuvres. |
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Substances such as diesel and liquid soap are poured on the road to facilitate skids, wheelspins, and other manoeuvres. |
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Here the boarders spin and jump, aiming to impress five judges who are marking on height, standard manoeuvres, rotation and overall impression. |
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Arriving in the town itself, the taxi manoeuvres around skips and building equipment, evidence that developers are moving in. |
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You seek freedom and space in a romantic involvement and make bold manoeuvres towards a new way of life. |
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The forward periscope is replaced by a passive optical periscope for night-time manoeuvres. |
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Kitesurfing is the world's fastest growing watersport with new innovations and progressive manoeuvres being discovered regularly. |
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Negotiations, haggling and manoeuvres are taking place both in the open and behind the scenes. |
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Instead, they indulged in their usual hole-and-corner and devious manoeuvres. |
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Like Fuller and Guderian, de Gaulle advocated a fully professional army, with an armoured corps capable of swift manoeuvres. |
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The really clever ones manage to get hold of industrial-strength incendiaries, which sound as if the SAS have come to town on manoeuvres. |
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However, in a series of manoeuvres, government whips agreed to his demands for two undisclosed concessions to benefit his constituency. |
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Anand was at his positional best in getting the better of Svidler, who fell prey to finely disguised manoeuvres. |
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The pigeons, probably well used to such manoeuvres, took off timely, to the chagrin of their destructors. |
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The Monaco GP was a bit of a procession, with very few overtaking manoeuvres. |
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The work's extreme manoeuvres seem designed to seduce its dancers into displays of gymnastic narcissism. |
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After a series of diversionary manoeuvres, he crossed the river under cover of a thunderstorm and defeated Porus. |
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On deck, Freyen was looking at the manoeuvres to dock the vessel with a serious look on his face. |
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This third try was symptomatic of a day of off-load practice for Bradford as they were given maximum time and space to execute their manoeuvres. |
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After a few years Mandy found she enjoyed dressage, where horses perform set manoeuvres signalled by the rider. |
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With nothing going on but election manoeuvres, the end result is stasis, which is perhaps, as the young woman's placard suggests, what everyone wants. |
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After roll call, she dives straight in with the day's tactical manoeuvres. |
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As the women made their protest, motorists began inching up the grass verge to get past their horseboxes, or made a series of tight manoeuvres to turn away. |
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They normally wear Home Service review order dress as would have been worn on garrison duties and manoeuvres during the latter part of the nineteenth century. |
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It amazed audiences at its first appearances at Western air shows in the 1990s with aerobatic manoeuvres previously unknown for a twin-engined jet aircraft its size. |
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This included the completion of a challenging course of tight turns and full boom operational manoeuvres while onlookers were given a running commentary of their every move. |
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Between 1 and 9 December 1916 there followed political manoeuvres of Byzantine complexity over which historians continue to dispute like so many medieval schoolmen. |
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The best thing is that the manoeuvres are completely physically untaxing. |
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Dr. O'Neill could have provided valuable assistance especially with respect to uterine relaxation before and during the manoeuvres to free the fetus. |
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While figure skating involves graceful acrobatic manoeuvres with music in the background, the freestyle performer executes a set of movements tracing a figure on the floor. |
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Reverse parking into small spaces is also a must as it would not do to keep the purchasers waiting as simple manoeuvres turn into a protracted disaster. |
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What should have been a fast flowing cat-and-mouse chase, with the highs and lows of your stomach on a bumpy sea ride, manoeuvres into two-and-a-half hours of drab mishmash. |
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However, these men were used to working in small units and large scale manoeuvres were alien not only to them but to the officers in command of them. |
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In 1936, 1,200 men in the Red Army parachuted during manoeuvres near Kiev. |
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Whatever the short-term outcome of these manoeuvres, the splits and divisions within Fiji's ruling strata will only fester and lead to further political instability. |
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Walking the ancient driftway through the marshes, we paused by the derelict drainage mill to watch the aerial manoeuvres of a mixed flight of golden plovers and lapwings. |
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Their success enabled the Allies to anticipate German military manoeuvres, saving thousands of lives and turning the tide of the war in the North Atlantic. |
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Skydivers are twirling and twisting through the air, performing complicated manoeuvres. |
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He was referred to a cardiologist after vagal manoeuvres failed to control the heart rate. |
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Many private and public events were accompanied by music, ranging from nightly dining to military parades and manoeuvres. |
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Edward's determination, military experience and skilful naval manoeuvres ended what was to him rebellion. |
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Cromwell appears to have taken a role in some of this group's political manoeuvres. |
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Wellington was eating a chicken leg while observing the manoeuvres of the French army through a spyglass. |
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Troops were still in Port Said and on operational manoeuvres when the order came from London. |
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Howe may have been dissuaded from pursuing aggressive manoeuvres due to the memory of the grievous losses the British suffered at Bunker Hill. |
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In political manoeuvres with Westminster politicians, Chalmers was opposed by John Hope. |
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Haig's poor public speaking skills aside, the manoeuvres were thought to have shown the reformed army efficient. |
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It was Fisher's policy to conduct all manoeuvres at full speed while training the fleet, and to expect the best from his crews. |
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The king visited Portland in 1936 to see Portland's top secret research and naval manoeuvres. |
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Although he claimed several triumphs, these were largely propaganda manoeuvres. |
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Yet the conflict inside the new host of the new loyalty, and the political manoeuvres used by the Russian Empire, led to splits in the Cossacks. |
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Due to military manoeuvres of imperial and French forces, he was forced to make a detour to the south, bringing him to Geneva. |
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Air-cooled 450bhp Pratt and Whitney radial engines provide enough power to perform the aerobatic manoeuvres and carry a wing walker. |
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The fetal vital signs respond to labour and delivery treatments and manoeuvres, and the simulator produces APGAR scores. |
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Gone are the days of processional races, with grands prix so far packed with overtaking manoeuvres and multiple pit stops. |
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It turned out to be American tanks going on manoeuvres in the Grunewald forest, firing blanks and throwing thunderflashes. |
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The manoeuvres of Microsoft and HP appear to comply with the letter of the regulations, even if they flout their spirit. |
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These swingby manoeuvres were a way of saving fuel while using the gravity of planets to boost speed. |
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In August, Victoria and Albert visited their son, the Prince of Wales, who was attending army manoeuvres near Dublin, and spent a few days holidaying in Killarney. |
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The Antarctic Treaty prohibits any military activity in Antarctica, including the establishment of military bases and fortifications, military manoeuvres, and weapons testing. |
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O'Connell's manoeuvres were important, but the decisive turning point came with the change in public opinion in Britain in favour of emancipation. |
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In spring, and occasionally in autumn, birds may soar high above the heronry and chase each other, undertake aerial manoeuvres or swoop down towards the ground. |
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Also, during certain manoeuvres they augment the primary actuators. |
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The secondary manoeuvres of tocolysis and prolongation of gestation are less well evidence based but appear better researched than primary prevention. |
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Faced with this sudden turn of events, Britain aligned herself with Prussia, in a series of political manoeuvres known as the Diplomatic Revolution. |
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A programme of realistic exercises was adopted including simulated French raids, defensive manoeuvres, night attacks and blockades, all carried out at maximum speed. |
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By summer, the division was under the command of III Corps and was based in North West England, around Liverpool, to conduct manoeuvres and training. |
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Much of the surrounding countryside and notably Slapton Sands was closed to the public while it was used by US troops for practise landings and manoeuvres. |
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With greater situational awareness achieved, the manoeuvres were performed through air craft borne, heliborne and land troops in a highly effective manner. |
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In addition these points of high ground are proximate to the Elsick Mounth, an ancient trackway used by Romans and Caledonians for military manoeuvres. |
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After confused manoeuvres between Reigate and Dorking as Parliamentary troops closed in, his force of 500 men fled northwards and was overtaken and routed at Kingston. |
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Preston coroner's court heard how they were practising autorotation manoeuvres, in which the engine's power is cut while the helicopter's blades keep rotating. |
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The heavily forested, swampy terrain made the infantry manoeuvres of the legions impossible to execute and allowed the Germans to defeat the legions in detail. |
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