To recover from the shunt on Saturday and go on to win the second event was very satisfying indeed. |
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Just as the trade starts to recover from the Christmas and New Year rush, the Burgundians arrive with barrel samples of the new vintage. |
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Poor nutrition can also make it more difficult to recover from flares of the disease. |
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I'm told optimism also helps patients recover from coronary bypass surgery. |
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A well-designed GPS receiver usually can recover from a deep signal null within approximately one second. |
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Protecting hagfish populations during potential reproductive periods may allow them to recover from the pressures of a commercial fishery. |
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Give yourself a moisturizing or exfoliating mask to help skin recover from flakiness and to wake up a dull complexion. |
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British tennis has taken half a century to recover from men discarding their flannels and flashing a bit of leg. |
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There was no way he was going to recover from this and be able to lead the senate effectively. |
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It will take the losers considerable time to recover from this disastrous performance. |
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Before Kayline could recover from her surprise, he had disappeared into the crowd. |
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People get over all sorts of disabilities and recover from all sorts of things. |
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From the sounds downstairs, my mother was trying to recover from last night's hangover and put on a decent dress for her daughters' weddings. |
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And they're there to give you a cup of coffee and couple of custard creams to help you recover from your ' flu jab. |
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On average it takes one day per time zone crossed to recover from the effects of jet lag. |
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Chessington and Hook United Football Club has been thrown a lifeline to help recover from debts threatening to dash promotion dreams. |
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Tonic herbs, or adaptogens, help the body resist and recover from stress and can increase energy, vitality and sexual vigor. |
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Yet if the Welsh recover from their shaky start, it will be another manager who will be receiving the glory and adulation of a nation. |
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How the Church will recover from the latest round of scandals remains to be seen. |
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Though they are not friends-Jarvis is a reserved man who does not display emotions easily-they help each other recover from their losses. |
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While vigorous vines may be able to recover from a single defoliation, repeated defoliation can weaken the vine to the point of death. |
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It will take the next few days, months and years for the families to try to recover from this. |
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It's terribly important to give yourself time not just to grieve but to recover from the grief. |
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The mental scars were harder to bear than the physical, and it took Janine many months to recover from the trauma of the crash. |
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Some 13 firefighters also had to take time off to recover from injuries suffered. |
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Shane had taken time out to recover from a viral infection and jetted off to the sun for a break. |
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The harbour authority incurred expense in lighting and buoying the wreck which it sought to recover from the defendants. |
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In January, Anita had her hip replacement removed to help her recover from MRSA, but this left her crippled. |
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A downhill tuck lets you slice through the wind, maintaining speed while you recover from the climb. |
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They rotate their crops, thereby helping the soil to recover from centuries of monoculture under sugarcane. |
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Shana was the first to recover from the disturbing sight of blood trickling through Krist's fingers. |
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The government pledged not to raise excise rates on cigarettes this year to allow the industry to recover from a slump. |
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Short bouts of intense social stress improved the ability in the mice to recover from the flu. |
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Recently he was forced to take an extended break to recover from a spiral fracture to his fibula, which ended up requiring multiple surgeries. |
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Obviously, the shorter the time required to recover from a drawdown the better the performance profile. |
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I will never fully recover from the loss, but your outpouring of kindness and understanding has made her death that much more bearable. |
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In the letter he told of Barbara's battle to recover from her horrific ordeal. |
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Boys go in groups of fifteen to thirty to bush camps, where they stay for ninety to a hundred days to recover from the operation. |
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Last week there were hopes that Pake would recover from his illness, but since then he has passed on to his eternal reward. |
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I then recover from seeing a passing shot called narrowly out to set up two break points. |
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You are hoping that the company is incredibly cheap, as judged by the low PSR, and is actually able to recover from its bad patch. |
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Since the oils do not mix with water, they are easy to recover from the condensed liquid. |
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In a pitiful attempt to recover from the picture-posting fiasco I shall share some interesting information with you. |
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The manager, whose prospects will be enhanced if Ronald De Boer can recover from a calf injury, cautions against adopting tactics designed only to avoid defeat. |
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As the companies that make PCs try to recover from their worst slump in years, you'll find incredible deals on new systems during the holiday shopping season. |
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At least one study has shown that leaf-chewing insects took longer to recover from defaunation than did other more mobile taxonomic groups, such as homopterans. |
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This makes her in some ways the perfect person to help the NFL recover from its self-inflicted wounds and get its act together. |
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One might be able to recover from waste relatively pure metals, such as chromium and molybdenum, which are for all practical purposes identical to unused materials. |
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Both came through a tiebreaker set against an unseeded opponent and then ran off with a second set, sort of a statement for their ability to recover from adversity. |
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Many computers include recovery features in their BIOS that allow them to recover from an interrupted BIOS flash that would normally brick the device. |
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In 1946 she was in England again, reading, experimenting with Anglo-Catholicism, trying to recover from the devastation of yet another wave of love affairs. |
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The process of deciding which vertex to fix next is not infallible, and when a wrong choice is made, there may be no later opportunity to recover from it. |
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The last thing they need now is this afternoon's game at Leeds, who will be desperate to recover from the disappointment of Wednesday's comprehensive defeat by Real Madrid. |
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During each stop, Mooney takes a few days to recover from his time at sea and replenish his body. |
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They would have been automatic first team choices, but instead they remain sidelined for the remainder of the year as they recover from their respective injuries. |
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The bottom line is I made a series of poor choices and overestimated my ability to recognize, react, and recover from a poor autorotation flown by my copilot. |
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Less than two years later, Andy was awarded a baby who would recover from temporary jaundice, and eventually Green became the legal co-parent of both children. |
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The multi-talented Pretoria athlete, competing as a leg amputee was trying to recover from a twisted ankle to his good leg during Sunday's competition. |
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Shah Jahan would recover from his illness only to spend his last days as an old and decrepit man, imprisoned by his son Aurangzeb, in the fort in Agra. |
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She's a strong old bird, but I don't think she'll recover from this one. |
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Barely had incensed Dickensians time to recover from this shock than they had to suffer a worse one. |
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But that's because we have a massive and extremely professional military and that gives us the luxury of being able to recover from some early goofs. |
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Very few teams recover from being 3-1 down inside English football's most imposing atmosphere, but Ranieri's did on his so-called baptism of fire. |
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The gloomy forecast will come as a blow to the struggling industry, which was only just beginning to recover from the effects of the foot and mouth crisis earlier this year. |
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Ashley Giles is confident that England will recover from the thrashing. |
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This pathological condition is called guttural pouch tympany, and surgical treatment is necessary for affected foals to recover from this disease. |
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In trying to recover from the turbulence, the first officer moved the rudder, the big fin on the back of the tail fin, the moveable piece, back and forth, back and forth. |
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The court postponed execution of the sentence, to give her time to recover from childbirth and to wean the new baby. |
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Except Lucio just had a bone removed from his hip and put into his wrist, to help him recover from a motorcycle accident injury, so it's down to me and Dave to cook. |
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We all had a couple of days here to recover from ferocious jet lag. |
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I know how long it takes to recover from being enslaved, because I was trafficked myself. |
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It's always triggering but when it pops up I just make sure I use the tools to help myself just to recover from listening to these type of stories in the news. |
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It was a question of degree for the tribunal in each case to decide whether the change of mind is too late to recover from the unwise and unwonted words. |
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He rallied the reformed cities and cantons and helped them to recover from the defeat at Kappel. |
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It would take well into the Triassic for life to recover from this catastrophe. |
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In an alienation of affections claim, a plaintiff can recover from a third party who has deprived her of the affection of her spouse. |
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The airspeed was so low that there was insufficient elevator authority to recover from the stall. |
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The older medicine used to speak of two ways, lysis and crisis, one gradual, the other abrupt, in which one might recover from a bodily disease. |
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It was clear that Davis had a serious problem and ultimately one he would never recover from. |
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Many of her experienced nobles were dead and the economy which had barely begun to recover from the earlier wars was once again in tatters. |
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While Germany struggled to recover from the destruction of the War, the recovery effort began in June 1948, moving on from emergency relief. |
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To recover from the losses sustained at Cravant, fresh troops under the Earl of Douglas were dispatched from Scotland to France. |
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Dolphins can tolerate and recover from extreme injuries such as shark bites although the exact methods used to achieve this are not known. |
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The ability of a fishery to recover from overfishing depends on whether the ecosystem's conditions are suitable for the recovery. |
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The Japanese had wanted reparations to help families recover from lost fathers and sons as well as heavy taxation from the government. |
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The area has a fragile ecosystem which is slow to change and slow to recover from disruptions or damage. |
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This period was marked by turmoil in much of the world, as Europe struggled to recover from the devastation of the First World War. |
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He would later return to recover from an injury sustained in the Battle of Portland. |
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In 1861, Swinburne visited Menton on the French Riviera to recover from excessive use of alcohol, staying at the Villa Laurenti. |
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The government started to initiate a number of social and economic reforms in order to recover from the damage of the war. |
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Generally, smaller nerves are more easily blocked and take longer to recover from local anaesthetics than large myelinated fibres. |
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A FORMER RTE reporter who was carjacked at gunpoint in Papua New Guinea will fly to Australia today to recover from her ordeal. |
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For decades, electrotherapy has been used to help professional athletes and weekend warriors recover from strains, sprains, pain, and injuries. |
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Here, Babydoll, Beauty and Star offer up solid advice on how to recover from your own OMG-worthy moments. |
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Q I have recently been very impressed with the care I have received from my district nurses, who have been excellent in helping me recover from cancer surgery. |
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The rapid recovery feature allows the sensor to recover from large changes in pressure faster than other vacuum gauges on the market, significantly decreasing downtime. |
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It seems the lanky Alabamian will never recover from double-bogeying the final hole of the 2001 US Open, which cost him the chance of a first Major. |
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Considerable industrial restructuring has helped the region to recover from deindustrialisation and the demise of the mass production of textiles. |
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I can usually recover from a garden variety cold with rest and fluids. |
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Vertebrates took 30 million years to recover from this event. |
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Earth's biodiversity required substantial time to recover from this event, despite the probable existence of an abundance of vacant ecological niches. |
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It takes centuries for a peat bog to recover from disturbance. |
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The ability to avoid or recover from predation often makes the difference between life and death, and is therefore one of the strongest components of natural selection. |
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As of August 2012, Japan had yet to fully recover from the 1991 crash. |
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Walpole was able to recover from these events by removing the patent. |
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Although these voucher values are the maximum amounts that opticians can recover from the NHS, they might well make additional marketing offers of their own. |
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In Gaul, which did not really recover from the invasions of the third century, there was widespread insecurity and economic decline in the 300s, perhaps worst in Armorica. |
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The stock market took a long time to recover from the downtrend. |
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Summer has the young monk, now 17, becoming hot and bothered by a beautiful young woman who has been brought to the monastery to recover from a spiritual malaise. |
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For every advance, it seems, researchers must recover from another pratfall, necessitating steady development and, naturally, a cartload of patience. |
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