In late spring and early summer a large fog triangle fills the southwestern half of the bay, covering just a few kilometres inland. |
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The circles, which were ablaze with daffodils this spring, are now afloat with airy geum, cosmos, acidanthera and dahlias. |
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Everyone, professor or cadre, would smile at us as if we were the apricot blossom and spring themselves. |
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And fall plowing except on blowy soils also will be good for the spring sown crops. |
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Makeup colors like ivory and blush dominate spring collections and have even infiltrated Burberry's shoes. |
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Reproductive development slows to a halt during each winter season, and then resumes each spring. |
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It emerges and receives pollen in the first year spring and become conelets. |
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The conelet goes through another winter rest and in the spring of the 2nd year. |
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Female strobili initiated during late summer or autumn in a year, then overwinter until the following spring. |
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The land was cleared of vegetation and buildings and by the spring of 1939 several wooden huts were present. |
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Macdonald began writing songs for her second album in spring 2009, in a brief break from her touring commitments. |
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Upon coming ashore, Andrew struck the rocks with his staff at which point a spring of healing waters gushed forth. |
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In spring 1916, Milner hoped Lloyd George could be persuaded to bring down the coalition government by resigning, but this did not happen. |
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In rapid succession in spring 1918 came a series of military and political crises. |
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In the 21st century the Internet and social media helped new eisteddfodau to spring up. |
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Walnuts are late to grow leaves, typically not until more than halfway through the spring. |
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The spring, Oswald's Well, is supposed to have originated where the bird dropped the arm from the tree. |
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Thunderstorms are common during the spring and summer months which may sometimes produce hail, high winds, and tornadoes. |
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A spring rose from the ground at the spot where her head fell and she was later restored to life by her uncle, Saint Beuno. |
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Calves are typically born in the spring and summer months and females bear all the responsibility for raising them. |
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It is one of the very first spring flowers, continuing to flower during the whole summer in localities where the snow melts later. |
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It's advised to plant them in the late spring or early summer because division takes place in the spring. |
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He doubtless hoped for a sympathetic ruling from President Reagan, at 70 no spring chicken himself. |
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Chester Racecourse hosts several flat race meetings from the spring to the autumn. |
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Shrewsbury has a busy spring and summer events season, which includes music, art, food and sport. |
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In the spring Edward pressed home his counterattack with a force of 35,000 soldiers, putting down the uprising and killing Madog. |
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The two main traditions spring from Western painting and Chinese art, going back well over a thousand years in both cases. |
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The appearance of the wild flowers in spring is associated with festivals in many places. |
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Most species are dormant from summer to late winter, flowering in the spring, though a few species are autumn flowering. |
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The single leafless stem or scape, appearing from early to late spring depending on the species, bears from 1 to 20 blooms. |
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After flowering leaf and root senescence sets in, and the plant appears to be 'dormant' till the next spring, conserving moisture. |
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Like many bulb plants from temperate regions, a period of exposure to cold is necessary before spring growth can begin. |
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Early spring growth confers a number of advantages, including relative lack of competition for pollinators, and lack of deciduous shading. |
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Of these, narcissi are one of the most important spring flowering bulb plants in the world. |
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By the early baroque period both tulips and narcissi were an important component of the spring garden. |
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In western countries the daffodil is also associated with spring festivals such as Lent and its successor Easter. |
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In some areas where narcissi are prevalent, their blooming in spring is celebrated in festivals. |
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However, despite Davis' domination between late 1980 and the spring of 1982, Reardon remained a major force in the game. |
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A winter and spring of rehabilitation failed to cure the recurring knee problem and she had surgery in May. |
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In the spring of 1914, Welsh contacted Ritchie and asked him if he would face him in England, providing he got a satisfactory guarantee of money. |
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Thus, George Harrison himself took over as producer in spring of 1971, including Leon Russell and Klaus Voormann in the sessions as well. |
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In the spring of 1946 The Company approached the Admiralty with a request to purchase three of these vessels. |
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A mud bath is a bath of mud, commonly from areas where hot spring water can combine with volcanic ash. |
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Although Mr Balladur is far ahead in the opinion polls, the spring election is far from being a one-horse race. |
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Pups are typically born in the spring and summer months and females bear almost all the responsibility for raising them. |
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The new battleship is scheduled to enter service next spring. |
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The Mistral from the northwest is the dominant wind on and off throughout the year, though it is most prevalent in winter and spring. |
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Then, in the spring of 1941, the German Army and the Finnish Army invaded the Soviet Union together. |
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By the time winter finally breaks through, daylight hours rise quickly, ensuring that daytime temperatures soar quickly in spring. |
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The Kullaberg Nature Preserve in northwest Scania is home to several rare species including spring vetchling, Lathyrus sphaericus. |
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After the spring bloom the haptophytes of the genus Phaecocystis pouchetti become dominant. |
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Typically snowmelt will peak in the spring and glacier melt in the summer, leading to pronounced flow maxima in rivers affected by them. |
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North Ronaldsay is well known as one of the best birdwatching sites in the country during the spring and autumn migration periods. |
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It extends from the spring high tide line, which is rarely inundated, to the spring low tide line, which is rarely not inundated. |
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And it is always mature in September, and the seeds germinate in the next spring. |
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During neap tides, they exhibit much longer closing periods than during the spring tide. |
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During the spring breeding season, females construct lairs within the thick ice and give birth in these structures. |
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In the spring and fall, walruses congregate throughout the Bering Strait, reaching from the western coast of Alaska to the Gulf of Anadyr. |
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Moreover, the peak production of antifouling compounds is during the spring. |
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In the spring of 1682, La Salle made his famous voyage down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. |
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From moist, dim nook and leafy tent, The fresh, wild breath of spring outsent. |
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At the bow the cut water was especially strong, as longboats sailed in ice strewn water in spring. |
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When this was leaked out to the British public in spring 1909, there was public outcry. |
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The second was a spring pushing the detonator away from the explosive charge into the buoyancy chamber unless compressed by hydrostatic pressure. |
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The various tribal chieftains met each spring to elect an overlord that would lead them in time of war. |
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A bank in the centre of the Solent, Bramble Bank, is exposed at low water at spring tide. |
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Systems with one degree of freedom, such as a mass on a spring, pendulums, balance wheels, and LC tuned circuits have one resonant frequency. |
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A desperate counterattack in the spring of 1943 by forces of Field Marshal Erich von Manstein temporarily halted the Soviet advance. |
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The Khamaseen is a hot, dry wind that originates from the vast deserts in the south and blows in the spring or in the early summer. |
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In spring and summer, thousands of students from all over Europe gather to attend language courses at the many language schools. |
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Turning the crank winds the spring and a full winding will allow several hours of operation. |
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The key to its design was the use of a constant velocity spring to store the potential energy which are no longer in use. |
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Along the way, a firetruck is prepared to simulate the effects of a spring rain. |
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Summers are warm and drier, with variable sunshine, rain and clouds, and spring weather is unsettled. |
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Therefore, a bear may need to be weighed in both spring and fall to get an idea of its mean annual weight. |
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They feed on their mother's milk until spring or even early summer, depending on climate conditions. |
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Short astronomic cycles can be the difference between the tides or the spring tide every two weeks. |
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Eastern gray squirrels can breed twice a year, but younger and less experienced mothers normally have a single litter per year in the spring. |
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During the spring and summer, they feed on soy, clover and corn poppy as well as grasses and herbs. |
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When spring arrives, they grow until they reach roughly their original size. |
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As temperatures start to rise with the onset of spring, their bodies start to rebuild the lost bones and tissues. |
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In the spring and early summer when the young moles leave their mothers' burrows they must find new territory. |
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While mating occurs in the fall fertilization does not occur until the following spring. |
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Their weights vary seasonally, growing from spring to autumn and reaching a peak just before the winter. |
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Large boars sometimes intrude into neighbouring territories during the main mating season in early spring. |
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Estrus in European badgers lasts four to six days and may occur throughout the year, though there is a peak in spring. |
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Badgers dig and collect bedding throughout the year, particularly in autumn and spring. |
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Only the stags have antlers, which start growing in the spring and are shed each year, usually at the end of winter. |
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A soft covering known as velvet helps to protect newly forming antlers in the spring. |
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Most of the underfur and some of the guard hairs are shed in the spring and grow back in the autumn period. |
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Pups are usually born in spring, coinciding with a corresponding increase in prey populations. |
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Gray wolves are the most important predator of raccoon dogs, killing large numbers of them in the spring and summer periods. |
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The rock dove breeds at any time of the year, but peak times are spring and summer. |
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In temperate areas, the house sparrow has an unusual habit of tearing flowers, especially yellow ones, in the spring. |
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Salmonella epidemics in the spring and winter can kill large numbers of sparrows. |
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They are sexually mature the following spring, but often do not mate until later years. |
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The common toad emerges from hibernation in spring and there is a mass migration towards the breeding sites. |
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Fresh from the tree, beech leaves in spring are a fine salad vegetable, as sweet as a mild cabbage though much softer in texture. |
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The leaves are edible, and if picked in spring when still young, are tender enough to be used in salads. |
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Blossoms are produced in spring simultaneously with the budding of the leaves, and are produced on spurs and some long shoots. |
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This high vitamin C content can be consumed as a tea from the shoot tips or even eaten straight from the tree when light green and new in spring. |
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Saint Fintan founded a monastery at Clonenagh, Ireland, in the sixth century and it had a spring beside it. |
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Bluebells are a species of deciduous woodland over much of their range, flowering and leafing early before the canopy closes in late spring. |
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Common gorse flowers a little in late autumn and through the winter, coming into flower most strongly in spring. |
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A thick mulch of chipped bark or compost will also make it much easier to pull out recently germinated seeds in the spring. |
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The trees drop their leaves in the fall, and new leaves grow again in the spring. |
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To be 'bogged down' or 'mired down' is to be mired, generally in the 'wet valleys' in the spring. |
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Bostonians eagerly await the arrival of spring after a long, cold, snowy winter. |
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One deer, later found to be heavily parasitized by bots, suffered severe vomiting attacks during the early spring. |
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One of his favorite pastimes was strolling through the breezeway on warm spring afternoons. |
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The women spent much time after harvest putting jams by for winter and spring. |
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This class of bottled water dominates the U.S. market and consumers seem to prefer the cachet of spring water to processed municipal waters. |
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American toads still fill spring nights with prolonged chirrings, while tree-frogs trill from perches in trees and shrubs. |
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The force required to compress a spring varies linearly with the displacement. |
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Now envy and antipathy, passions irreconcilable in reason, nevertheless in fact may spring conjoined like Chang and Eng in one birth. |
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Is it not crystal clear, then, comrades, that all the evils of this life of ours spring from the tyranny of human beings? |
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The spring diving board is four feet above the water, but there is another diving board five feet higher than this one. |
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Grass goes dormant during the winter, waiting for spring before it grows again. |
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The weather is raw and boisterous in winter, shifty and ungenial in summer, and a downright meteorological purgatory in the spring. |
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The earthy smell of fresh turned loam told me the farmer had started plowing this morning, the definitive sign of spring for me. |
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We must spring into action with a relentless sense of expedience and determination! |
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When spring arrives the fava arrives and everyone in the Mediterranean can dream up a way of cooking it. |
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The vortex trail will spring from the upstream edge of a flat bottomed gate, causing pressure pulsations at the bottom of the gate. |
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The foehn and the sun must have awakened the spirits of spring way up in the heights. |
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He got to Dawson before the river froze, and now I suppose I won't hear any more until spring. |
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The hardware store is gearing up for spring in February with garden supplies and seeds. |
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One hundred fifty Gothics sold over 1.5 million copies a month last spring. |
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The rite of spring in eastern Canada has begun. Sweet and pure, maple syrup epitomizes the Great White North in all its unspoiled glory. |
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Throughout the winter and spring, a variety of little greens shoot up that are the staples of a harvested salad. |
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After we found the freshwater spring we were more confident that the place was habitable. |
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Heavy snowfall can occur in winter and early spring on high ground, and occasionally settles to great depth away from the hills. |
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After wintering in the James Bay, Hudson tried to press on with his voyage in the spring of 1611, but his crew mutinied and they cast him adrift. |
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On poorly drained impermeable areas of millstone grit, shale or clays the topsoil gets waterlogged in winter and spring. |
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Each spring they planted a garden and each summer they enjoyed homegrown vegetables. |
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English Heritage does, however, permit access during the summer and winter solstice, and the spring and autumn equinox. |
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The spring release device was used in the past almost universally on trailing type plows with one to three or four bottoms. |
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When an obstruction is encountered the spring release mechanism in the hitch permits the plow to uncouple from the tractor. |
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It controls many perennial weeds and pushes back the growth of other weeds until the following spring. |
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It accelerates soil warming and water evaporation in spring because of the lesser quantity of residues on the soil surface. |
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Because of its lowland location York is prone to frosts, fog, and cold winds during winter, spring and very early summer. |
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Alfred was forced into hiding for a time, before returning in the spring of 878 to gather an army and attack Guthrum at Edington. |
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In the spring, Alfred was able to gather an army and attacked Guthrum and the Danes at Edington. |
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He spoke languidly, and only those few words, like a watch with an inelastic spring, that just ticks a moment or two and stops again. |
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Arms and upper-body carriage this spring have few if any of the inelegancies that were almost a City Ballet hallmark. |
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This spring is the ingressive source of the water that flows through the cave. |
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The epidemic reached Constantinople in the late spring of 1347, through Genoese merchants trading in the Black Sea. |
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In the spring of 1458, Thomas Bourchier, the Archbishop of Canterbury, attempted to arrange a reconciliation. |
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In the spring of 1559, it became evident that Elizabeth was in love with her childhood friend Robert Dudley. |
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In spring 1599, Elizabeth sent Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, to put the revolt down. |
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He wrote them in a stylised language that does not always spring naturally from the needs of the characters or the drama. |
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In the spring of 1639, King Charles I accompanied his forces to the Scottish border to end the rebellion known as the Bishops' War. |
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In the spring of 1648 unpaid Parliamentarian troops in Wales changed sides. |
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By spring 1646, his father was losing the war, and Charles left England due to fears for his safety. |
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Press reports were released that deliberately exaggerated the damage and claimed the expedition would be postponed till the spring. |
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In the spring of 1710, Anne dismissed Godolphin and the Junto ministers, replacing them with Tories. |
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From the summer of 1940 to the spring of 1943, Birmingham was bombed heavily by the German Luftwaffe in what is known as the Birmingham Blitz. |
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By the spring of 1794, forced collection of food was not sufficient to feed even Paris and the days of the Committee were numbered. |
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The Allies then invaded France and captured Paris in the spring of 1814, forcing Napoleon to abdicate in April. |
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If any single corps was attacked, the others could quickly spring into action and arrive to help. |
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In the Soviet Union, both the Germans and the Soviets spent the spring and early summer of 1943 preparing for large offensives in central Russia. |
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That second spring the khamseen was worse than I have ever known it before or since. |
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The king parrot is a magnificent bird, and the clear blue of a Melbourne spring day sets them off perfectly. |
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The Green Party of England and Wales holds a spring and an autumn conference every year. |
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Artificial levees block spring flood water that would bring fresh water and sediment to marshes. |
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The spring time dawn chorus at 55 degrees latitude has been described as one of the best in the world. |
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The river is tidal from Howley Weir in Warrington, although high spring tides often top the weir. |
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Very high spring tides can generate a tidal bore from Hale as far upstream as Warrington. |
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The largest bores occur in spring, but smaller ones can be seen throughout the year. |
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Well dressing ceremonies are held in most of the villages during the spring and summer months, in a tradition said to date from pagan times. |
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In the spring, however, thick carpets of bluebells can be found, flourishing before the beech leafs out and shades the forest floor. |
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Near Wheddon Cross is Snowdrop Valley, which becomes filled with thousands of little white flowers called snowdrops during early spring. |
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In spring and summer, the sea is cool compared to the air temperature, causing less convective cloud cover. |
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As a result, the highest rainfall can be expected in autumn and lowest in spring. |
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It is usually warm most of the year with no pronounced rainy season, but slightly more rain in autumn and spring. |
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The piston was then temporarily locked in the upper position by a spring catch engaging a notch in the rod. |
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The vehicle occupant can move around with relative freedom while the spring tension of the reel keeps the belt taut against the occupant. |
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In this usage, the motor works against a return spring to move the throttle in accordance with the output of the governor. |
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One end of the lever carried a weight or spring that restrained the valve against steam pressure. |
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Gravity is a conservative force, as is the force due to an idealized spring, as given by Hooke's law. |
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It is also the fundamental principle behind the spring scale, the manometer, and the balance wheel of the mechanical clock. |
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Suppose that the spring has reached a state of equilibrium, where its length is not changing anymore. |
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Moreover, the same formula holds when the spring is compressed, with F and X both negative in that case. |
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A mass m attached to the end of a spring is a classic example of a harmonic oscillator. |
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It is the industrial age development of the deadfall trap, but relying on the force of a wound spring rather than gravity. |
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The jaws of this type are operated by a coiled spring and the triggering mechanism is between the jaws, where the bait is held. |
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It is generally planted in the spring, and thereafter grows as a perennial. |
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The prototype arrived in Blackpool during early spring in 1934 along with four other designs. |
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The locker of the trapped chest must be careful, so as not to spring the trap. |
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Some of this movement was temporary, made up of seasonal harvest labourers working in Britain and returning home for winter and spring. |
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Messages to her scratched onto metal, known as curse tablets, have been recovered from the sacred spring by archaeologists. |
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Engineers drove oak piles into the mud to provide a stable foundation, and surrounded the spring with an irregular stone chamber lined with lead. |
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Although Uther ultimately triumphs, he dies after drinking water from a spring the Saxons had poisoned. |
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From spring 1817, however, there is a rich record of his prolific and impressive skills as letter writer. |
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In the spring of 1877, Alice returned from India and removed the children from Lorne Lodge. |
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After discovering she was pregnant in the spring of 1945, Blyton miscarried five months later, following a fall from a ladder. |
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And we would spend a whole glorious month there in the spring and two months in the summer. |
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From this spring two arches decorated with pearls, and at their intersection an orb surmounted by a cross formy. |
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Many deciduous species are marcescent, not dropping dead leaves until spring. |
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There they gorged on birds, fish, and vegetation and found a small freshwater spring. |
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The most temperate seasons are spring, which can be changeable, and autumn, which is generally sunny and dry. |
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By the spring of 1692, the Jacobite chiefs had all sworn allegiance to King William. |
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Since the Giants' minicamp last spring, Buggs already has begun to expand his training horizons, much to Arnsparger's satisfaction. |
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The final Entente offensive of the spring was the Second Battle of Artois, an offensive to capture Vimy Ridge and advance into the Douai plain. |
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In the spring Allied commanders had been concerned about the ability of the French Army to withstand the enormous losses at Verdun. |
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However, even by the spring of 1940, the Luftwaffe still had not mobilized fully. |
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The peacetime strength of the Luftwaffe in the spring of 1939 was 370,000 men. |
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In the spring of 1940, the Luftwaffe assisted the Kriegsmarine and Heer in the daring invasion of Norway. |
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In the spring of 1940, the Luftwaffe contributed to the unexpected success in the Battle of France. |
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The navy said 22 September was the earliest possible date, and proposed postponement until the spring, but Hitler preferred September. |
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A third of the initial strength of the German air force, the Luftwaffe, had been lost in the western campaign in the spring. |
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Richard Murray of the King's Fund think tank, expects numbers on waiting lists to continue rising and exceed 4 million by spring. |
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Snowfall can occur in winter and early spring, although it is not very common away from high ground. |
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Rainfall on Ben Nevis is about twice as high in the winter as it is in the spring and summer. |
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Although Tower scoop makes it a no fall zone, Tower Gully is becoming popular, especially in May and June when there is spring snow. |
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Many of Glasgow's trees and plants begin to flower at this time of the year and parks and gardens are filled with spring colours. |
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However, after reaching Ulster the horse stops and urinates, and a spring rises from the spot. |
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Echaid decides to build a house there and covers the spring with a capstone to stop it overflowing. |
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A senior US State Department official described Bosnia in the spring of 1995 as the worst crisis with the British and French since Suez. |
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In the spring of 1854 the Russians again advanced, crossing the River Danube into the Turkish province of Dobruja. |
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From 1993, the Budget was in spring, preceded by an annual autumn statement. |
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Meta leapt forward. In midair his lower half morphed, and suddenly he was one-half humanoid, one-half coiled spring. |
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The college includes the historic Piula Monastery as well as Piula Cave Pool, a natural spring situated beneath the church by the sea. |
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Anders argued that he could not advise the soldiers to return to Poland unless the Polish Government promised elections this spring. |
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After defeating Russia, the Germans tried to win in the spring of 1918 before the millions of American soldiers arrived. |
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At the age of 12, Pinter began writing poetry, and in spring 1947, his poetry was first published in the Hackney Downs School Magazine. |
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By the spring of 1936, the management of the New York Philharmonic was confronted with a problem. |
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Released as the album's third single, it hit the Top 10 during the spring of 1983 and was a hugely popular MTV music video. |
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In spring 2011, Kapoor's work, Leviathan, was the annual Monumenta installation for the Grand Palais in Paris. |
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The National Football League is held every spring and groups counties in four divisions according to their relative strength. |
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Cercyon had his daughter buried alive but Poseidon turned her into the spring, Alope, near Eleusis. |
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After the start of the civil war, various new telecommunications companies began to spring up and compete to provide missing infrastructure. |
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In spring 2016, AFRICOM estimated that ISIS had about 5,000 fighters in its stronghold of Sirte. |
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On the lane below, more orangetips nectared on spring beauties and violets. |
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Generally, the city is sunny during the year, but rain is fairly common during the spring and in the summer. |
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A nervy tank lining will be difficult to lay around tight bends or in corners because it tends to spring back. |
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When nations set fixed election dates, these are usually midweek during the spring or autumn to maximize turnout. |
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In spring, the moult is slow, starting from the forehead, across the back, toward the belly. |
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The moult, initiated by photoperiod, starts earlier in autumn and later in spring at higher latitudes. |
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In spring, the male's testes are enlarged, a process accompanied by an increase of testosterone concentration in the plasma. |
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One method of catching wildcats consists of using a modified muskrat trap with a spring placed in a concealed pit. |
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Such food is favoured in early spring and summer, but may also be eaten in autumn and winter during beechnut and acorn crop failures. |
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In the spring, these proteins are used as a nitrogen source during the growth of new leaves or flowers. |
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The polio vaccination program took a body blow last spring when the disease developed in children injected with vaccine from the Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley, Calif. |
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Should the engine run too fast, the governor will reduce the current being applied to the motor, causing the return spring to pull back and close the throttle. |
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In the spring recently weaned pups and yearlings occasionally strand on beaches after becoming separated from their group. |
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Generally nocturnal and shy in nature, hares change their behaviour in the spring, when they can be seen in broad daylight chasing one another around in fields. |
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Bottled water can originate from tap water, groundwater, or natural spring water and might be filtered, distilled, deionized, carbonated, or mineralized. |
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The spring season in March is warm with occasional thunderstorms. |
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With the exception of the trigger mechanism and spring, the pistol was made entirely out of flat black plastic and looked very much like a small buttless sawed-off shotgun. |
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Southeasterly damp winds spring up between July and October. |
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This occurred in the spring of 2005, after unusually heavy rains. |
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Then without a word she lay on her back in the bed, her dark blond pubic hair rising about her dark wet cave like dried brush about a hidden spring. |
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The analogue of Hooke's spring law for continuous media is then. |
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A rod of any elastic material may be viewed as a linear spring. |
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The legendary account of the foundation of Thebes mentioned a monster snake guarding the spring from which the new settlement was to draw its water. |
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Over the broadest there seemed to spring a cragged and stupendous arch, from which, as from the jaws of hell, gushed the sources of the sudden Phlegethon. |
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There was a currency crisis that started in the spring of 2008, and on 6 October trading in Iceland's banks was suspended as the government battled to save the economy. |
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After learning how to crutch at 13, he could dag 400 sheep in a day by the spring of 1965 and earned himself more than just a bit of pocket money. |
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Long celebrated in art and literature, narcissi are associated with a number of themes in different cultures, ranging from death to good fortune, and as symbols of spring. |
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This included the discovery of a chalybeate spring in his own park at Middleton Hall, and coaching inns from Swansea to Narberth. |
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John held a council in London in January 1215 to discuss potential reforms and sponsored discussions in Oxford between his agents and the rebels during the spring. |
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Each team suspends a cup from a spring and drops dimes in the cup, measuring the length of the spring each time another dime is dropped in the cup. |
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Lapland is so far north that the Aurora Borealis, fluorescence in the high atmosphere due to solar wind, is seen regularly in the fall, winter, and spring. |
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Endly the reverse model still means water infiltration and erosion control, at least in spring when the daily resultant is a water table lowering. |
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The hosts initially looked like they lacked a spring in their step, but fears of further agony evaporated in the seventh minute with a goal of typical Arsenal quality. |
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In spring 1882 Inflexible was part of the Mediterranean Fleet and was assigned to protection of Queen Victoria during a visit to Menton on the Riviera. |
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When Alban reached the summit of the hill he began to thirst, and prayed God would give him water, whereupon a spring immediately sprang up at his feet. |
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We'll walk over the spring fields and through those ferny old woods. |
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In 1810 the Hot Springs failed and William Smith opened up the Hot Bath Spring to the bottom, where he found that the spring had not failed but had flowed into a new channel. |
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The Generals had not noticed, in their strong desire to win the goofy arms race That the spring flopped and flooped and flippled all over the place! |
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The sap rises vigorously in the spring and like that of sugar maple can be tapped to provide a refreshing drink, as a source of sugar and to make beer. |
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A gate opens into the Forewalk overhung by the arching branches of more fine beeches, among the roots of which spring numerous clumps of glistening holly. |
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The grass is forward, or forward for the season. We have a forward spring. |
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In the spring of 1296, Andrew Moray, together with his father and uncle, joined the Scottish feudal host assembling in preparation for the impending conflict. |
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When spring comes, the frogsicle defrosts and shivers back to life. |
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Medieval construction was seasonal, work on site being undertaken only in the spring and summer, when the light was good and the weather more reliable. |
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I replaced the broken spring and now the toaster is good to go. |
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By late spring the BEF had taken just over 300,000 casualties. |
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Mother, make Harry bring me a gourdful fresh from the spring. |
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The shelter drawings WAAC acquired were completed between the autumn of 1940 and the spring of 1941 and are regarded as among the finest products of the WAAC scheme. |
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In spring 1605 they moved to another small house in Mitcham, London, where he scraped a meager living as a lawyer, while Anne Donne bore a new baby almost every year. |
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Tiree, along with Colonsay, enjoys a relatively high number of total hours of sunshine during the late spring and early summer compared to the average for the United Kingdom. |
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The building, from the tenor of the whole description, was in the style of the Renaissance, and the pillars probably supported the hanses, or spring of the arch. |
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George Orwell in his essay Some Thoughts on the Common Toad described the emergence of the common toad from hibernation as one of the most moving signs of spring. |
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Highland games are held in spring and summer in Scotland, celebrating Scottish and celtic culture and heritage, especially that of the Scottish Highlands. |
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These forests have over time synced their seedling deposits after the spring peaks in flow to best take advantage of the nutrient rich soil generated by peak flow. |
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The Stones played nineteen shows in the US in spring 2013, before playing three shows in England, one at Glastonbury Festival 2013 and two in Hyde Park, London. |
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Warmer spring temperatures then initiate growth from the bulb. |
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Russia withdrew in February 2009 to concentrate on bidding for the 2013 Rugby World Cup Sevens, Australia and Ireland withdrew in spring 2009 due to financial reasons. |
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It is useful for grassland ploughing and sets up the land for weathering by winter frosts, which reduces the time taken to prepare a seedbed for spring sown crops. |
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As the cut was his fourth above the same eye, Hatton had plastic surgery on his eyebrow that November, with a view to a world title shot in the spring. |
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Japan's top stakes races are run in the spring, autumn, and winter. |
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The bottom is held in normal plowing position by a spring operated latch. |
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Amish farmers tend to use a team of about seven horses or mules when spring ploughing and as Amish farmers often help each other plough, teams are sometimes changed at noon. |
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Other noted stakes races include the February Stakes, Takamatsunomiya Kinen, Yasuda Kinen, Takarazuka Kinen, Arima Kinen, and the Tenno Sho races run in the spring and fall. |
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In spring 2006, she ran aground on an atoll in the South Pacific. |
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It mainly grows in spring and leaf production exceeds lead senescence. |
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Early in spring, Alaric, probably desperate, invaded Italia, and he drove Honorius westward from Mediolanum, besieging him in Hasta Pompeia in Liguria. |
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They are produced in spring shortly after the new leaves appear. |
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Alfred was forced to go into hiding for the rest of the winter and spring of 878 in the Somerset marshes in order to avoid the superior Danish forces. |
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