There were fascicles of spindle cells sometimes arranged in a whorled pattern or admixed with thick collagen fibers. |
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Then, I was grasped by my shoulders and shoved against a thick post that had once been an ash tree. |
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Mature specimens develop a thick trunk and stems with leaves and flowers at the top of the plant, often too high for the gardener to enjoy. |
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Though addressing serious issues such as the status of women, it is not thick with gravitas. |
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Now, the coals of the campfire had burned low and, in the big skillet, rabbit legs and thick bacon rashers spluttered. |
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I answered obediently and went to the fire to stir the thick stew inside the cauldron. |
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Rounded towers and thick bulwarks provided maximum protection against the siege engines of that era. |
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The tusks on the barrs that I have seen are very thick and seem to hold up fine with the whetters intact. |
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He was tall and a bit on the thick weighty side, though it wasn't hard to see that he was also quite muscular. |
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The cavity created by the added framing should be thick enough for the desired insulation R-value. |
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Less than 5m out from the shore, a mud bank shelves off steeply into the depths, passing through a thick halocline layer in the shallows. |
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These patches may have a thick silvery-white scale of dead skin on the top, and may be itchy. |
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It also has thick pads on its bottom and inside for optimal bowling-shoe protection. |
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If the floor slab is not thick enough to handle these loads, alternate anchorage must be provided. |
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The consistency is like toothpaste, though the viscosity is more like a thick hair gel. |
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But homes today don't normally feature ramparts, drawbridges, moats and six-foot thick stone walls to keep out unwanted visitors. |
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There is a thick overlapping astragal running round the columns carrying the vaults and arches. |
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From stem to stern, your ship will be held together by a thick cable woven from the most tenacious strands of grass we can find. |
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His black hair was drawn up in thick spikes, and he had a sallow face which was a ghastly white. |
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Organic jojoba oil and aloe vera gel star in this thick conditioner that softens dry, damaged hair. |
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In it he almost obliterates the sky in a frenzy of thick white paint and the sea in a swirling foreground of creamy, hot-chocolate gloop. |
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But among the neatly stitched squares and rectangles of denim and canvas there is one of thick regimental tartan. |
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He had a thick shock of dark brown hair, with a little gray peeking in around his temples and just above his ears. |
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She found a thick leather vest and put it on top of the shirt, pulling the laces tight. |
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Maybe it was her exhaustion settling in, but the thick layers of silk and lace were as comforting as a pile of blankets fresh out of the dryer. |
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Placing the refrigerated meat on a thick aluminum or copper pan or cookie sheet will help warm it up by conducting the cold away more swiftly. |
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Even beneath the thick cover of the canopy, they could not escape the rain that rolled, gathering drops together, to fall to the ground below. |
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She wore her long blonde hair in a thick braid and her white dress swayed about her ankles as she walked to the other side of the porch. |
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There was some speculation that he might simply be laying the melodrama on thick for the benefit of the crowd, but I don't see it. |
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Halve the tomatoes, again lengthways, and cut the aubergine into short, thick chunks then add them to the potatoes. |
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The bearded man left the room and returned a moment later carrying two thick Manila folders which he handed to Cain. |
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If their loved ones visit, inmates see them through thick plate glass or over a video link. |
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I pulled two hairpins from my thick hair as it fell down, still tied back by a black ribbon. |
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The resulting septal trabeculae are thick with regularly produced lateral branches. |
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A car comes rattling down the street, thick smoke pouring out the back, every door a different colour of blistered paint. |
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I am far too in love with fig rolls and thick white sliced bread smothered in cheap spread. |
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He also has a piece of adhesive gum with drawing pins sunk in it which, when combined with a thick rubber band, makes a horrifying catapult. |
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Radar beams penetrated through Venus's thick cloud layers to reveal these surface images of both sides. |
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We are thick and ignorant just as we are fair and enlightened and a relative proportion of us are bigots and racists. |
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This is a condition where thick sticky fluid accumulates behind the eardrum as a result of an infection of the middle ear. |
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Rae stood and walked to the door, putting a hand on one of the cool, black iron strips reinforcing the thick wood. |
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Her own effort to complete the thick pile of paperwork required to submit a claim took six months. |
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They may be associated with large telangiectatic vessels or may exhibit thick scaling that mimics psoriasis. |
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Kentrosaurus defended itself against attack by flesh-eaters like the allosaurus, by lashing out with its thick strong tail. |
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Wisconsin is carpeted thick and green following such mildness and moisture. |
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Powered by steam, not sail, this fire-breathing monster carved through the ocean at 12.4 knots and was covered in a thick hide of heavy armour. |
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Most of the windows were secured with thick boards, and many doors were large and overly secured. |
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Other plants will produce thick cuticle or reflective hairs to reduce the amount of light and heat they receive. |
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They are large bivalves with thick shells, which bear numerous and finely spaced concentric lines but no radial ones. |
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This, of course, is the season of hallelujahs and glorias, and the choirs are coming out thick and fast to meet the heavenly challenges. |
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A mild hailstorm may simply tear some leaves, but a severe hailstorm will rip off all the leaves, and cut shoots back to their thick stubs. |
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They are covered with dense, long, shaggy fur made up of thick hairs with longitudinal grooves. |
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A thick white coat of hollow hairs provides good insulation from the arctic climate. |
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It was a sitting room, with huge windows and thick carpet and couches and the usual luxuries. |
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I blinked my eyes blearily and opened my mouth to yawn, I felt thick and slow. |
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Manager and band sport lacquered pompadours like thick medieval lances and long pointy shoes. |
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Running his fingers idly over the smooth varnish, he noted the beautiful grain of the wood beneath its thick protective cover. |
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It appeared to have one more cloth under the heavier top cloth of thick high-quality fine weave, but was smooth and slippery like silk. |
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He put on a pair of glasses with clear, thick lenses that looked like bifocals. |
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These were of brick, built on the surface but surrounded with a traverse and topped with a six foot thick shingle filled concrete sandwich roof. |
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This is the sort of thick paper, nicely printed glossy lifestyle magazine that looks nice on your coffee table. |
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The thick black curve of Fig.2 illustrates representative traces of tension versus time. |
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He led us through some fantastic coral formations, tunnels, and schools of shiners so thick you couldn't see the person in front of you. |
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One tried to enter the three-storey back-to-back terrace home, but was beaten back by intense heat and thick smoke. |
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Marie just rolled her eyes and turned her attention back to the piece of thick Manila paper the teacher was handing out. |
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The bands come in thin, large and jumbo elastics to handle the finest strands to thick hair. |
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Tar clogs your lungs like thick treacle, and a 20-a-day smoker inhales a full cup of tar in a year. |
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She could tell exactly how much of that thick stack of cash was of ones, fives, tens, and hundred-dollar bills. |
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The curd is perfectly complemented by the thick warm brown treacle topping that titillates the palate of dessert lovers anywhere. |
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At the very least the company made sure all our keisters were comfortable with thick foamy pads while watching the show. |
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The thick layer of leaves keeps the ground relatively wet, so Bob usually waits until June to plow the leaves under and then plant hay. |
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Still, he calmly slipped out of his thick green jacket and hung it on the hanger closest to the air conditioner. |
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Clues to the presence of HPS are thick concentrated blood, low blood platelets, and a high white cell count with many young white cells. |
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Daniel grabbed her hand and pulled up her shirt sleeve to revel thick welts, scabs and scars all over her arm. |
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These protoplasts had a thick cytoplasm with numerous plastids and mitochondria. |
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The galaxy's hallmark is a brilliant white, bulbous core encircled by the thick dust lanes comprising the spiral structure of the galaxy. |
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There was an apple tree and an avocado in the front yard, surrounded by thick St. Augustine grass. |
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A thick half-pound, grilled to a perfect medium, it oozes juice, staining the semi-fresh kaiser until it's ketchup red. |
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Except for the thick camera cables on the floor and the lighting gantries where the roof should be. |
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He had a round face covered in stubble, thick eyebrows, small, dark, squinty eyes, full round lips and very short receding dark hair. |
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Most blades are uniformly thick along their length, but some are tapered towards the heel. |
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He asked all the Hans to follow Manchu traditions, shaving their hair from the front of the head and wearing a thick plait at the back. |
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Whether they win or lose, the action is electrifying, it's second to none and owners are right in the thick of it. |
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This time he sang for his tree to grow thick branches and leaves to shelter him in this forbidding place. |
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Angel looked up from the table he was sitting at, squinting his poor eyes through his thick lenses, to see who was walking in so early. |
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At one point it got about a hundred yards away from the boat and kited fast through a thick weedbed. |
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Place a layer about six millimetres thick on a tray, lined with plastic wrap. |
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To one side was a rolling expanse of pasture land, clustered with flocks of sheep so thick that hundreds must graze there. |
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The air inside the pub was dense and suffocating, thick with sweat and laughter, jolliness engulfing and eating away at everything in the room. |
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Trees had begun shedding their leaves and the water was drying quickly into thick mud. |
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Without missing a beat, Jake pursued the figure as it dashed through the thick covering of trees. |
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The spray skirt has a light and pliant nylon construction, and a thick PVC coating renders it leakproof. |
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I had collapsed onto the thick down covers of my four-poster, with its deep purple silk coverings that I had loved so much. |
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Turning on our torches, the walls came alive with a thick covering of hydroids, sponges and anemones. |
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There are seals and porpoises, thick kelp forests, colourful corals, and large wolf fish. |
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The entire body and limbs were covered with a thick fine hair or wool curling tightly to the skin. |
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The glass is 1.5 inches thick with a layer of material sandwiched in between to further improve blast resistance. |
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A braided band of leather lies across her forehead to hold back her white, thick mane. |
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We shouldered our backpacks and set out up a steep hill in the direction of some thick green woods. |
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Histologically, thick collagen bundles were seen, characteristically whorling around vessels in a fibrotic stroma. |
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Shrimp ranchero is five jumbos drenched in a stewlike spicy tomato sauce and served with thick tortillas. |
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He could feel the unstated tension between her and his father, so thick he could cut it with a knife. |
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Male lions develop thick woolly manes on the neck and shoulders, signifying maturity. |
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Other breeds may be larger, but none as impressive as the Komondor with his thick coat and large size. |
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The took a compass bearing for the direction of the croaking and eventually reached stagnant, muddy pools, thick with a scum of dead insects. |
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The new school calendar came in the mail yesterday, along with a package three inches thick with forms, forms and more forms. |
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A plank fifty feet long and eight inches thick could be sawn on both edges in less than five minutes! |
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In domain B, the viscous substrate was displaced by the moving backstop and accumulated as a thick wedge against the frontal ramp. |
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I'm not one of those that laments the old thick dimpled beer tankards with handles on the side. |
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The first festival I attended was by far the best, because the air was thick with bile and acrimony. |
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He has a thick brown beard and shoulder length brown hair that curls ever so slightly. |
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He is handsome, with high cheekbones, a strong chin, and a shock of thick hair, and he stares with a slight frown at something in the distance. |
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And, if tourists come as thick and fast as those visiting cards, Kerala tourism industry will be laughing all the way to the bank. |
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She was shaking even though she was wrapped up in a thick long coat in the middle of summer. |
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On her left wrist she had two black laces like the other one on her right and a white thick sports wristband. |
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Birds such as dunnocks, robins and wrens prefer a hedgerow which is thick at the bottom. |
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Once an arm of the lake, the delta here is today choked with thick stands of invasive tamarisk. |
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Thermal sag of this rift permitted accumulation of thick Triassic-Jurassic sandstone sequences. |
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To the north and south are sandpits and marshes so thick they resemble oil slicks. |
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Gallipoli resembled a huge sandpit full of precipices, endless ravines and impassable ridges covered in thick scrub. |
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Under the light, Nick's thick blond hair glows an eerie yellow and his blue eyes flash luminously as he slowly peruses the area. |
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He has a shock of thick snow-blond hair that is certain to attract the others in white. |
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I was wrapped up in my big coat, my lovely new thick scarf around my neck, beanie on my head and my hood pulled over it. |
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Oil paint can be thinned to a watery consistency or brushed on with thick luscious strokes. |
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The teacher was a cheery middle-aged woman with black hair and rather thick bifocal glasses. |
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The huge contact area and large gaps between the processor and the heatsink require a thermal pad or thick mesh-reinforced paste. |
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Bryar ladled the thick soup into a wooden bowl as he spoke, and Rayne could feel her mouth watering at the mere sight. |
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Someone could have a bone to pick with you soon, and they'll lay it on thick as sauce. |
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The recent fall of snow, laid in a thick carpet, deadened any sound, adding to the tranquillity and pristine feel of the mountains. |
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Indian sportswriters covering the game found the city thick with rumors long before the first ball was bowled. |
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But calamus itself, the real thing, has a thick bulby root-stretches out-this way-like the fingers spread. |
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A thick gush of guitar and xylophonic pluck, the vocals are pushed up front for the first time. |
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The door was stout oak shod with iron and locked with three thick iron bolts into the door frame. |
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Dinners got longer, and we would take a break if necessary to make room for delectable baklava, thick with pistachios and honey. |
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The thick green carpet that was laid down looked almost like real, lush grass. |
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Between their thick and wobbly tones and my horrible drawl, it's been a struggle. |
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The thick criss-cross mess looked like the job your granny might do on an old rag doll. |
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All around the pedestal, black tentacles grew of the mist, thick and hairy, their undersides covered with tiny snapping jaws. |
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Herbivores are quite important for the reef because they keep thick mats of filamentous and leafy algae from smothering the corals. |
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They were, as I had guessed, thick with leafy trees and swarming with life. |
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The smaller of them contained a hot, spiced drink similar to kefir or lassi, thick and slightly alcoholic. |
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I stared out at the gorgeous garden, covered with shady trees and thick grass. |
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A thick paper coin with a round hole in the center, the mill was worth one-tenth of a cent. |
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The treads give added mobility over predecessors with conventional wheels, allowing it to travel over thick carpet. |
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She wept violently as she drew, making harsh, thick strokes across the paper. |
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I opened the card envelope and pulled out a picture of a young boy with a bushy Afro and glasses as thick as my fingers. |
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She lays it on thick about how she's always loved your work and how she thinks you could make beautiful music together. |
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The robber pushed past and failed an attempt to escape through the thick glass back doors of the terrace. |
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The skeletons of dead chromists accumulate on the floor of lakes and oceans, where they may become thick deposits of silica or calcium carbonate. |
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Her plate was heaped with several good, thick slices of tasty, tender pork. |
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This variety, developed well before the 17th century, has no proper head but instead wide, spreading leaves with very thick midribs. |
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They were each attempting to suck their incredibly thick chocolate milkshakes through the straw. |
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Fred Matthews replaced Wade up front and he was soon in the thick of it as Ilkley won yet another scrum out right. |
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Apparently, he hadn't shaved for a few days and his thick dark hair was in desperate need of a haircut. |
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Someone delivers Goodman a soda, and he widens his mouth to encompass the thick cap of the bottle. |
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The thick line is a calculated trajectory near a surface and the thin line is a trajectory far from any surface. |
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She lost her balance and fell headfirst onto a 1-cm thick piece of plush carpet remnant covering the concrete floor. |
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There was a schlooping sound as he shook the coating of thick black oil from his fingers. |
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The summer weather that the weekend gave us has gone, and been replaced by thick grey clouds, heavy with rain. |
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Mr. Stupak, 57, with a shock of thick gray hair and the stare of a law enforcement officer, is a Yooper. |
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The interior of the feed store was cooler than the street outside, but airless, and thick with the smells of sacking and corn. |
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To the west, the indigo-blue waters of Pamlico Sound lap grassy marshes thick with egrets and blue herons. |
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Shoes provide a perfect environment for the fungus that causes athlete's foot or thick brown misshapen toenails. |
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Alicia is sitting on a small stone bench in a patch of sun with a thick shawl wrapped around her shoulders. |
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There was wood all around the base and the smell of kerosene was thick in the cold air. |
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The first meal of the day will usually be a simple thick rice soup with accompaniments of chicken, dried squid, and pickled vegetables. |
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It has caramel apples and kettle corn and hot apple cider and thick stadium blankets. |
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Lots of lovely thick oil paint smeared in heavy layers onto the canvas creates dark and hugely atmospheric landscapes. |
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If the surface was primed with DG27, this first coat should be thick enough to cover over all of the key. |
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On the walls, there were thick tapestries made of expensive fabrics, and old pictures painted in glory. |
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She needled him with such venom from behind her thick lenses that Seb was visibly squashed. |
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Suddenly they're dressed to the hilt in 1980s sunglasses, shorts, and a thick gob of zinc oxide on their noses. |
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But a seventh away win of the season at Vale Park will fire them back into the thick of it. |
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On our way out of al-Juweibir, we stop and talk to a man putting a thick layer of tar on his grandfather's boat. |
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There was essentially nothing to be seen, just the occasional fences, thick green, wind-blown grass, cows and a handful of lonely cars. |
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George has a thick neck and is not easily embarrassed but his high handed action is now rebounding on him. |
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On large canvas slabs, he uses a thick rust-colored paint and applies objects such as antler-shaped branches, a door latch or a metal chain. |
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When they are cooked, lift them out and boil the liquid until thick and reduced. |
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For the curry aioli, in a medium bowl, combine the egg yolk, garlic, ginger, and mustard and whisk until thick and lemon colored. |
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Instead of boarding, the ceiling was reconstructed using 1.5in thick plaster on mesh as a fire retardant. |
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In her hands she held an axe, the thick handle made of reddish wood, and the head a rusted silver, with a sharp, murderous blade. |
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I ask Anita, a short, middle-aged Latina who wears a thick American-flag bandanna across her forehead. |
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I was wearing a t-shirt, thick shirt, windcheater, coat, weatherproof hooded jacket and a Dockers scarf. |
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We had our bikes, our waterproofs and our special thick plastic newspaper sacks to keep the newsprint nice and dry. |
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It is used to hold thick doors open, crush particularly large spiders and scare witless those English students who have to read it. |
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And unless the powers that be and their witless supporters get that through their thick skulls, failure is what we are most likely to get. |
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The menu comes on an A5 sheet of high-quality paper, with its corners slipped into slits on a thick sheet of brushed copper. |
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The tank cracked, and the thick blue liquid started to squirt through the bullet hole. |
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I finished off with a thick covering of bark mulch to preserve moisture, suppress weeds and add organic material. |
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In height, he came up to her waist, and muscles rippled beneath the thick covering of dark fur. |
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A Kikuyu dish, Irio, often served with curried chicken, is made from beans, maize, and potatoes or cassava mashed to a thick pulp. |
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She stared out the window, at the thick snow falling fast on the ground and building up on the window sill. |
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There was a whoosh, a sound like a thick book being shut, and a stranger walked through the closed closet door. |
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It need not be so thick you could cut it with a knife, but it should be well on the way. |
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And the thick bottle and handsome label make it an excellent gift wine for a lover of big reds. |
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There is the first extract or the thick creamy milk from the scraped coconut. |
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The finishing of the leather began with applications of traditionally Cod oil being applied and rubbed in with a thick wad of sheepskin. |
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Inside was a thick stack of 8x10s. Lipton looked through the stack slowly, reading the notes he had written on the backs of each photo. |
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Voices and footsteps were heard from outside the thick wooden doors that led to the dining room. |
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The couch and kikuyu have both responded well to the treatment and have provided a thick matting of grass on the surface. |
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Around one corner was a thick wooden door with a barred window that begged inspection. |
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It is an area dense with the thick woods and craggy terrain of a largely virgin Arctic rain forest. |
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When the dough has been shaped into a pyramid, a thick meat and potato stew is poured round it and decorated with whole hard-boiled eggs. |
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The cheddar mash had no overtly cheesy taste but was rich and creamy and the dish was served with a thick onion gravy, dotted with baby onions. |
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A turnover from James Dalton, back in the thick of things after a long spell out in the cold, sent Dean Hall winging down the left touchline. |
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Bobby was wearing new lace-up shoes and knickers with long, thick socks like most of the boys in my school. |
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Of 24 micrographs, 22 had neighboring thick and thin filaments with periodic structures connecting the two. |
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She was a bit taller than Dai with short thick curly hair and tanned skin, much like his own. |
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Those winged seeds store enough energy to take root in a thick layer of partially decomposed leaves. |
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But it is also about three fat rashers of Gloucester Old Spot bacon on thick white bread with ketchup. |
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Dotted with extraordinary trees like the baobab with its thick knotty trunk and root-like branches, the park teems with wildlife. |
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Next add the ginger, turmeric and oil and work the ingredients into a thick brown paste. |
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Night grew thick around them as the village's lights winked out in the horizon. |
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As he wanted to stay a moment and savour the scene, he leaned against the thick trunk of the sturdy oak behind him. |
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The puppets were made from donkey skins, which were thick and non-transparent. |
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Thinly built, with thick glasses and K-Mart clothes, Lee is as cheery as he is modest. |
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Two of the three theatres in the Kyogle Cinema show all the latest movies in comfort with thick seats and cheap prices. |
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He always started with his special thick and creamy soup, prepared to a secret recipe and reserved for him alone. |
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Carefully, he opened the incision with a pair of forceps, revealing her skin's thick red underlining. |
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After they have definitely formed they can be recognized by their thick stubby appearance. |
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Breakfast with thick condensed milk, missed the spot completely and reconfirmed my decision to leave. |
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Using it with cold fingers in thick gloves, I found it rather fiddly. |
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He was a short, stout man who had long ago lost most of his hair and now had to keep his thick bifocals on a string around his neck or else he'd lose them too. |
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But Rubens was merely trying to appeal to wealthy art patrons, who liked their models with thick legs and dimpled derrieres. |
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They pump their haul of diluted bitumen into tanker cars in the terminal's loading yard, thick with the smell of petroleum. |
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Scuffles broke out with riot police, who used pepper spray to repel party members wielding Greek flags on thick wooden sticks. |
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His eyes were blue and shone through a shock of thick ebony black hair. |
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Consider the trashy, silky sweatpants sent down the runway by Jarrar, complete with thick stripes running down the legs. |
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When the cocoa beans are roasted, their shells crack to expose the nib, which is then ground into a thick paste. |
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These start with a poached egg on puff pastry, followed by melt-in-your-mouth herbed salmon, and then a thick slice of roast beef in gravy accompanied by scalloped potatoes. |
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The burning heavy plastic caused acrid smoke which left a thick layer of soot on over everything in the room and means an awful lot of cleaning up. |
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He frequently slips into Neapolitan dialect so thick that is incomprehensible. |
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The floor and most of the counters were blanketed in a thick snowdrift of flour, marked with trails of footprints where they had walked through it. |
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The Barclays Center where the Duke and Duchess will be seated would have stood in thick of where the pivotal action transpired. |
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The English mistakes came thick and fast as Jonny Wilkinson knocked on and Luger sliced a horrible kick into touch to the delight of the Welsh supporters. |
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Look for wool or acrylic knit hats with a tight, thick weave. |
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Like before, after you have put the case where it is going to stand permanently, you can unfold the thick rubber pads to prevent any vibration of the case. |
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Once off the A19, the roads to Kepwick were bordered by thick drifts of snowdrops and we found more growing alongside winter aconite in the small churchyard. |
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Fold a paper towel or cloth to make a thick pad, as large as the label. |
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A thick layer of snow lies on the rooftops, lights flash and twinkle on every street and a dazzling forest of trees has sprouted up all over the city. |
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It must have been full summer, for it was warm enough not to need a coat, and the lawns were thick with white daisies, all impossibly open in the moonlight. |
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Instead, rain forest trees are often supported by thick buttress roots. |
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His copy of The Diviners was meticulously tabbed and flagged and he had a thick file of all of the emails that the two men had exchanged with each other before this evening. |
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I suppose I could have pretended to be an investor and had a bit of fun, but the air was already thick with with the reek of manure without me adding to it. |
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If you like your smoothie very thick add a quarter cup of a full fat yogurt. |
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I wore my big, thick woolly tramping socks to work the other day. |
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The collection is laid back and includes well worn jeans with oversized white shirts and thick knits, masculine suits and lots of simple cotton and jersey dresses. |
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As the news of their son's bravery came in, his parents didn't seem surprised that he had been in the thick of the action on the outskirts of the city. |
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Some people find it hard to breathe while wearing thick respirators, so they just cover the mouth and leave the nose exposed in the air, which is wrong and risky. |
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As you can see, the flames are so intense and the smoke is thick and so black, that it's pretty impossible to see if there is, in fact, a second tractor trailer involved. |
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Air pollution is so thick in the city that residents rarely see the sun. |
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But if Strauss-Kahn's case is dismissed, or deflated to a misdemeanor, the question will be how thick that line is, in fact. |
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It was in 1997 that Chris won his first major prize in an open competition by landing the President's Cup and the awards have come thick and fast since then. |
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If a log were a perfect cylinder with uniformly thick growth layers, the figure on the surfaces of boards cut in tangential planes would be parallel markings. |
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In time the word shed its literal association with thick vegetation and was applied generally to any country, open or treed, beyond the settled coast. |
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He was holding onto the thick leg of an armchair, but tiny, scratching hands were clawing at him, forcing him to loosen his grip more and more gradually. |
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We picked up some croissants and a thick wedge of baked cheesecake, and pointed at some fruit scones, and then wandered home to curl up and nod off. |
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It came out of the west over a thick covering of Australian pine trees. |
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The woods near our home were thick with walnut, white oak, sweet birch, sassafras, hemlock, red maple, juniper, tulip trees, and many more species I couldn't name. |
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They won't be able to sit with us up in the thick leaves of the non-bearing mulberry that held my tree house and hear the conversations we shared. |
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Much, much better were the thin wedges of nutty, fudgey Manchego cheese and the thick but sweetly tender Serrano ham clearly cut from the leg, not industrially pre-sliced. |
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Securing a SAN from external assaults is not particularly hard, since most SANs are located behind thick firewalls with zealously guarded network access. |
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Arrowhead and asterisk mark thick cuticle and primary wall, respectively. |
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Here an organized coil of thick nickel cable is able to stand on its side, while loose lengths of thinner wire assume increasingly amorphous shapes. |
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Four of them carried a thick black nylon body bag, two to a side, and loaded it into the middle of the hull. |
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So the Russians like to eat shchi, especially overnight shchi and sour shchi with mushrooms cooked in baked clay pots, borshch, rassolnic, solyanka and other thick soups. |
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Putin also hoped to drum up some patriotic pride with a big circus to serve with thick black bread. |
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He got his parents to tape him in, you know that gaffer tape they use, that thick tape, to tape him onto the bike, because his balance was still a bit wobbly. |
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For him, one of the most entertaining aspects about working on the theater's new play has been deciphering the thick Yooper accent used by his two costars. |
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The trees themselves are so thick they'll never turn into millable timber. |
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And Bossie will once again be in the thick of it, all the more dangerous for having learned from his past crusades. |
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This was destined to become part of the thick liquor in the tanning pits for leather, as Oak trees in particular have high levels of tannin in the bark. |
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If your bearings were lubed with a thick gel or grease, you may have to let them soak for ten minutes, shake for ten minutes, soak for ten minutes and so on to get them clean. |
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He still had a thick dirty blonde hair with a style reminiscent of Elvis. |
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Audrey had thick brown hair and blunt almost square features. |
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Papa had to shave his thick auburn hair because of a case of head lice. |
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This calcrete can be three meters thick and looks like a breccia. |
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She suddenly felt a thick wad of paper towels shoved into her hand. |
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The last to take the runway was a shimmering gold, high-low gown with two elbow length cuffs, a thick choker, and heeled mules. |
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With a voice thick with tears, Collins told Fajuri he had stopped performing in 2000 and it was time to consign the piece. |
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The vines were thick and heftily wooded, larger than any plant life a desert dweller could ever imagine, and more voracious than the most haggardly pack of wolves. |
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His thick brown hair was spiked, but shaggy at the same time. |
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They both credit NYC Prep as a learning experience that forced them to mature and develop a thick skin at a young age. |
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This was the perfect inspiration to create a hot chocolate so thick and textured the spoon was actually necessary. |
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They wore white socks and polyester shirts and ties and thick glasses and coded in machine language and assembler and FORTRAN and half a dozen ancient languages now forgotten. |
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After storage, thick transversal sections were made with a razor blade. |
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Their features are more thick and in different proportions than men. |
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He knew old timers used soap for lube in muzzle loaders, so he taught me to roll the bullets in a thick mixture of Ivory soap and water and let them dry. |
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His angular cheeks, thick glasses, and carefully combed hair incarnate elegance, vision, and, unfortunately, personal agony. |
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This characteristic of the proposed scheme could make it suitable for less tectonically stable parts of the world provided enclaves of suitably thick crust are available. |
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Properties of wrought products depend to some extent on the quality of the ingot from which they were made, especially thick plates or strip made from thin castings. |
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Everywhere we look in the cosmos, we see galaxies, forming a thick network that almost looks like cells in the human brain. |
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Vincent was reading one of her thick books and taking notes down. |
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Each rack is suspended over a lake of thick black paint and dipped with minute precision so as to coat the very top of the pencil in a millimetre of black. |
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Large, ungainly and hanging onto my thick specs, I'd leap over a vault with my free hand, landing with a resonant thud on the other side, and I loved it. |
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The influence of Oliver Stone, our granddaddy of prurient interest in political violence, hung thick in the air. |
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First words, then shoves, were exchanged, and finally, testosterone thick in the air, a few blows were thrown. |
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To our right, carpets of flowers reach up to a thick cloud cover. |
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He was a well-fed man with a plump belly and thick arms and legs. |
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Her shaggy, ragged coat, thick with its winter growth, was still not enough to keep out the biting cold that had come with last night's ice storm. |
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