Relaxed and carefree, they fall in love with a Mediterranean resort or a fishing village in the Canaries. |
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However if he can keep the Canaries in the Premiership then that will mean as much as lifting a trophy. |
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Far-flung destinations like Goa, Cuba and Egypt are now threatening the Canaries as the most popular winter destinations for Mancunians. |
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Following my two-week stop-off for repairs in the Canaries, the boat has never been better. |
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On the earliest charts displaying a longitude scale, the prime meridian passed through the Canaries. |
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In the Canaries, the lavas are much more compositionally varied in each of these stages, ranging from tholeiitic basalts to phonolites and trachytes. |
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His first full season at the helm was a rewarding experience as he led the Canaries to the play off finals after helping them to a sixth place finish. |
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His earliest recollection of becoming involved as a hobbyist was when in the early seventies he purchased two pair of border Canaries for his young son Eric. |
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In 1936, Francisco Franco was appointed General Commandant of the Canaries. |
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The international boundary of the Canaries is the subject of dispute between Spain and Morocco. |
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The Canaries went ahead when the home defence failed to clear their lines and Pilkington was on hand to slide in his eighth goal of the campaign. |
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But Portugal exercises sovereignty over the Savage Islands, a small archipelago north of the Canaries, claiming an EEZ border further south. |
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Referee Michael Oliver failed to detect a foul in a crowded box and the Canaries escaped down the tunnel with the scoreline still blank. |
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And while Scots basked in 20 hours of sunshine, the Canaries and the Balearic Islands were hit by thunderstorms. |
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Bodybuilder Carl Thompson, 36, Sally Barrett and other members of the group were caught by a rip current at Fuerteventura in the Canaries. |
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A LOGGERHEAD turtle will be returned to the sea in the Canaries a year after it was saved by an Irish sanctuary. |
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Sahara the hooded seal is meant to live among the Arctic sea ice but was found starving and half-dead on a beach in the Canaries. |
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And to copper-fasten the misery, Pilkington looked on as the Canaries were sucked under and relegated from the Premier League. |
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Anthony Pilkington sidefooted the Canaries ahead before Grant Holt was denied a penalty for Norwich. |
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We're going to wipe up your team just like we wiped up the Canaries. |
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When I used to be able to afford to go on holiday to the Canaries I was appalled at the lawlessness of motorists and others who parked on and overtook at zebra crossings. |
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The 30 for Hedblom, lucklessly beaten in two play-offs this year, in the Canaries and at Portmarnock, is the more attractive in a field that lacks depth. |
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On this basis of calculation he identified Hispaniola with Cipangu, which he had expected to find on the outward voyage at a distance of about 700 leagues from the Canaries. |
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This was due to a very public falling out with the Airport over charges, but the airline has since returned and now operates two flights a week to the Canaries all year round. |
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After that, the Canaries were incorporated into the Kingdom of Castile. |
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As we walked deeper into the darkness, we both knew this could go sideways in a heartbeat. We were sitting ducks. Birds on a wire. Canaries in a coalmine. |
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And when Wolves had the ball they gifted it back to the opposition so fecklessly that the Canaries continued to carve out chance after chance and could have scored eight. |
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Beaming the sound of the birds' natural predators, such as geese or owls, at their roosts scares the canaries away from the power lines. |
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In the 19th century, underground coal miners carried canaries down into the shafts as their first line of defense against poisonous gases. |
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As the names indicate, color-bred canaries are bred to attain specific colorations and song canaries for their singing abilities. |
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Small square cages are used for canaries, while thrushes are given larger round cages. |
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Avoid nesting material for finches, canaries and other small birds because they may have artificial fibers such as polyester contained within. |
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Both institutions were canaries in the coal mine of the rebuilding process. |
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When it gets dark the canaries stop singing but at dawn they start again and wake up the guards. |
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The show should only consist of budgerigars, canaries, zebra finches, Bengalese finches, pigeons and captive bred British birds. |
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Finches, canaries and budgerigars do not need as much attention from their people and so may be an option for those with busy life-styles. |
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Budgies, finches, sparrows and canaries are only a few of the more than one hundred kinds of birds people keep in their apartments. |
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Finch mules have always been more difficult to breed than the canaries or finches themselves, but some were less difficult than others. |
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A dozen birdcages with canaries are scattered throughout the room and attached to the walls. |
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Sheesh, a bummer to be sure, but the show isn't just about despair, faulty canaries and premature death from lung cancer. |
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The family have always kept pets, Mrs Cotter said, and currently own cats, a dog and two parrots and some canaries. |
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The song of the canaries in a cage downstairs rings out throughout the whole restaurant. |
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Janet has been keeping exotic birds including cockatiels, finches and canaries for 12 years. |
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Reich had the bird breeder's equivalent of a green thumb, and was known among bird hobbyists for training canaries to sing the song of the nightingale. |
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Microsoft believes that the sites could act as canaries in a coal mine, alerting the company to dangerous zero-day exploits, before the attacks gained widespread usage. |
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The coastal communities are simply the canaries in the coal mine. |
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His earliest recollection of becoming involved as a hobbyist was when in the early seventies he purchased two pairs of canaries for his young son Eric. |
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In a cage across the room, I noticed canaries that chattered incessantly to each other and seemed to sing at my presence in protest of my invading their territory. |
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The goldfinches chittered and sang like drunken canaries and once in a thunderstorm a barred owl blundered into that fake crystal chandelier she had always detested. |
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Along with camels, pigeons, donkeys, oxen, canaries, cats and dogs, the memorial remembers the eight million horses killed in the Great War alone. |
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The bokmakieries, canaries and a colony of vivid European bee-eaters that I spotted gave me just a glimpse of the nearly two hundred bird species that inhabit the reserve. |
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Scientists have really gotten interested in the brains of songbirds, particularly those birds that can keep learning new songs when they're adults, like canaries. |
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It can also be dissolved in alcohol to form tincture of iron, which is used as a medicine to stop bleeding in canaries. |
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The family includes species known as siskins, canaries, redpolls, serins, grosbeaks and euphonias. |
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The weakest members of society become social barometers or canaries in a coal mine. |
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The product is available in varieties for finches, canaries, parakeets, cockatiels, parrots and conures. |
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People whose health is affected by the environment they live in can be dubbed a climate canary, after the canaries which used to warn miners of poison gas. |
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Warrant canaries are legal tricks employed by conscientious organisations to get around the fact that certain demands from the US government cannot be disclosed publicly. |
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