Tiny aquatic organisms called phytoplankton live in the ocean, providing the basis for the food web. |
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Tiny raised flowers done in what seem to be French knots are balanced by the flat stem stitch. |
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His Tiny Tots dahlias are unique in that they give off a pleasant scent, something dahlias just don't do. |
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Tiny insects can trigger an explosive opening of mature bunchberry flowers, and are showered with pollen as they fly away. |
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Tiny children sit passively by their parents, too weak and languid to play or run around, as cars flash past them. |
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Tiny wrinkles morphed into deep creases in his skin, by his eyes and near his mouth. |
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Tiny meteors, commonly called shooting stars, hit the earth's atmosphere and turn into fiery streaks. |
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Tiny crystals of hematite, goethite, chalcopyrite, marcasite, and dolomite are common and make excellent micromounts. |
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Time Computers has followed Tiny Computers into the digital home entertainment field. |
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Tiny twin girls born eight weeks premature kept special care staff busy as the New Year's Day smiles were mixed with concern. |
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Tiny bikini underwear is gaining in prevalence simply because of today's fashion trends. |
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Tiny turnips, the first finger-length zucchini and broad beans are there for the asking. |
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Tiny microchips are making people on a huge estate feel more secure by putting burglars off raiding their homes. |
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Tiny electrodes are microfabricated along the walls of the hair-like capillaries, in essence creating a complex grid of electrodes. |
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Tiny mussels balled around the oysters, keeping them small and making them unfit for market. |
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Tiny adularia rhombs are also present on the matrix of a specimen showing an unusual association of wire gold with scheelite. |
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Tiny took us along the seemingly endless corridors to the gate at the end and he opened it for us. |
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At this point, I still haven't settled on a name for her, but I keep leaning towards Valentine, with Tiny being her nickname. |
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Tiny yellow flowers were sprinkled throughout the mosses that blanketed the slippery rocks at the waters walls. |
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Tiny lurex tops, bumfreezer leggings and high heels, this gang with red-painted lips and rouged cheeks and hair coiffed high ran riot. |
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Tiny dots on the horizon testified that the other fishermen were still hauling in the catch out there. |
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Tiny rural roads used as diversions were brought to a standstill by lorries trying to find a way around the chaos. |
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Tiny ones like money spiders that come in the house I can swish out with a broom because I don't like to kill them. |
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Tiny pyromorphite crystals associated with wulfenite have been found in road cuts near Cranston, Rhode Island. |
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It was almost like the Gullah speak of the Sea Islands, but Tiny was white and was brought up far from that culture. |
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Tiny hands forming tiny people out of cereal, foil wrap or paper clips, illustrate the size of children's personally improvised art. |
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Tiny needles are inserted into the hair follicle followed by an electrical charge that damages it, causing it to stop producing hair. |
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Tiny microchips, like the one pictured between two fingers, can be implanted under a pet's skin. |
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Tiny blossoms of deep pinks and reds will add great color to your festive fall container. |
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Tiny water droplets splattered across his reflection in the mirror at which he stared at ominously. |
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Tiny winged creatures flutter about, causing the children to duck and wave their arms. |
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Tiny bathrooms are more problematic but there is usually room for at least one pot plant. |
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Tiny vivid goldcrests flurried about thistles, the cool descended, and I took the direct descent to the valley floor. |
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Tiny transistor sets with FM facility disappeared with astonishing speed from the shelves of duty paid shops. |
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Tiny ivory fans were put into tea chests and we all associate white ostrich feather with presentation at court. |
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Tiny ridges, bumps and cracks visible on their surfaces are magnified a thousand fold. |
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Tiny strands of fuzz caught our attention by gently waving in the completely slack water. |
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Tiny perfume bottles in delicately colored glass always brought Laura to mind. |
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Tiny snowflakes flurried down to the ground where they quickly disappeared. |
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Tiny silver chains hang from the whiffletrees and show where the horses belong. |
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Tiny though this fractional increase seems when expressed this way, the overall amounts are huge. |
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Tiny microorganisms such as bacteria are often the agents of choice for bioremediation. |
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Tiny ivory turnips blushed with rose pink are this season's pleasant surprise. |
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Tiny houses were strung out along our route, framed in their verdant patch of coffee, banana and vegetables. |
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Tiny organisms that invade the body cause infections that can make you ill. |
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Tiny eddies of smoke escaped from the edges of the bark, then succumb to the heat of the flames. |
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Tiny grooves may need to be cut into remaining teeth or fillings, so that the denture clips into a firm position. |
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Tiny pits occur in the nails, sometimes causing the nail to separate from the nail bed. |
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Tiny dewdrops are falling like rain and its even biting in Dhaka where the temperature was around 11-14 degree Celsius. |
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Tiny glints of light appeared in the distance and began to move at great speed towards the enemy armada. |
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Tiny bits of metal leaf come together like a textured, variegated sheet on craft projects. |
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Tiny pure white lace gloves and a mother-of-pearl prayer missal completed the ensemble. |
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Tiny particles such as photons or atoms can readily be put into a quantum superposition existing in two different states or places at once. |
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Tiny fairy penguins body-surf onto the beach, struggle to their feet, and waddle up to their custom-made nesting shelters. |
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Tiny blue azures alight in the grass, and cabbage whites hover over the vegetable patch. |
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Tiny and withered by hard living as she appeared, she still wore shocking strawberry blond braids down to her waist. |
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Tiny flower prints or gingham for a casual country look, swagged silky fabric, bright or pastel tissue paper for more formal occasions. |
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Tiny gardens of moss and liverworts flourished where spores had drifted in from outside and settled under the warm glow of the cave lights. |
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Tiny ivory fans were put into tea chests as makeweights and we all associate white ostrich feather with presentation at court. |
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Tiny beads were colored in the most vibrant hues of violet and the entire light show was mesmerizing. |
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Tiny vessels smaller than 6 m diameter without clearly visible and stainable cell wall thickenings were neglected. |
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Tiny baitfish feed on these amphipods, and the next point in the cycle provides food for larger fish, which in turn nurture popular gamefish, among others. |
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Tiny strips of lime zest added an occasional extra tang to the mix. |
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But, unknown to her owner, for the past three weeks Tiny has been wandering into the yard at Clacton police station looking for food and attention. |
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Tiny details from an image, features that would hardly have been noticed at the time, can spark memories in a Proustian rush. |
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Tiny flats, some as small as 18 square metres, are selling like hot cakes to Beijing's young urban professionals and are the talk of its youth-oriented media. |
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He'd come over to confront Stan and Tiny and to tell them exactly what he thought of their effrontery, but held back the accusation for want of proof. |
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Tiny snowflakes flurried about them as they finally completed the task. |
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Tiny feet tip-toed across a rug that was probably very expensive, up several flights of stairs of cushiony carpet and onto a hallway that was cold, lifeless, and noisy. |
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Tiny diagrammatic shapes seemed to float in the darkness when I closed my eyes, and my ears sensed the lingering reverberation of a guitar in the distance. |
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Tiny snowflakes brushed her face as they fell, fluttering to the ground. |
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Tiny red gems twinkled in the eye sockets, and the broad top of the skull was dotted with similarly tiny green and black jewels, forming an intricate paisley pattern. |
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Izzard, dressed like a riverboat gambler, plays a smooth-talking mogul named Tiny Diamonds. |
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Tiny figures huddled in sweatshops, toiling in unspeakable conditions. |
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Tiny cogs and flywheels rolled or flew into the corners of the room. |
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Tiny tots in the age group of 1-10 years participated in the competitions. |
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Tiny water droplets are borne on the air like dust motes, sparkling in the glare from the banks of fluorescent lights in the canopy above the petrol pumps. |
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Tiny was a male bull elephant with one tusk shorter than the other. |
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Tiny tots toddled and waddled in memory of a special friend. |
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Tiny particles of soot or chemical compounds like sulphates reflect sunlight and they also promote the formation of bigger, longer lasting clouds. |
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I was a qualified nursery nurse at Tiny Tots nursery in Middleton. |
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Bob Cratchit, the clerk who is the father of Tiny Tim and who meekly serves Scrooge, is paid fifteen shillings a week. |
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But please, can we call a halt to the current orgy of lachrymosity, which is starting to make Tiny Tears look like Steven Seagal? |
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Edge Hill university's Chancellor Dr Tanya Byron is famous for working in television series such as House of Tiny Tearaways and Teen Angels. |
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Tiny water fleas ingest the larvae first, and they are easily filtered from drinking water. |
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Other new Welsh microbrewers at the festival include Tiny Rebel from Newport and Cerddin Brewery in Maesteg. |
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Tiny Teddies Day Nursery, which has sites in Radford, Tile Hill and Whitley, nominated the Anesis Ministry for its Christmas charity. |
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Tiny flowers are perfect for attracting delicate beneficials like chalcid wasps and hover flies, whose larvae devour aphids. |
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Tiny leafhoppers a around 1-2mm a feed off the sap in the plant but introduce microbacteria which dry out the plant. |
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Tiny Rebel has won the Champion Beer of Wales for two years in a row for its FUBAR, and Dirty Stop Out beers. |
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Tiny pinworm eggs can live for two to three weeks on desks, countertops, and other surfaces. |
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If you thought smocking was only for Tiny Tears and pregnant ladies, think again. |
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Tiny breast are a further indication for the inanimateness Caro's body shows. |
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Tiny Streets, Big Stories Casco Viejo is the oldest area in Panama City. |
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Staff at Tiny Teddies Out of School Services will use the money to buy equipment including a drum machine, keyboard and karaoke machine. |
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Tiny microfibres provide plenty of exfoliation while the lime and ginger is a real wake up call. |
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Tiny shells of planktonic animals rain down from the surface waters of the ocean on to the deep sea-floor. |
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We use a programme called Tiny Tastes, which involves choosing a target food and inviting the child to have a tiny taste of it each day for 10 days. |
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Decades later, Mother, Major, Tiny, Small and Granny Clanger return to their little blue planet to delight a new generation with their animated antics. |
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The Tiny Lite Display-A-Tray is also offered in a multi-tiered display rack assortment, which company officials say helps encourage impulse purchase and consumer shopability. |
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Tiny hands are eagerly plucking the strings of violins, guitars and vihuelas as the musicians compete for attention inside the parent center at San Fernando Elementary School. |
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Tiny microglia puff up and pounce on invaders that enter the brain, using chemical warfare to kill infiltrators, while devouring dead and dying cells. |
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Tiny microliths were developed for hafting onto harpoons and spears. |
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Tiny floating plastic particles also resemble zooplankton, which can lead filter feeders to consume them and cause them to enter the ocean food chain. |
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With Tiny, it is good as a surprise strat. If another team doesn't realize where he fits into the whole lineup, then you can really throw the opposition off balance. |
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The last time she had visited, Sean's father, Tiny Tim, who was tight as a tick with his money, jovially presided over the place, one big yard filled with rusting cars. |
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Tiny Amaya Fuller was just a few days old when she became the first baby to be born in the city to be signed up to the 'REP's Children' initiative. |
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Gifts were donated by Tiny Teddies Nursery, Jaguar Land Rover and Sainsbury's as well as being bought with money donated to Anesis, which organised the event. |
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Gifts have been donated by Tiny Teddies Nursery, Jaguar Land Rover and Sainsbury's as well as being bought with money donated to Anesis, which is organising the event. |
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Tiny barn swallows struggle across the sands to find a life-saving oasis. |
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The new version, which is claimed to produce high-quality SVG Tiny animations, includes Opacity and Gradient support and has been developed to work with Adobe Creative Suite. |
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A tiny arched drawbridge spanned the channel, wide enough for two people to walk abreast. |
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Like a little aardvark discovering a termite mound, her tiny nose twitched ecstatically. |
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Now he could look right through the tiny window over the roof, on to the tree-tops aback of the house. |
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Recent research around volcanic vents has found tiny organisms that breathe iron. |
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Enceladus, a tiny moon orbiting Saturn, appears to be venting water into space from a series of fractures over its south pole. |
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You can still buy factory loaded.38 Special wadcutters from the major makers, but it's a tiny trickle compared to ten years ago. |
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Alarmingly, I have experienced a number of electrical shocks whilst performing my morning ablutions close by to the tiny bulbs. |
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The fabric was printed with a simple design, and the full skirt accentuated her tiny waist. |
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Stranded in a tiny village without amenities, he eagerly accepts an offer of shelter in a local abode. |
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Houdini relied on great skill, low cunning, and keeping tiny metal picklocks concealed about his person. |
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Marching stiffly across the room he performed a perfect about-turn before slapping his tiny sandalled foot on the clay floor and saluting. |
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If the particles are not tiny enough, they will have an abrasive effect on the skin. |
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Kokhi's parents' place is a tiny top-floor walk-up in one of the slummy blocks that line Hebron Road on its way out of town. |
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We keep all of the tiny wage they pay me, but its enough to stop us going up the wall. |
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They are a tiny bit smaller than the eggs of a bee hummingbird and they certainly look like wall lizard eggs. |
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My absolute favorite place was a tiny casino in the Royal Haitian Hotel in Port Au Prince, Haiti. |
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Only a tiny part of the pattern need be printed at a time, and by looking at it you can tell where it's from. |
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Leeds University scientists have calculated the birds, including tiny quail weighing mere grammes, are five times fitter than our Olympic athletes. |
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As on the fish serving fork, the terminal of the fork is formed by a thick quahog clamshell with a tiny crab on it, and the stem is lavishly encrusted with marine elements. |
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Infrared cameras placed throughout a test-flying area communicate with tiny sensors on the quadrotors, feeding into a computer-based navigation system. |
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One of the most interesting spaces to open recently is the South African-run Axis Gallery, located on the top floor of a tiny walk-up at 453 West 17th Street. |
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Coconut charcoal is charcoal from coconut shells that has been altered with oxygen to create lots of tiny pores. |
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The next evening, Romero was saying mass in the chapel at the hospice where he lived in a tiny room near the infirm and the dying. |
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As she maneuvered her walker to the elevator, I provided a visual description of her tiny room, including the eyelet sheets that had been hung on her window. |
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This particular form of tailoring is tight and tiny, cut with soft, rounded shoulders, open necklines and small waists which are sometimes belted. |
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But Nicole claims that she's always been a tiny bony little waif, and during season one of The Simple Life, she was going through a rare chubby period. |
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Once a tiny, flitting waif, she had become a graceful, full-figured woman. |
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That means Chariklo likely has one or more tiny shepherd moons itself, making the centaur a miniature solar system. |
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Many of these microscopic devices must be interconnected by metal wires, which are made by filling tiny trenches in the surface of the semiconductor wafer. |
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A tiny sliver of the population has celiac disease or medically diagnosed gluten sensitivity. |
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Has the tiny nation of Burundi become ground zero for a new global black-market trade in human remains? |
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Unlike its famous neighbor Rwanda, the tiny landlocked country of Burundi is difficult to locate on a map. |
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Everybody making pinot noir lives in the shadow of one tiny vineyard in Burgundy, the 4.4 acres of La Romanee-Conti. |
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The children teased my parents about their budding romance and my parents, in turn, fell in love with their tiny wards. |
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In the tiny seaside town of Yacahts, Oregon, buck Henderson is ready to die. |
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Close enough to see the tiny scar on his eyelid that looks like a birthmark. |
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Cannons were fired in the heart of the tiny principality, which is no bigger than Central Park, to celebrate the news. |
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No more hunting for the tiny little arrow with your big fat finger, in other words. |
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For the best that Barcelona has to offer, belly up to Pinotxo Bar, a tiny place with a gracious host. |
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Made with a tiny budget in a mere three years, Glodell has achieved the near-impossible with bellflower. |
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Whatever the reason, Burton was committed enough to leave tiny Bunker Hill to seek out her beau. |
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We came across men in loose djellabas riding tiny donkeys, and others scything by hand, leaving piles of barley under olive trees. |
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Mr. Bachner found it by wandering through the market and identified a craftsmen here who works in a tiny booth. |
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Given this tiny pool of survivors, a skeptic might ask why the story of the Mandans should matter to the contemporary reader? |
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The tiny creature contributes to its ecosystem in ways we are only just beginning to appreciate. |
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In anaerobic digesters, organic material is mixed on a huge pot with massive quantities of tiny bacteria. |
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As a boy in alamo, a tiny Mormon ranching community in Lincoln County 90 miles north of Las Vegas, Lamb was one of 11 children. |
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His tiny Texas aggie brain froze when he tried to repeat his talking point about the three federal agencies he would close. |
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When her bra was cut from her body, the assassin or assassins also cut off the tab on which the tiny metal clasp was affixed. |
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The coroner would also note the tiny hemorrhages that accompany strangulation. |
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Ukraine has a large number of political parties, many of which have tiny memberships and are unknown to the general public. |
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In order to preserve eggs, a tiny hole was pierced and the contents extracted. |
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This is because only a tiny percentage of animals ever fossilize, and most of these remain buried in the earth. |
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I wish we could go outside instead of stifling in this tiny room. |
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In shape it is a tiny square box of silver, studded outside with eight small balas-rubies. |
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She turned off the bed-head light in this tiny, low-ceiled rolling home of hers, raised the curtain and watched the specks of light streak by. |
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Bones put the tiny crimson speck between his slides, blobbed a drop of oil on top, and focused the microscope. |
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Anyone looking for a kitten should consider that it is a tiny bundle of energy. |
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Women now resembled well-rounded cabbages from which protruded a tiny head crushed beneath a Charlotte hat covered with plumes and gew-gaws. |
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Lou Brent rolled from his cot, got to his feet on the floor of the tiny coop. |
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The tiny mouth is uttering the most satisfied of crowings, and her eyes have that pure, soft expression never seen except in baby eyes. |
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The buccal wall is near its base surrounded by a vestigial ectocingulid, which ends mesially in a tiny tuberculid. |
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He smiled again, easily, dimples creasing his cheeks, and a tiny fanwork of lines crinkled the corners of his dark eyes. |
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It wasn't quite as feelsome as the Palm V, because one could only roll a thumbwheel and type on its tiny keyboard. |
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I have a tiny bit of respect of Angelina for adopting an orphan instead of populating the world with another flesh loaf. |
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She laughs, not a funny ha-ha laugh but rather a tiny self-inflicted chuckle of disgust. |
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I always supposed he was called Goog because the tiny flattened ears did nothing to interrupt the goog-like sweep from crown to jaw. |
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He was a tiny wiry-haired fellow with a pale, sharp-featured face and restless movements. |
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These tiny organisms are crucial elements of the food chain supporting many species of fish. |
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Up the block at Nananom, a tiny music and sundries store, all the hiplife CDs were sold out. |
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Through his life, he always stood out from the crowd with his tiny frame and hornrimmed glasses. |
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The tiny tesserae allowed very fine detail, and an approach to the illusionism of painting. |
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The size of the burhs ranged from tiny outposts such as Pilton to large fortifications in established towns, the largest being at Winchester. |
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After taking hostages from the leading men of the city, on 24 September the Norwegians moved east to the tiny village of Stamford Bridge. |
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They wanted to watch the game on TV, but there was too much interference to even make out the score on the tiny screen. |
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What a tiny little schooner! But is it not bold to spread both sails? And see, now that we have come round to the wind, how the skiff keels over. |
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The City is now only a tiny part of the metropolis of London, though it remains a notable part of central London. |
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However this causes only a tiny portion of the masses of other subatomic particles, such as protons and neutrons. |
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Lindwyrms are wingless dragons that look like huge snakes. Some lindwyrms have two tiny feet that are almost useless. |
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These speciality beers have a tiny proportion of the market, but are of interest to connoisseurs worldwide. |
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These were painted with tiny sable brushes and evoke Early Netherlandish painting. |
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Gravity does not move through matter in waves, nor is it composed of tiny specks of matterlike photons. |
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Wallington was a tiny village 35 miles north of London, and the cottage had almost no modern facilities. |
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Mary Norton wrote The Borrowers, featuring tiny people who borrow from humans. |
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He sailed the last fifty miles with a tiny sailplan to keep the boat upright. |
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Reattaching his severed finger required microsurgery to suture together the tiny blood vessels. |
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The Labour Party under Harold Wilson won the October 1974 election by a tiny majority of only three seats. |
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And in the centre was Charles Edward Stuart's tiny escort made up of Fitzjames's Horse and Lifeguards. |
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The official Liberals found themselves a tiny minority within a government committed to protectionism. |
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Chicago was home to the reinvention of the harmonica from tiny dime store toy to amplified and distorted Mississippi sax. |
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Into Devon and Cornwall, the coastline becomes more rocky and steep, with numerous cliffs and tiny fishing villages along the coastline. |
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Apart from the main island of Anguilla itself, the territory includes a number of other smaller islands and cays, mostly tiny and uninhabited. |
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Mossack Fonseca approached Niue in 1996 and offered to help set up a tax haven on the tiny South Sea island. |
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In it he provided a conceptual model for electromagnetic induction, consisting of tiny spinning cells of magnetic flux. |
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A tiny, upright figure on muleback, she wore a hat of deep red, her auburn hair falling down about her shoulders. |
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The Thomas family lived on a tiny income and lacked the comforts of modern life, largely through their own choice. |
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The body was covered with what appeared to be tiny pills, while one outstretched hand held a glass. |
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The passport's critical information is stored on a tiny RFID computer chip, much like information stored on smartcards. |
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Historically, they constituted only a tiny fraction of the whole Indonesian population and continue to do so today. |
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The region is peppered with tiny Inuit fishing communities, of which Cartwright is the largest. |
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Adults are found in summer on newly fallen or recently felled trees chewing tiny slits in the bark in which they lay eggs. |
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The eggs hatch in about 2 weeks, and the tiny larvae tunnel to the wood and score its surface with their feeding channels. |
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Glacier ice is slightly less dense than ice formed from frozen water because it contains tiny trapped air bubbles. |
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Caernarfon is described as having neither drainage or fresh water and the inmates housed in tiny windowless cells. |
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Wild salmon get these carotenoids from eating krill and other tiny shellfish. |
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They also feed on zooplankton, tiny animals found in oceanic surface waters, and small fish and fish larvae. |
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Copepods and other tiny crustaceans are the most common zooplankton eaten by herring. |
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Their distinctive, flattened tests and tiny spines were adapted to life on or under loose sand. |
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In fact, the known association of seabirds with land was instrumental in allowing the Polynesians to locate tiny landmasses in the Pacific. |
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Here it was sucked from tiny one-shot bottles wrapped in coarse paper, taken between drafts of good East German beer. |
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Another subtype is an island or bar formed by deposition of tiny rocks where water current loses some of its carrying capacity. |
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In most species of caridean shrimp, the females lay 50,000 to 1 million eggs, which hatch after some 24 hours into tiny nauplii. |
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At this stage, the myses already begin to appear like tiny versions of fully developed adults and feed on algae and zooplankton. |
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Bony amber owes its cloudy opacity to numerous tiny bubbles inside the resin. |
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The bulk of French armour was scattered along the front in tiny formations. |
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The steamboat was destroyed, the cargo was lost, and the tiny Union escort was run off. |
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Only a tiny fraction of wild species has been investigated for medical potential. |
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After several months of growth and development, these sprout limbs and undergo metamorphosis into tiny toads. |
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They are pardalotes, tiny little feathered jewels with stubby bills and stubby tails, giving an oddly ladybird-like silhouette. |
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The drain plug was then very slowly removed, and tiny pieces of floating wood were used to observe rotation. |
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In very deep mixed layers, the tiny marine plants known as phytoplankton are unable to get enough light to maintain their metabolism. |
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The tiny specimens have been suggested to be juveniles and the larger ones adults. |
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Avoid stepping on rope, as this might force tiny pieces of rock through the sheath, which can eventually deteriorate the core of the rope. |
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A dispute with Spain in 2002 over the tiny island of Perejil revived the issue of the sovereignty of Melilla and Ceuta. |
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Using tiny print to state the origin of blended oil is used as a legal loophole by manufacturers of adulterated and mixed olive oil. |
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In the 2010 census 18,185 Mexicans reported belonging to an Eastern religion, a category which includes a tiny Buddhist population. |
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A few shots fired from a machine gun on Siar over the heads of the tiny German garrison at Lorengau were the last shots fired in the battle. |
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My favorite prestidigitation was when he pulled the live dove out of that tiny scarf. |
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Around the city there are tiny placards on the walls noting where the flood waters reached at their highest point. |
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A brief rainshower falling on the smooth surface of fine-grained sediment spatters it with tiny crater-like pittings known as rain prints. |
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The whole bell had to be recast although it had only one tiny, hardly visible crack. |
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The Southeys made their home at Greta Hall, Keswick, in the Lake District, living on his tiny income. |
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Halfway along the ridge is Innominate Tarn, a popular beauty spot with an indented rocky shore and a line of tiny islets. |
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Some varieties include feldspathic greywacke, which is rich in feldspar, and lithic greywacke, which is rich in tiny rock fragments. |
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The ovary is superior and develops into a dehiscent seed capsule bearing numerous tiny seeds. |
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A few spindly trees cling to the sides of the gorge, but their roothold on the tiny patches of soil gathered in cracks is precarious. |
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To trace out to its marshy source every runlet that has cast in its tiny pitcherful with the rest. |
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I'm about a foot taller than Doris, so I look down on her tiny curls, each one a perfect rosette of blue icing under a saranwrap tent. |
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When you start scrambling eggs, look first for tiny pieces of eggshell that might have fallen in. |
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I shoehorned his dozen burgeoning bags into the backseat of my tiny car, and off we went. |
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The tiny restaurant usually got by with three workers on that shift, but found itself shorthanded when the tour bus pulled in. |
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I slaved away in my tiny kitchen, gradually developing my own techniques in my quest for perfect results. |
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Spiritlings are tiny fey creatures no bigger than half an inch across that inhabit various wild places throughout Norrath. |
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Rather than squishing everything into a tiny window, I have shown only part of my app. |
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Roxy was knitting tiny finger-puppet monsters. The Gem was peppered with balls of wool and potentially stabby knitting needles. |
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Down there on the stage Furtado twizzled her shiny jet ringlets around her tiny digits and wobbled off stage in her stilty white stilettos. |
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The swampy pools, such as the jungle abounds in, seem to be her ideal. The eggs in due course of time hatch out into tiny tadpolish larvae. |
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Near the schoolhouse was a tholtan, a tiny, half-ruined cottage with sagging thatch and the door off its hinges. |
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Half an hour due east of Marfa is the tiny college town of alpine. |
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Soon the rocket was out of sight, and the flame was only seen as a tiny twinkle of light. |
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She would make a tiny pocket in an undershift. Even boys wore undershifts, though theirs were shorter than the knee-length ones girls wore. |
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When the carpet layers came in and removed the carpet she said there were millions of black eggs and tiny worms crawling under the carpet. |
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Flat, unspankable buttocks. Large aureoles on tiny breasts. Unlike his gold engagement ring, she isn't made to measure. |
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The reason being, is that the bitter cold kills the hemlock's adversary, the hemlock woolly adelgid, a tiny insect pest. |
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This tiny Creature is the Whale's Guide, and therefore protected by him, while all the finny Race besides are his Prey. |
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Ten-year-old Aron Anderson is the only pupil left at his school on a tiny island, after older students moved on to secondary earlier this year. |
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They then travelled to Greenland and hitched a lift across the iceberg-covered waters of Baffin Bay in a tiny boat. |
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But baby wallabies are born so tiny and undeveloped, they immediately crawl into their mothers' ' pouches to continue to develop. |
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The tiny mammal, yet to be named, is the first Parma Wallaby to be born at the Pembrokeshire attraction as part of a European breeding programme. |
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I would spend weeks trying to write notes on tiny scraps of paper that could be hidden under my watchstrap. |
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High ground for bedding is just tiny, isolated wax myrtle and saw palmetto islands. |
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Smoggy pollutants get through even tiny gaps in windows, Morrison notes, especially ones that haven't been weatherproofed. |
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It retains the hatchback's wedgy rising beltline, with the result that the side windows to the rear of the car are really quite tiny. |
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They are tiny parasitic wasps which lay their eggs in the whitefly scale, killing it. |
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In a tiny, remote Chinese village, an ancient Roman bloodline may live on. |
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Sir David Attenborough looks at African wild dogs in Zambia, chimps in the Sahara and tiny tropical hermit crabs searching for shells. |
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Ahistoric, atmospheric farmhouse in the tiny hamlet of Suvay in the Abondance Valley, near the classic French ski resort of Chatel. |
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Come harvest time, it was run over by a winnower or combine, and hundreds of tiny body parts were spread across the field. |
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These guides supported tape on a film of air supplied by tiny air holes in the smooth surface and connected to a small air pump. |
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These range from the tiny money spiders to the more sinisterly named rustic wolf spider. |
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The only figure with a hint of colour is the person with the dog, to which I added a tiny touch of weak Alizarin crimson. |
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For secure storage, a tiny Allen screw in the top right of the frame can lock the safety in on-safe position. |
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Snow Creek is a tiny village off of Highway 111 near I-10 nestled on an alluvial fan at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains. |
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In fact, a combination of tiny amounts of these xenoestrogens is many times more harmful than any one of them alone. |
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Via bikes, boats and a tiny plane, they headed into the forest to meet the Yanomami, a tribe who didn't yet know the Becks effect. |
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Tending the tiny Yin Yang Desktop Zen Garden Terrarium reminds you to pause daily. |
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The spiral disk of the Andromeda galaxy, the Milky Way's neighbor, is just a tiny part of a much larger entity. |
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Skeletal feldspar grains contain ankerite rhombs, and tiny sphalerite, galena, barite, and siderite crystals. |
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The dream surf park is a 2-acre wave pool capable of generating anything from tiny beginner ripples to 10-foot barrels every minute, with every wave the same. |
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Phil used a stillwater waggler rig, baiting a tiny 18s hook with luncheon meat cut into squares no bigger than one-eighth of an inch, plus hempseed as groundbait. |
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Fresh leaves had been stripped from a bush and a tiny fragment or two indicated that the Ojibway had torn a piece from his deerskin waistcloth to fasten over the leaves. |
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Magnetic resonance force microscopy employs an ultrasmall cantilever arm as a platform for specimens that are then moved in and out of proximity to a tiny magnet. |
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A single tiny treelet broke the plain just at the skyline of the rise. |
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I blow it up until it's tight as a tick. Just below the skirt through which the lanyard passes, a tiny mouth whistles a single-note tune until the balloon's lungs are emptied. |
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They lived in a tiny apartment, with some old, shabby furniture. |
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He flies around the Galaxy all alone in just a little tiny scoutcraft? |
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You walk up fifty-seven marble stairs. You open these big brass doors, and there in this sanctum santorum, this holy of holies, is this little tiny cabin. |
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Hagfishes lack a true vertebral column, and are therefore not properly considered vertebrates, but a few tiny neural arches are present in the tail. |
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Dirk Bogarde wrote about his start at tiny Amersham rep in 1939, and Sir Michael Caine recounts his time spent at Horsham rep in the early fifties. |
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