I was slow in learning the skills and my legs and back soon started to ache. |
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After a long struggle to secure a location on campus, the farmers' market has been plagued with slow business and advertising woes. |
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This leads to 5 linear equations in 5 unknowns and he refers the reader to an appendix containing Cramer's rule for their solution. |
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The gameplay speed and clock is extremely slow, but these settings can easily be customized. |
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She'd just returned from her job at the plant nursery and was sitting at the table, unlacing her sneakers. |
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He works in the Continental Shoemakers' factory and sneaks away to write poetry when business is slow. |
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Patients once perceived doctors as experts while seeing themselves as completely unknowledgeable about both their condition and its treatment. |
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X was popularised as the unknown in maths when Descartes' printer ran out of Ys and Zs for the mathematician's equations. |
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However, with all of the traffic headed north and none going south, travel remains slow. |
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I was praying that the restaurant clock was slow and I wasn't a minute late. |
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Jeremy was born with a twisted body, a slow mind and a chronic, terminal illness that had been slowly killing him for all his young life. |
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The idea of something as modern and unremarkable as an unlabelled videotape containing a terrible curse is enough to make you take up reading. |
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I recognise that this has been a rather slow and dull debate to this point. |
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Since it is the night shift and business is usually slow during those hours, you will be working alone. |
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It's a slow process but it's time well spent to educate others and provide tools on how to live gently and harmoniously on our planet. |
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I found the salesperson to be so aggressively unknowledgeable and remarkably useless that I fled. |
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He supported famous Korean painter Lee Jung-sup when he was an unknown artist and enabled him to get an exhibition. |
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But I've made my own set of mistakes and I see it reflected in her need for order out of chaos and her fears of the unknown. |
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This way of thinking stayed with him when he left the navy and, unknown to him, he carried on storing away his problems. |
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The label Frankenfoods is, as always, the way to get press, and a decent metaphor for the ambiguous nature of the unknown quantity. |
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It was awful up there, cold and damp, and the ground was too slow for my liking. |
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The two files were saved on different dates, he said, because the computer's internal clock was slow and ticked over to midnight in between. |
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Lions remain stubborn and untameable symbols of a wilderness as rightly unknowable as they themselves are. |
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He was a little slow in understanding our request and we lamented in front of him that you couldn't get good hired help anymore. |
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The funeral parade of The Unknown Soldier passes across Key Bridge toward Virginia and Arlington National Cemetery. |
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The unlabelled, Sony-brand cassette is black, with a clear window and is roughly the size of a cigarette packet. |
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The wharves and warehouses on the Floss were busy again, with echoes of eager voices, with hopeful lading and unlading. |
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Her right foot moved first, then her left, alternating in a rather boring and slow way. |
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On my first listen, I found the album dull and slow, but subsequent tries have brought out all the strange and lovely stuff going on. |
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This game had all the ingredients of the banal and wonderful as it slipped from dull slow football to edge of the seat stuff. |
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Pursued across the continent by her domineering mother and agent, she hitches a ride with an unknowing gang of holidaymakers. |
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This eliminates the multiple acknowledgments that create congestion and slow performance. |
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Technically South and North Korea are still at war, but Kim Dae Jung's achievement has been a slow process of reconciliation. |
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If you want to watch me being awkward and unknowledgable on international TV this evening, feel free to tune in. |
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Much of that cash goes to newbie computer-program creators and unknown artists. |
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Except, in 1983, number six and number sixteen were great achievements for an unknown artist, surely? |
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Mr Davis, who is married and has three children, would start as a relative unknown among rank-and-file party members. |
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A relative unknown until recently, Sean made a fantastic debut on the Irish Tour in February and is hotly tipped as a real star of the future. |
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For this you need to look at ones that convert from rear to forward facing and that you can use a booster seat when the child gets older. |
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The rest of the songs were unknown to the band and to some extent even myself. |
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Movements are large and appear relatively slow in the techniques designed for armored combat. |
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At the most it may be unknown, but that unknownness will disappear and it will be transformed into a known thing. |
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Joey was boredly twiddling his thumbs at the table, and Adie was blabbering on and on to herself in her booster seat. |
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For years and years the Australian turf in good weather has been all against the rising fast ball and slow bowler's spin. |
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Injuries often kept Larson off the field, and a slow bat hurt him when he did play. |
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To me he is a natural sweeper, he reads the game well for a young player but at times he is too slow on the ball and a little languid. |
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Whether a tech makes house calls or has a shop, the tools of the trade should include a bootable disk, virus software, and diagnostic programs. |
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Therese unknotted the string and pulled off the brown paper, revealing a simple book, with a cover of blue fabric. |
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Private tuitions are not allowed and slow learners are encouraged to come up instead of being condemned. |
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Add the flour, salt, chilli, and turmeric and fry on a slow fire till the flour is well roasted. |
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She unknotted the sweater that was tied around her waist, and put it on to hide her arms. |
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Family members, friends, and unit representatives laid wreaths at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier during private ceremonies for the three men. |
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Many of the works are unlabelled, leading the viewer to ask themselves of the intent and purpose behind the piece. |
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Demand for cattle has been hampered by the flood of cheap unlabelled foreign imports and generally the price has dipped. |
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He throws his jacket onto the pile of Stuart's clothes and unlaces his shoes. |
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As Vul dried himself off from his dip in the pond, Asa unladed all the packs from the horses and donkey. |
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Siobhan and her husband Eamonn, from Montenotte in Cork, realised something was wrong when their toddler was slow to learn to speak. |
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They are dull, slow, sober and fearful characters with a weak pulse and a cowardly, slothful disposition. |
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Now he wants Americans to appreciate the gray areas and accept that some facts are unknowable. |
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Everyone who loves you is aware of your unfathomable depth, your dark feelings and unknowable concerns. |
|
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Our ride was slow and dull, conversationless, through land that seemed to look all the same. |
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The dress still retained a richness and splendor unlike any garment she had worn since that day. |
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The days are just moving so fast and slow at the same time, it's difficult to keep track. |
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Of course, one of the points made there is unknowability, and the nature of being unknowable is that it's unknowable. |
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The thought of our two innocent, unknowing birds having their wings clipped and being put behind a high fence was disturbing. |
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Still, transactions were delayed, data was missing and system performance was slow. |
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As you can imagine, it was a lot of waiting and a lot of anxious moments, but it was a very slow and deliberate process. |
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Detainees live absent any points of reference, the whole process is very slow, and that detainees have the feeling that they are living in limbo. |
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This has been a slow process is was initiated several years ago and has raised doubts about the commerciality of the project. |
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Tragic, because unknowingness is the human condition, and, in the end, there's no getting around it. |
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We fly and survey the familiar and yet unknown path below us and then we land and rest our eyes and minds and sun-seared souls. |
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In each of several trials, he found an unknown toy among familiar toys and brought it back with good consistency. |
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It would operate as a collective, showcase unknown artists, provide free space to performers and be run by volunteers. |
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The reason for this is truly mystifying as she never missed an opportunity to work with both famous and unknown singers and orchestras. |
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The speeds are quite slow, but fast enough for a little surfing and emails that aren't way too big. |
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The collection includes the famous as well as the not so famous and unknown artists too. |
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Everything burnable was begged, collected, dragged, piled up and then guarded night and day. |
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The production team is a group of relative unknowns and judging by their work here, they deserve to remain as such. |
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My supervisor informs me that my paper looks fine to submit and informs me the date of my first-year viva. |
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In our tests, this printer was slow, noisy and yielded the least impressive results, even with the subtle photo cartridge in place. |
|
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Sadly, the world has been feuding for many years and unknown to her, the dispute is because of her. |
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It consumed everything that was burnable, leaving behind only molten metal and frames of vehicles. |
|
Gather several plastic bottles and boxes made from cardboard or other sturdy, burnable material. |
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From what I've read, both male and female Burmese of the traditional type are very affectionate, talkative and cuddly cats. |
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Now the underbrush was thickening, and suddenly I entered a small clearing surrounded by thick pine trees. |
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The externalisation of the world, the unknownness of the mind and the unknownness of the universe are the same. |
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While performing it appears slow and gentle but every bit as accomplished as it higher powered and more modern cousins. |
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The story of the Prudential has stopped being one of irritating slow performance and become something much more important. |
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There are no other cars on the road and the truck drivers just chill in their slow lane and leave the fast one all to you. |
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In Jai-Alai you will hear people talk about live or dead balls and fast or slow balls. |
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He was tinged with western boosterism, appreciated the out-of doors, and displayed bursts of powerful ambition. |
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Finally, Rosen hit a slow grounder toward Detroit third baseman Gerry Priddy and raced as hard as he could for first. |
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A booster seat lifts your child up so the seat belt fits right and protects your child. |
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She has shown aptitude on fast and slow ground, is trained by a very able handler who thinks plenty of her and possibly has plenty more to come. |
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Countless women have been simply delighted by this charming and vivacious woman. |
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Anyway, she was a vivacious, ebullient sort of girl, and I took an immediate liking to her. |
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Cook until the burnt sugar mixes in with the cream and sugar and pour into a saucepan. |
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Most of its sinks and toilets are made of vitreous china that resists dirt and bacteria. |
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Dozens of copies of the paper were sent via TNT, the courier, to arrive in time for a splendiferous dinner and prize-giving. |
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Parents' excuses included the belief that their children were too big for car seats and saying that the booster seat was in another car. |
|
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He has been a slow learner but has learnt the finer points and has put them into practice for the benefit of the team. |
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However, kernel vitreousness and percent protein for most durum wheats tested were lower than the standard. |
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Shriveled seed with normal coloration and vitreousness may be docked for poor test weight at the elevator. |
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She said Johnston will be remembered for her vivacious nature, spirituality and hard work. |
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Melon vitrescence is a critical problem for growers and shippers as it degrades fruit quality and cannot be detected by nondestructive methods. |
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Barrett was slow to learn the defense last season, but he's athletic, fearless and can play the ball. |
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It is during vitrifaction, however, that the secret formulas and the skilled hand of the artist are decisive. |
|
Christopher watched as Sara continued to smile, unknotting the mess and then deftly performing the duty he'd tried himself. |
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He disappeared into one of the unlabeled doorways and I sat back in a huff. |
|
After many hours, and many stops, I arrived upon the unlabelled back roads that led to the venue. |
|
Faced with a wholly unknowable threat, the rational thing to do is to compare those outcomes we can predict, and ignore those we cannot. |
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Trembling, she unlaced her shoes and laid them on the ground next to her bed. |
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He said vitrified radioactive materials would be bound up in glass or other depositories and would not be easily released. |
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Corio slipped his sunglasses into his pocket and started unlacing his boots. |
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Both 4x2 single and crew cabs boast an unladen fuel consumption of 45.6mpg on the extra urban cycle. |
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The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain. |
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You can't coming across as a smug and superior school marm correcting a slow child if you want to succeed. |
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And soon breakfast and the beautiful fact that Thomas is slow, quiet and dull in the mornings. |
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I tried to tell her that she upheld the only force, apart from fear and greed, strong enough to bind the diverse Burmese into one nation. |
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All new technologies generate fears of unknown and perhaps unknowable potential harm, but reassurance is demanded nonetheless. |
|
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At the school dance, a teenager kept his eye on a beautiful, vivacious girl, a little older than him and with curves in all the right places. |
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Slowly, her muscles unknotted, and her the anxiety in her face seemed to scatter. |
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You can never test a theory that claims that an invisible and unknowable force is responsible for a phenomenon. |
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He answered all the questions that were put to him in his slow and dull manner, using readymade and overcooked phrases. |
|
Once upon a time, a troll lived in a vast and splendorous castle atop a medium sized hill. |
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At age 27 years, she had undergone an uncomplicated OLT, with shunt removal and intraoperative splenectomy. |
|
The radiologic impression was that the lesions represented splenic abscesses, and the patient subsequently underwent a splenectomy. |
|
He raises his small black eyes, stares at me, and says something in Burmese. |
|
However, staff greeted us enthusiastically and quicker than a flash were fitting a booster seat on to a chair for Eva. |
|
Examples of advanced laparoscopic procedures include splenectomies, colostomy takedowns, colectomies, and Nissen fundoplications. |
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She was a very bubbly and vivacious woman who usually had no difficulty meeting people. |
|
Two young girls were dancing vivaciously twirling spectacular scarves of sapphire and pink. |
|
On the initial attempts, it is helpful for the swimmer to perform long, slow strokes and a long side kick while getting a breath. |
|
For full effect and for safety, flyes must be performed in a slow and controlled manner. |
|
The large number of votes that the dolphin received shows that we as humans appreciate grace, beauty and vivacity. |
|
They are closely followed by the Irish, while rural Slovenians, French and Italians are the least optimistic. |
|
Most of our boxes are unpacked now but there's chaos everywhere and it's a slow process of getting everything sorted out. |
|
So I fired up the computer, pulled the blind against the fading sky, and settled down to a slow, steady effort. |
|
Scientists hope patients will adapt, though the learning process might be slow, like a child beginning to recognise shapes and colours. |
|
But this is a slow process and it could be a matter of months before we have any results. |
|
|
These entire proceedings did not address the issue of access to the material filed, and viva voce evidence given, before the Board. |
|
A second visit to Venice took place in the midst of the Thirty Years' War, when travel was slow and hazardous. |
|
Motorbikes in the summer are the worst for speed and caravans create long lines of very slow moving traffic. |
|
Genetic epidemiology may identify hitherto unknown molecular mechanisms and improve understanding of critical events in the evolution of disease. |
|
As Shawn and I were continuing our way to unknown territory, I spotted a familiar figure leaving some disco with a few other people. |
|
This time out, the author returns to both familiar and unknown ground to collect new stories, strange encounters and first hand accounts. |
|
You can't let it out of control, though, otherwise you'll grow slovenly and disgusting. |
|
To sum up, to show action and movement, select a slow shutter speed and stand side on to the action. |
|
Well, because of its speed, which was slow, and its size, which was huge, Frances was and is a colossal rain maker. |
|
Then again, if he's objecting to your haphazard grammar and slovenly spelling, he has a point. |
|
Patton has also been studying the Burmese language with a community of monks around Harvard and is a member of the Buddhist Community there. |
|
The term passing lanes implies that the road is divided into slow and fast moving traffic lanes. |
|
After sufficient burnable material accumulates in and upon the soil, a hot fire can occur. |
|
He tends to swell held notes in both slow and fast movements, perhaps a nod to authentic performance. |
|
The museum exhibits are planned in a series of large free-standing glass vitrines placed along the path and sheltered by the undulating canopy. |
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The rooms are dark and filled with vitrines so old the glass is all wiggly. |
|
A vitrine contains parts of the original manuscripts for his 15,000 page novel and his 5,000-page autobiography. |
|
Wool sucking, in particular, is prevalent in the oriental breeds, such as the Siamese, Burmese, and Himalayan. |
|
General household waste is collected once a week but it must be separated into burnable and non-burnable items. |
|
I think there's plenty of undue hostility towards conservatives in academia, and plenty of vitriol that ought to be condemned. |
|
|
All the bile and vitriol she had gathered over a lifetime of disappointment came pouring out. |
|
Burnable garbage is comprised of things like pieces of paper, old clothes, and cut hair. |
|
He was sick of the personal vitriol and unfounded character assassination that was arriving via Letters to the Editor. |
|
The firestorm raged for about 3 hours and only subsided when all burnable material was consumed. |
|
On the afternoon of May 22, she poured half a litre of vitriol into a flask and entered Shen's office. |
|
This simply will not do, given the play's premises and vitriolic criticism of capitalism. |
|
Polemical works on a variety of religious issues reveal a bitter and vitriolic side to his nature. |
|
She has been on the receiving end of other withering and vitriolic attacks from women columnists. |
|
One or two turned vitriolic in their public criticism, and one anonymously accused him of fraud. |
|
Forest openings and clearings and agricultural areas are also good habitat for the Western Bluebird. |
|
I'll try not to take his vitriolic attack on the film personally, and hope that audiences will form their own opinions. |
|
Such stirring events provoked a range of responses, and those printed here are bitter, mournful, vitriolic, and celebratory in turn. |
|
An irascible bachelor, he was often vitriolic in his criticism of the work of other artists, and jealous of their successes. |
|
It is not hard to see how libels and satires might foster conflict, for they offer mostly vitriolic attacks on individuals or vices. |
|
Green's arrogant belief that he has been dragged down by his environment and peers leads him to vitriolically reject the class he was born into. |
|
Nearly 90 percent of the Thai people are Mongoloid, with lighter complexions than their Burmese, Kampuchean, and Malay neighbors. |
|
He found a grassy clearing with ease, and began gathering a pile of dead wood from the ground. |
|
The autonomic function tests were performed as in the slow breathing group and the values were recorded before and after the study. |
|
His project was a burned pound cake, but it looked burnt and the lemon topping was watered down. |
|
The fast-lane campaign works on a similar principle to fast and slow lanes in swimming pools. |
|
|
The concession stand sat at the back of the lobby and if some new kid happened to be on duty, the place probably smelled of burned popcorn. |
|
Also, I fielded a slow roller and tripped over the mound and fell flat on my face. |
|
When you have burned them well, cut off the burned skin together with the spines, and all the meat remains. |
|
Many industry watchers were dumbfounded at the overt bias and political boosterism. |
|
It was kind of a slow field and was getting a little bogged down at the end. |
|
I benefited from that, and I understand that there's a place for some hometown boosterism, but at the same time it's patronizing. |
|
The prize goes to his splendidly illustrated book on the archaeology and aesthetics of the Renaissance culture. |
|
Contrary to the triumphal boosterism of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Brechin offers imagery of despair with the city as maelstrom. |
|
A cheering crowd dragged their burned and mutilated bodies through the streets and hanged two bodies from a bridge over the Euphrates River. |
|
The batsmen just couldn't pick my slow looping balls, playing and missing regularly. |
|
The burned and charred hulks, lined up on a rear lot at the San Gabriel Valley dealership, looked like they'd been flown out of Mogadishu. |
|
He did splendidly with the estate agent, securing a new photograph and a roadside sign. |
|
Too much heat means the skins at the bottom of the still will start to burn and your entire batch will be marred by the burned flavors. |
|
The symptomatic splenic lesions, as compared with asymptomatic lesions, were bigger and were found more often in women and younger patients. |
|
Flow cytometric analysis was performed on both splenic tissue and splenic hilar lymph nodes. |
|
Abdominal CT showed a subcapsular splenic hematoma and a large, irregular, cystic lesion at the splenic hilum. |
|
The splenic artery was encased by tumor, although there was no intraluminal invasion, and the artery showed severe calcific atherosclerosis. |
|
Attached to the mastoid process are the mm. sternocleidomastoideus, splenius capitis, and longissimus capitis. |
|
Rhomboideus-occipitalis passes between trapezius and splenius to reach the occipital bone. |
|
There are different techniques of enamelling and one of them is when a vitreous coating is fused on to a metallic surface. |
|
|
At autopsy, mild acute splenitis and recurrent nodular sclerosis Hodgkin disease were found in fibrosed mediastinal nodes. |
|
To retain high-resolution information, chlorosomes were embedded in vitreous ice and imaged without further treatment or staining. |
|
When I see patients with chronic syndromes where they have splenomegaly and disease progression over time, I always consider sarcoidosis. |
|
The vitreousness of grain was inherited intermediately, and positive heterosis was often observed. |
|
These include mononucleosis, leukemia, splenomegaly, Hodgkin's disease, AIDS and all the various types of anemias. |
|
With two buttons you can accomplish more than an afternoon with a pile of reel-to-reel tape, scissors and splicer. |
|
Three cable splicers and two members of the line crew had accepted the offer. |
|
For years he was a high-voltage cable splicer, a job he loved because it meant working outdoors with plenty of freedom and overtime pay. |
|
So I started hanging round people who I used to see smoking spliffs and stuff. |
|
The cornea, the pupillary opening within the iris, the lens, and the aqueous and vitreous humor combine to form the refractive media of the eye. |
|
He smelled like kerosene, Chai tea, and spliff, and incense, and crackling fires. |
|
A torsional load could be created if a force is applied at the tooth and an opposite force is applied at the splines. |
|
Lighter shades of bricks, including for instance gray and ivory, have been shown to produce more of a greenish vitrescent marking. |
|
The hydraulic disc brakes are small and light, and the rotors fit onto splines on lightweight hubs. |
|
With those two sides nearly done, cut the next two corners and roll in the screen and the spline. |
|
If you are using Fiberglas screening, simultaneously roll the screen and spline into the channel in this step. |
|
Two generally accepted numerical approaches for obtaining this derivative are the spline fitting method and the incremental polynomial method. |
|
I told my friends to get it and they were equally amazed by the splendiferousness. |
|
The parade showcased the nation's cultural legacy with pomp, colour and splendour. |
|
The triglyceride and essential oil are located in separate, well-defined compartments, the seed endosperm and vittae, respectively. |
|
|
In most cases, a cold dose of healthy public ridicule would quench the more volcanic vituperators and reason would be restored. |
|
The vituperation and neglect I and the bulk of my fellow modern artists suffer was also the lot of Van Gogh. |
|
That place with such grandeur and splendor is enough to make me confused into thinking that I were walking on the street in Paris or in New York. |
|
The Burmese, however, are grouped with the Thai prisoners, and given the tough treatment. |
|
To vitrify soil, normally four carbon electrode rods are inserted into the ground and a powerful electric current is turned on. |
|
Anyone who defies or dares to challenge them is subject to the most awful abuse and vituperation, all of it personal, racist and ideological. |
|
With her pupils dilated to blackness, and spitting vituperation in all directions, the very last thing she seems is sane. |
|
Bombard the offices of those Senators with your views, and back up your objections with hard data rather than vituperation. |
|
This tour of past splendor only magnified the shock I received later when I heard the news, and saw the reactions all around me. |
|
Its lush harmonic arrangements conceal some vituperative and downright nasty lyrics, delivered in a deceptively deadpan manner. |
|
The attacks on Australian judges in recent times have become more vituperative, more sustained and more intensely personal. |
|
You look around here and you can't help but realize the magnificent splendour of nature. |
|
His crude and vituperative language in exchanges with the Lord Chief Justice have bordered on a rejection of the rule of law. |
|
Yet working-class people and lifestyles are subject to vituperative attacks. |
|
Her poems could be cajoling and vituperative, making love and war simultaneously, her sensual lyrics cohabiting with performance pieces. |
|
It's another thing to be out in creation in some way or another and experience and encounter God's beauty or majesty or splendor or power. |
|
A vitriform, entirely synthetic material characterized by its low specific weight and impact resistance. |
|
He's a bit slow to learn and it took time for the penny to drop, then he started to finish even though he would have hated the ground. |
|
Anyway, I managed to squeeze into my exam suit and, in between feeds, nip over to the royal college to do my vivas. |
|
He stared up at the magnificent splendor of a truly Roman city, its grand architecture and its air of power and determination. |
|
|
But, is there any such likeness between the loveliness of this world and the splendours in the Supreme? |
|
It was so amazing, meeting her in person, and she's really as bubbly and vivacious as she appears in writing. |
|
Just as the trek started to take its physical toll, we reached the crest of the hill and the Blue Nile Falls appeared in theatrical splendour. |
|
Local translations have been made into Burmese, and in Madagascar and in a former Russian Republic. |
|
The costumes and choreography are far more theatrical and splendorous than anything previously associated with the genre. |
|
I became once again vivacious and cheerful, thanks to the effect of his powerful will. |
|
Man and nature have worked together to produce the splendorous sights of Oslo and Stockholm. |
|
Baptist missionaries developed scripts based on Burmese for Pwo Karen and for other Karen languages. |
|
Trekking is one means of discovering the country along the route, the lie of the land and enjoying nature in all its beauty and splendour. |
|
The combination of unknowable rules and draconian penalties is already having a chilling effect. |
|
However, reaching the solution is a complex journey that has embroiled native communities and their non-native neighbours for the past century. |
|
People also like birds, and birds shouldn't have to fight native and non-native predators to survive. |
|
In this control section of the river, both native and non-native fish are quickly identified, measured, weighed, and released. |
|
More than half of the students in the district qualify for free or reduced-price lunch and nearly 30 percent are non-native English speakers. |
|
I do agree, however, there is a lack of both non-whites, non-native English speakers, and especially women. |
|
Thus he bought a single Matisse picture, but then sold it again, and never acquired any fauvist, cubist or non-naturalistic work. |
|
The Queen's building itself has a magnificence and a splendour that befits its reputation. |
|
Among the topics which Frobenius studied towards the end of his career were positive and non-negative matrices. |
|
It is an occasion celebrated with pomp and splendor, starting with colourful marches followed by vibrant speeches. |
|
In one study, researchers evaluated melatonin levels in healthy patients, patients with nocturnal asthma, and patients with nonnocturnal asthma. |
|
|
Nocturnal eaters were significantly more likely to report binge eating and differed significantly from non-nocturnal eaters. |
|
There are notable exceptions, especially among academics and medical faculties. |
|
The magnificence and splendor of the city is at its peak during this season. |
|
The curriculum is scrutinized by the military regime, and it often is forbidden to teach in languages other than Burmese. |
|
Its splenetic and arrogant final edition on Thursday also appeared as childish anger from staff. |
|
Casts and splints hold an injured bone in place so that it can heal correctly. |
|
The story, a fairy tale that carries a remarkable moral, is brought to animation with magnificent splendor and humor. |
|
Rule-breaking was one of the things I loved most about my silly and vivacious wife. |
|
The mandibular lateral line canal runs anteriorly along the ventral surface of the splenial and postsplenial to open onto the symphysis. |
|
A lively and vivacious teenager, Katie was an exemplary student loved by her teachers and fellow pupils alike. |
|
Arabian art, according to Streisand, has always been one of great wonder, splendour, and beauty. |
|
Her smile was worth seeing, and her green eyes sparkled with vibrancy and vivaciousness. |
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The Pali alphabet used for written Burmese is made up of eight vowels, three diphthongs, 32 consonants, and several tones. |
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When we arrived Mike's leg had been splinted and the third person in the party was heading on out to call for help. |
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Furniture produced during the Qing Dynasty pursued splendour and a gorgeous appearance. |
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To create a show of this nature is a slow and steady process of workshopping and experiment. |
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For not only is she immensely talented as a performer, she is also matchless in her energy and vivaciousness. |
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By the light of burning splints, the raiders had marched all the men into the fields and tied them up. |
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It was very lavish and very imposing, a grueling display of majestic splendor. |
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Our manipulation, casting and splinting procedure has never resulted in any disability for the patient. |
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His eyes were a deep chocolate brown and sparkled to with vivacity and arrogance. |
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Bellamy Road came out of his seventh-place finish in the Kentucky Derby with a splint injury and has not raced since. |
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He lives with his wife, Mary Todd, and their children in considerable splendour in a magnificent period house in Armagh. |
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It really could have been a lot worse and Johnny and Cipriano did an excellent job in splinting that arm right away. |
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His reports were filed as exhibits and in addition, he gave viva voce testimony. |
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Had I, in some inexplicable way, left my own town earlier than I intended, and really travelled in a slow train? |
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Holidaymakers come back year after year and, amid the splendours of the Alps, they insist on bourgeois comforts and good Bavarian cooking. |
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The primary point of the character is to provide a source of gross-out humor, as the group reacts to his slovenly appearance and phlegmy cough. |
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On the slow speed circuits it's proved that it's fast at Imola and I think here it's proved that it's quick and reliable on a high-speed circuit. |
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She stood just inside the gate and clutched her small bundle of possessions, her one familiar token in an unknown world. |
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You can enjoy a walk in the nearby Dubare forest and see many of nature's splendours, from birds to butterflies. |
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Yet despite his slovenly appearance, somehow Araki is always followed by lovely young ladies in kimonos and gangs of sharp-dressed yes men. |
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The inner rotor portion of the pump is splined to one output on the axle and the outer drum portion of the pump is splined to the other. |
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Two lads with notably large feet and broken shoes dance skillfully while a slovenly, fat woman picks at her guitar. |
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Medications, hand splints and physical therapy can help in earlier stages of rheumatoid arthritis. |
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The Singapura combines, as one suspects that it would, the sweetness of the Burmese with the playful and inquisitive nature of the Abyssinian. |
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He wears a splint to support his right ankle and enable him to walk, and his right arm is a dead weight. |
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I explained to him that it was more of a severe sprain than an actual fracture and prescribed a wrist splint to be worn for the next three weeks. |
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Southern African herbalists apply milk of the euphorbia to draw out deep-lying thorns and use wooden splints for broken limbs. |
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I asked if they were mad at me, and they said I drove people to and from the airport like a champ, but that business was slow. |
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