They tranquilized the bear with a dart so that it could be safely moved to a different area. |
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He believes that middle-class people bear a disproportionate share of the tax burden. |
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The great bear market starting in 1929 scared a whole generation of investors. |
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In all criminal cases the most favourable interpretation should be put on words that they can possibly bear. |
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To them, it's good fun to respond to any request for Smokey reports with clean and green, then watch speeding adults become bear bait. |
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As sharp legal practitioners, no class of human beings can bear comparison with them. |
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Aidids have presumably homologous warts, although these do not bear long secondary setae. |
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Christopher Robin's toy bear is on display at the Main Branch of the New York Public Library in New York City. |
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He was renamed after a black bear at London Zoo called Winnie who got her name from the fact that her owner had come from Winnipeg, Canada. |
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The bear is such a popular character in Poland that a Warsaw street is named for him, Ulica Kubusia Puchatka. |
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The midget-minded masochists among us, it seems, cannot bear even the slightest hint of progress toward law reform and justice for Gays. |
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Westhoff was in midinterview when receiver Laveranues Coles ran up behind him and wrapped Westhoff in a big bear hug. |
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Though these names were of Viking derivation some of the families who bear them appear to have had Gaelic origins. |
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Additionally, the exchequer had to bear the cost of the ongoing military presence in Wales, including maintenance of the castles. |
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Large factory units, either empty or turned over to retail use, bear witness to the lack of success in replacing older industries. |
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Several coins from the 2nd and 1st centuries BC found in the Basque Country bear the inscription barscunes. |
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This chthonic couple seem to bear the superior ethical power and also the power of creation and destruction. |
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Some dialects, particularly those of the Chittagong region, bear only a superficial resemblance to Standard Colloquial Bengali. |
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The Irish government has committed itself to train the necessary number of translators and interpreters and to bear the related costs. |
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They typically express the emotional toll the colonists bear by their isolation. |
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Swift could not bear to be present at the end, but on the night of her death he began to write his The Death of Mrs Johnson. |
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He did not wish to bear Queensberry's insults, but he knew to confront him could lead to disaster were his liaisons disclosed publicly. |
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Rushdie is a supporter of gun control, blaming a shooting at a Colorado cinema in July 2012 on the American right to keep and bear arms. |
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I couldn't bear to be without him, so I was like, 'Well, I'll just cancel my stuff then. |
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Often they incorporate text as well as image, although some bear only text and others only image. |
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Additionally, bricks could bear more weight and endure better than rammed earth. |
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A bronze bear from Gaul was placed inside, along with an equestrian statue from Ravenna, believed to be Theodric. |
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Many of the pamphlets bear the handwriting of Gladstone, which provides direct evidence of Gladstone's interest in various topics. |
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Notably the Polar bear, Ursus maritimus, reaches the southeast of Labrador on its annual migration. |
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The place was actually set up by a Nipponophile Englishman, but the kitchen staff are all Japanese and its Far Eastern credentials bear scrutiny. |
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In amphibians and some primitive bony fishes, the larvae bear external gills, branching off from the gill arches. |
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The lower neck, throat, neck, and the region between the forelegs are devoid of spots, or have bear them only distinctly. |
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As with the bear, Scottish and Welsh heraldry displays the boar's head with the neck cropped, unlike the English version, which retains the neck. |
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Some bryophytes, such as the liverwort Marchantia, create elaborate structures to bear the gametangia that are called gametangiophores. |
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The works of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne bear its powerful impression. |
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The Thistle Chapel does, however, bear the arms of members living and deceased on stall plates. |
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A vote for any other candidate is considered to be likely wasted and bear no impact or benefit on the final result they would prefer. |
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The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain ceremonial occasions, but an Earl may bear his coronet of rank on his coat of arms above the shield. |
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East Asian seals usually bear the names of the people or organizations represented, but they can also bear poems or personal mottoes. |
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Sometimes both types of seals, or large seals that bear both names and mottoes, are used to authenticate official documents. |
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East Asian paintings often bear multiple seals, including one or two seals from the artist, and the seals from the owners of the paintings. |
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A chief of a clan is the only person who is entitled to bear the undifferenced arms of the ancestral founder of the clan. |
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Surrealist flora and fauna therefore bear one reference to the old real world and are never pure abstractions or nonobjectivities. |
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These were small silver pennies, which often did not bear the name of either the moneyer or the king for whom they were produced. |
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Although many of the coins bear the name of a moneyer, there is no indication of the mint where each coin was struck. |
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Calves are typically born in the spring and summer months and females bear all the responsibility for raising them. |
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In North America, animals such as the gray wolf, grizzly bear, cougar, and coyote are sometimes considered a threat to livestock. |
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They bear dates from 1822 to the present and are minted in very small quantities. |
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Maundy coins still bear the original portrait of the Queen as used in the circulating coins of the first years of her reign. |
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If the train had come just five seconds earlier... well, it just doesn't bear thinking about! |
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These nundinals bear a very great resemblance to the dominical letters, which return every eight days, as the nundinals did every nine. |
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Other localities in Ireland also bear the name Duibhlinn, variously anglicized as Devlin, Divlin and Difflin. |
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Though bear in mind that it's very teenage to indulge yourself in blood and gore, and Torchwood is going to be smarter than that. |
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Other controversial dishes in Chinese cuisine includes Cantonese snake soup, dog meat and bear claws. |
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These bear-walkers owed their powers to their personal manito, the bear, and traveled in disguise at night, causing disease among their victims. |
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Into the middle arch of each desk silver-headed brads had been hammered to form a lion, a bear, a ram, a dove, and in the midst a flaming torch. |
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Every possible pressure was brought to bear on the minister to ensure the unjust law was not passed. |
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To protect our legs we wore over the trousers heavy leather chaparejos, sometimes of bear or buffalo hide. |
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If our suspicion be wholly unfounded, let his own questionable ways, not our necessary circumspectness bear the blame. |
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These include a fight with an enormous bear, and the rescue of a Cornish princess from an unwanted marriage. |
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Sometimes she caught him looking at her with a louring invidiousness that she could hardly bear. |
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A big greyish rounded bulk, the size, perhaps, of a bear, was rising slowly and painfully out of the cylinder. |
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The affections which these exposed or derelict children bear to their mothers, have no grounds of nature or assiduity but civility and opinion. |
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The cuffs, or epimanikia, which fit over the sticharion, bear little or no resemblance to the maniple. |
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The public schoolboy is taught to bear whippings and faggings without murmuring. |
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A child, by a constant course of kindness, may be accustomed to bear very rough usage without flinching or complaining. |
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The owners of Sloppy Joe's in Havana, too, may bear some responsibility for the fruitification of the drink. |
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Early next morning we were over at the elk carcass, and, as we expected, found that the bear had eaten his full at it during the night. |
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Is it in essence so extremely funny-ha-ha that it will bear this so frequent repetition? |
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My Lord, out of the love I bear to some of your friends, I have a care of your preservation. |
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They made me work the Saturday of our wedding anniversary. What could I say? I just had to grin and bear it. |
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John Romane, a short clownish grub, would bear the whole carcase of an ox, yet never tugged with him. |
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I cannot bear elections, and still less the hash of them over again in a first session. |
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Wroe would put a pillow in the oven, lay his head on it, and let the oven be heated as hot as he could bear it, to drive away a head cold. |
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The larger Welsh mammals died out during the Norman period, including the brown bear, wolf and the wildcat. |
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Other areas of the Northern Hemisphere did not bear extensive ice sheets, but local glaciers in high areas. |
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Brown bear also consume bison, often by driving off the pack and consuming the wolves' kill. |
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Gordy, who looks sort of like a bear cub, only not cute, is a very huggy person. |
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In fact, his assumption of the office of Censor may have been motivated by a desire to see his academic labors bear fruit. |
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Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. |
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Archaeological sites do not bear out the historically defined area as being a real demographic or trade boundary. |
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The largest predator on land is the polar bear, while the brown bear is the largest predator on the Norwegian mainland. |
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Upon his succession as king, Henry became entitled to bear the arms of his kingdom. |
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As for Richard's physical appearance, most contemporary descriptions bear out the evidence that Richard had no noticeable bodily deformity. |
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Not but what I'd had a lot to bear, and took a deal of punishment before he jacked up. |
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He flung subtle jibes at her until she couldn't bear to work with him any longer. |
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Many larger animals, such as wolf, bear and the European elk are today extinct. |
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And when the ship was caught, and could not bear up into the wind, we let her drive. |
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He was uncomfortable being introduced to new people, and could not bear to look at his own reflection in a mirror. |
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The first cost is that in sexually dimorphic species only one of the two sexes can bear young. |
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Every Elliott and Crawford and MacAllister is on the warpath, loaded for bear. |
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Northern and eastern Bangladesh is home to the Asian elephant, hoolock gibbon, Asian black bear and oriental pied hornbill. |
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The whole machine of government ought not to bear upon the people with a weight so heavy and oppressive. |
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They may bear witness in many ways, according to how they believe God is leading them. |
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The supporters, a lion and a bear, stand on a bed of acorns, a link to Bladud, the subject of the Legend of Bath. |
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Often, a second layer of tissue, the partial veil, covers the bladelike gills that bear spores. |
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After her three miscarriages, it seemed to be more and more unlikely that the queen would bear an heir. |
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They showed that a powerful man was buried in a large barrow, c 575, on a bear skin with two dogs and rich grave offerings. |
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Byron also kept a tame bear while he was a student at Trinity, out of resentment for rules forbidding pet dogs like his beloved Boatswain. |
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Many of his sets, especially in street scenes, bear a strong similarity to Kennington, where he grew up. |
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Past two years old Keg was now, a big and very bearly bear, and with the first tocsin of fall in the air he'd wandered off toward Sugar-loaf, answering the call of his kind. |
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It was a promising idea, but the evidence did not bear out their theory. |
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A Class 91 locomotive, 91 124, used to bear the name The Rev W Awdry. |
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Please bear with me a moment while I connect you to his office. |
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He... chose to bear The Name of Fool confirm'd, and Bishop'd by the Fair. |
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On some of the richest days, when a moose stalks by or a bear is blueberrying or munching hazelnuts outside, I think of my house as a bathysphere suspended in the wilderness. |
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The bottlings from the barrel-aged wines bear a premium label. |
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Major archaeological sites that bear testimony to the Danelaw are few. |
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Let all good citizens whose livelihood and labour have thus been put in peril bear with fortitude and patience the hardships with which they have been so suddenly confronted. |
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New evidence can be brought to bear during a retrial at a district court. |
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This waste had been the cause of great irritation to Mark, who, though careless of most forms of ineconomy, could not bear to see the wasting of natural force. |
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Imagine the situation had this bear suffered from arachibutyrophobia! |
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At a time of tremendous strain in his marriage, in part due to Catherine's apparent inability to bear children, he directly advocated bringing a second wife into the house. |
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In these and other cases, it is important to bear in mind that the arguments in On Liberty are grounded on the principle of Utility, and not on appeals to natural rights. |
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Malignant principles bear fruit in kind and the Revolution did no more than practice what men had been taught by the abandoned crew of philosophers. |
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I have formed many intimacies and friendships here, but I am afraid they are all of too tender a construction to bear carriage a hundred and fifty miles. |
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The transition is a keen one, I assure you, from a schoolmaster to a sailor, and requires a strong decoction of Seneca and the Stoics to enable you to grin and bear it. |
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At one point Howard formed his ships into a line of battle, to attack at close range bringing all his guns to bear, but this was not followed through and little was achieved. |
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Alva, as usual, brought his dilatory policy to bear upon his adversary. |
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I enticed the little bear into the trap with a pot of honey. |
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Today the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom usually has a minimum of two Scottish justices to ensure that some Scottish experience is brought to bear on Scottish appeals. |
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Other characters include Shere Khan the tiger and Baloo the bear. |
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We should count her a very tender mother which should bear the pain twice, and fellowfeel the infant's strivings and wrestlings the second time, rather than want her child. |
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Grinning and fleering as though they went to a bear baiting. |
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Unwilling to bear the economic consequences of reduced trade, the Russians routinely violated the Continental System and enticed Napoleon into another war. |
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People face a dilemma whenever they bring to the fore an understanding that appears inadequate in the light of the other beliefs they bring to bear on it. |
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Its repeated use in Freeman's Journal throughout June 1830 appears to bear reference to his resolute political will, with taints of disapproval from its Irish editors. |
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The nursing bear wouldn't move far until her cubs were older. |
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The glacier bear is found only in limited places in Southeast Alaska. |
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When a friend asked Socrates, how he could bear the scolding of his wife Xantippe? he retorted, and asked him, how he could bear the gaggling of his geese? |
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Hooke in a 1682 lecture to the Royal Society proposed a mechanistic model of human memory, which would bear little resemblance to the mainly philosophical models before it. |
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These steps may not be immediately popular, but the society may have to bear with them until they succeed in gingering renewed interest and pride in the language so chosen. |
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A residential college and an Episcopal seminary at Yale University also bear Berkeley's name, as does the Berkeley Library at Trinity College, Dublin. |
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It has played an important part of the Games' identity promotion since the 1980 Summer Olympics, when the Russian bear cub Misha reached international stardom. |
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In the popular mind they have come to symbolise the nation of England, although according to heraldic usage nations do not bear arms, only persons and corporations do. |
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The few native land mammals in Greenland include the polar bear, arctic fox, reindeer, arctic hare, musk ox, collared lemming, ermine, and arctic wolf. |
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The site's ware is characterized by punctate and incision geometric designs, which bear a similarity to the Sabir culture phase 1 ceramics from Ma'layba in Southern Arabia. |
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At Williams Island the crew encountered a polar bear for the first time. |
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They managed to bring it on board, but the bear rampaged and was killed. |
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If you are a married woman over 45 and are thinking of taking a plunge into the job market bear in mind that you won't be an odd duck in the employment pool. |
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Four notable exceptions are the grey wolf, human, brown bear, and coyote. |
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After obtaining a doctorate, Dutch doctors may bear either the title dr. |
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From Elvis's teddy bear huggableness to Bowie's extraterrestrial transvestism, rock 'n' roll had always considered male androgyny to be axiomatic. |
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Strategy marshals capabilities and brings them to bear with precision. |
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John Aubrey was one of the first to examine the site with a scientific eye in 1666, and recorded in his plan of the monument the pits that now bear his name. |
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In Eurasia and Africa, predators include the wolf, leopard, tiger, lion, dhole, Asiatic black bear, crocodile, spotted hyena, and other carnivores. |
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This would have prevented Boudica from bringing considerable forces to bear on the Roman position, and the open plain in front made ambushes impossible. |
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