Birth defects and complications are also being missed because ultrasound waves are unable to penetrate large fat deposits. |
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This Birth began the second Age of God the Son and will end with the death of Peter the Roman. |
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From D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation forward, cinema has reminded us that battlefields are populated with human beings, not toy soldiers. |
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Death and Birth are subjects that demand serious treatment and both set the tone for the album. |
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This is because it commemorates the Presentation of Christ by His Mother in the Temple at Jerusalem exactly forty days after His Birth. |
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Soon it was thought incubi produced children through the demonic version of the Virgin Birth. |
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In his exploration of the evolution of Calgary, entitled Birth of a Metropolis, Lougheed underscores the city's rapid pace of development. |
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The passage of the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act is listed in the Republican Party platform as one of the successes of the Bush administration. |
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Birth weight was recorded in pounds and ounces and converted into kilograms. |
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Birth weight for gestational age, divided into fifths, showed an association with later marital status for men but not women. |
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Birth control pills can cause a small increase in the risk of thrombosis and heart attack. |
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In 1921 Stopes founded the Society for Constructive Birth Control which led the way for the later family-planning clinics. |
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Nicole Kidman is similarly dominant in Birth, a controversial, arresting film by British director Jonathan Glazer. |
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When I was a student in seminary I had as an assignment to write a paper on Calvinism and Birth Control. |
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The table to the right shows the most common countries of birth of London residents. |
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Bede counted anno Domini from Christ's birth, not from Christ's conception. |
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The province of his birth remains unknown, though various conjectures suggest Gallia Belgica, Gallia Narbonensis, or northern Italy. |
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Brutus arrived 260 years after Albina, 1136 before the birth of Christ, but by then there were only 24 giants left, due to inner strife. |
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When Urgulanilla gave birth after the divorce, Claudius repudiated the baby girl, Claudia, as the father was allegedly one of his own freedmen. |
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Eventually Nero stopped referring to his deified adoptive father at all, and realigned with his birth family. |
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The drug thalidomide caused many birth defects and led to an iatroepidemic. |
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Their activity brought about the Radical Reformation, which gave birth to various Anabaptist denominations. |
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The birth order of the boys is clear, but no source gives the relative order of birth of the daughters. |
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When Henry VI had a mental breakdown, Richard was named regent, but the birth of a male heir resolved the question of succession. |
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The eldest son of Henry II and Eleanor, William, died in 1156, before Richard's birth. |
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At the time of his birth, Richard II of England, his cousin once removed, was king. |
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As he was not close to the line of succession to the throne, Henry's date of birth was not officially documented. |
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By 1510, this figure had increased with the birth of an additional 16 possible Yorkist claimants. |
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John Beaufort had been illegitimate at birth, though later legitimised by the marriage of his parents. |
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Anne had become pregnant by the end of 1532 and gave birth on 7 September 1533 to Elizabeth, named in honour of Henry's mother. |
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Jane died of puerperal fever only a few days after the birth, leaving Henry devastated. |
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His father, Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond, died three months before his birth. |
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This leads to small interpregnancy intervals that negatively impact maternal nutritional status, leading to poor birth outcome. |
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Catherine had two stillborn sons in 1514 and 1515, but gave birth in February 1516 to a girl, Mary. |
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Relations between Henry and Catherine had been strained, but they eased slightly after Mary's birth. |
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The table shows the top 21 countries of birth of residents in 2011, the date of the last UK Census. |
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He was not influenced by sordid considerations.... Had she been merely of illegitimate birth, he would have overlooked the bar sinister. |
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He was a Bechuana by birth, a good hunter, and, for a native, a very clever man. |
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Others hatch their eggs and tend the birth till it is able to shift for itself. |
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Ground zero for U.S. birth tourism appears to be San Gabriel Valley, located in the county of Los Angeles. |
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Nature took its course, and Marie did give birth to a bundle of joy, but she soon discovered that motherhood was not all bliss. |
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Transsexualism follows a careerlike orientation which begins shortly after birth. |
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Now envy and antipathy, passions irreconcilable in reason, nevertheless in fact may spring conjoined like Chang and Eng in one birth. |
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Consanguineous marriage is customary in many societies, but leads to an increased birth prevalence of infants with severe recessive disorders. |
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This family empathy measure is highly related to ever use of birth control but not to any measure of continuous use. |
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She enrolled at the university under false pretenses, giving an invented birth date and lying about her qualifications. |
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Thus the fraternal birth order effect is specific to male sexual orientation, and does not affect female sexual orientation. |
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I am by birth a Genevese, and my family is one of the most distinguished of that republic. |
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My mother died giving birth to me and I often thought while a giantling that I had killed her. |
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At the same time southern France gave birth to Occitan literature, which is best known for troubadours who sang of courtly love. |
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Merlin matures to an ascendant sagehood and engineers the birth of Arthur through magic and intrigue. |
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She tricks him into believing that she is Queen Guinevere and he sleeps with her, and the ensuing pregnancy results in the birth of Galahad. |
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Helena subsequently gives birth to a son who becomes the Emperor Constantine the Great, giving a British pedigree to the Roman imperial line. |
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As the customary gap between birth and baptism was three days, he was probably born about 13 April. |
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In 1568, Edith had given birth to a daughter named Anne, but the child died aged about seven weeks, in November that year. |
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It is thought that bundles of burning brushwood were rolled down the hill to represent the birth of the New Year after winter. |
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Charles comforted her by telling her she had indeed given birth to two sons and a daughter. |
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Both were dead by the time of Hilliard's birth, and in many respects he is more conservative even than Holbein. |
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Rossetti's wife, Elizabeth Siddal, died of an overdose of laudanum in 1862, shortly after giving birth to a stillborn child. |
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Geoffrey Chaucer was born in London sometime around 1343, though the precise date and location of his birth remain unknown. |
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To commemorate the 700th anniversary of Bacon's approximate year of birth, Prof. |
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Titled Globe to Globe Hamlet, it began its tour on 23 April 2014, the 450th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth. |
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His date of birth is not known, but he was baptised on 26 February 1564, and is likely to have been born a few days before. |
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Edmund Spenser was born in East Smithfield, London, around the year 1552, though there is some ambiguity as to the exact date of his birth. |
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Mary Powell died on 5 May 1652 from complications following Deborah's birth. |
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She died on 3 February 1658, less than four months after giving birth to daughter Katherine, who also died. |
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Radically reduced in price to ensure unprecedented circulation, it was sensational in its impact and gave birth to reform societies. |
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Claire Clairmont gave birth to a baby girl on 13 January, at first called Alba, later Allegra. |
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He fell in love with a French woman, Annette Vallon, who in 1792 gave birth to their daughter Caroline. |
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In 1823 Mill and a friend were arrested while distributing pamphlets on birth control by Francis Place to women in working class areas. |
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Both were early advocates of birth control at a time when this was considered scandalous. |
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Mill died the year after Russell's birth, but his writings had a great effect on Russell's life. |
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In 1961, after four miscarriages in four years, Shirley Williams gave birth to their daughter, Rebecca. |
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Kipling's birth home on the campus of the J J School of Art in Bombay for many years was used as the Dean's residence. |
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A few months after her birth Enid almost died from whooping cough, but was nursed back to health by her father, whom she adored. |
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In honour of the 125th anniversary of her birth, 25 contemporary mystery writers and one publisher revealed their views on Christie's works. |
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In Part I, the Messiah's coming and the virgin birth are predicted by the Old Testament prophets. |
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The annunciation to the shepherds of the birth of the Christ is represented in the words of Luke's gospel. |
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In early 1707, George's hopes were fulfilled when Caroline gave birth to a son, Frederick. |
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The change to remove his image generated controversy, particularly because 2007 was the 150th anniversary of Elgar's birth. |
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In 1936, the Hall was the scene of a giant rally celebrating the British Empire, the occasion being the centenary of Joseph Chamberlain's birth. |
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There is no official record of his birth, although Chaplin believed he was born at East Street, Walworth, in South London. |
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At the time of his birth, Chaplin's parents were both music hall entertainers. |
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Harris was by then legitimately pregnant, and on 7 July 1919, gave birth to a son. |
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On 12 October 1933 in London, she gave birth to a daughter, Suzanne, later Mrs. |
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On 20 January 1965, Sellers and Ekland announced the birth of a daughter, Victoria. |
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The rivalry between England and Australia gave birth to The Ashes in 1882 and this has remained Test cricket's most famous contest. |
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In 2001 he opened the season with consecutive second place finishes in the country of his birth, South Africa. |
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Hence a child born to that person in the United Kingdom would normally be a British citizen by birth. |
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The success of the Serbian Revolution against Ottoman rule in 1817 marked the birth of the Principality of Serbia. |
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Territorial nationalists assume that all inhabitants of a particular nation owe allegiance to their country of birth or adoption. |
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In Irish nationality law, birth in Northern Ireland grants an entitlement similar to birth within the Republic itself. |
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Although her birth generated public interest, she was not expected to become queen, as the Prince of Wales was still young. |
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From Elizabeth's birth onwards, the British Empire continued its transformation into the Commonwealth of Nations. |
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A country scores higher HDI when the life expectancy at birth is longer, the education period is longer, and the income per capita is higher. |
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Beginning in Germany and Switzerland in the 16th century, the Radical Reformation gave birth to many radical Protestant groups throughout Europe. |
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The birth of their son, later James V, brought the House of Stewart into the line of descent of the House of Tudor, and the English throne. |
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A man's birth order often influenced his military recruitment, as younger sons went to war and older sons took charge of the farm. |
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With extremely high birth rates, low death rates, and steady settlement, the colonial population grew rapidly. |
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The United States has a birth rate of 13 per 1,000, which is 5 births below the world average. |
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In 2013, the highest teenage birth rate was in Alabama, and the lowest in Wyoming. |
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In recent years, Poland's population has decreased due to an increase in emigration and a decline in the birth rate. |
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The pioneering work of Robert Owen, a Welsh radical, at New Lanark in Scotland, is sometimes credited as being the birth of British Socialism. |
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The latter group would have included individuals who were British citizens by descent or by birth in a British colony. |
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Business owners' hesitation to extend credit to new customers led to the birth of the credit reporting industry. |
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To research a possible link between US bombardment and rates of birth defects and pediatric cancer in Iraq is a moral imperative. |
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Because of her noble birth, she bitterly resented her position as a morganatic wife. |
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Another contrary view has been recently proposed by Arun Bala in his dialogical history of the birth of modern science. |
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Normal DNA sequencing methods happen after birth, but there are new methods to test paternity while a mother is still pregnant. |
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Originally, this was the supervision of birth, death and marriage registration. |
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Replacement fertility is the total fertility rate at which women give birth to enough babies to sustain population levels. |
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In countries like Iran where contraception was subsidized before the economy accelerated, birth rate also rapidly declined. |
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Rabbinical Judaism maintains that a Jew, whether by birth or conversion, is a Jew forever. |
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Immediately after the birth, the words of Adhan is pronounced in the right ear of the child. |
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All members of the Orthodox Church profess the same faith, regardless of race or nationality, jurisdiction or local custom, or century of birth. |
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Mary is thus called the 'Theotokos' or 'Bogoroditsa' as an affirmation of the divinity of the one to whom she gave birth. |
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The UN predicts a steady population decline in Central and Eastern Europe as a result of emigration and low birth rates. |
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Around the time of the events that led to your birth, there was no longer anything new even about multichimeras. |
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The tercentenary of Bunyan's birth, celebrated in 1928, elicited praise from his former adversary, the Church of England. |
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In 2016, to mark the centenary of Dahl's birth, his letters to his mother were abridged and broadcast as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week. |
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Edith's sixth and final son died on 25 January 1882, one day after his birth, on Maugham's eighth birthday. |
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In the 1580s and 1590s James VI strongly promoted the literature of the country of his birth in Scots. |
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On 22 January 2009, two stamps were issued by the Royal Mail to commemorate the 250th anniversary of Burns's birth. |
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The groove of direct hereditary descent in the land of his birth, which he never in thought, and hardly in body, moved out of. |
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By the time of Shaw's birth, his mother had become close to George John Lee, a flamboyant figure well known in Dublin's musical circles. |
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When Pound told Dorothy about the birth, she separated from him for much of that year and the next. |
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In September, Hemingway drove Dorothy to the American Hospital of Paris for the birth of a son, Omar Pound. |
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He was a British national from birth, and as Southampton Row is within the sound of Bow Bells, Barbirolli always regarded himself as a Cockney. |
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Fryer shipped off to war prior to Clapton's birth and then returned to Canada. |
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One month later, Adams gave birth to son Brooklyn, whose father was then Manchester United footballer David Beckham. |
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This casts some doubt on 23 April date, as high infant mortality rates meant parents would usually baptise their children shortly after birth. |
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It was a difficult birth, and his mother Elizabeth, who hoped for a girl, was uncomfortable even looking at him at first. |
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After Lowry's birth, his mother's health was too poor for her to continue teaching. |
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Charles had been followed by the birth of two girls, Emma in 1829 and Henrietta in 1833, before William's birth. |
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Richard was barely two years old when his mother died on 31 October, six days after the birth of Graham, the family's thirteenth child. |
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It was on 10 September 1957, a day before he left for New York, that Sybil gave birth to their first child, Kate Burton. |
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He received his resident alien visa from the American consulate when his birth certificate arrived from Britain. |
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Under naive falsificationism, the birth control pill would be considered as ineffective since there are instances in which it does not work. |
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However, if you have decided to have a child, then you have an obligation to give birth to the happiest child you can. |
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His date of birth is thought to have been between 23 December 1265 and 17 March 1266, born into a leading family of the region. |
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Wollstonecraft died at the age of 38, eleven days after giving birth to her second daughter, leaving behind several unfinished manuscripts. |
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From an academic perspective, Marx's work contributed to the birth of modern sociology. |
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In most accounts he is swallowed by Cronus at birth but later saved, with his other brothers and sisters, by Zeus. |
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Personal photo, IDN, name, date of birth, signature, nationality, and the ID card expiry date are fields visible on the physical card. |
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They have photos but not birth dates and are therefore not accepted by banks. |
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Other forms of officially accepted identification include the driver's license and the birth certificate. |
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The front shows the first and last name of the holder, first names of both parents, birth date and place, and an 11 digit ID number. |
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In Canada, a driver's licence usually lists the name, home address, height and date of birth of the bearer. |
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The basic document needed to establish a person's identity and citizenship in order to obtain a passport is a birth certificate. |
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These are issued by either the US state of birth or by the US Department of State for overseas births to US citizens. |
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In this case, the applicant may sign an affidavit of citizenship or be required to present a birth certificate. |
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The validity period can be up to 16 weeks with reference to the birth time of the child. |
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As an agitator of stereotypes, how did you feel about The Birth of a Nation? |
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Birth control and data mining used to be things they believed in, now both are big government plots to be stopped. |
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This rapprochement was The Birth of a Nation that Griffith evoked when he changed the name of his movie from The clansman. |
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But it was the Helsinki Birth Cohort of 1934-1944 that allowed more than 6,000 Finnish women to be studied. |
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So, today, for the first time, EMC is announcing its first U.S. grant to The Birth Place Midwifery Clinic, led by Jennie Joseph. |
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Birth and death, however, collide in a remarkable way in a number of tombs in the Greek world in which a woman is found inhumed or cremated together with a fetus or neonate. |
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The second half of Birth of a Nation was intended to leave its viewers speechless, shaking with anger at the dastardliness of the upstart blacks, and their white supporters. |
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The queen was pregnant again, and she was aware of the consequences if she failed to give birth to a son. |
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The birth was difficult, and the queen died on 24 October 1537 from an infection and was buried in Windsor. |
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The euphoria that had accompanied Edward's birth became sorrow, but it was only over time that Henry came to long for his wife. |
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Others, such as the Revd Giles Fraser, a contributor to The Guardian, have argued for an allegorical interpretation of the virgin birth of Jesus. |
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If, on the other hand, Mary gave birth to a healthy child, Elizabeth's chances of becoming queen would recede sharply. |
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She gave birth to a son, believed to be named Damerei, who was given to a wet nurse at Durham House, but he died in October 1592 of plague. |
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Although his birth is not formally recorded, it is known that he was born while the Six Articles were in force. |
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Charles had nine children, two of whom eventually succeeded as king, and two of whom died at or shortly after birth. |
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At birth, Charles automatically became Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay, along with several other associated titles. |
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Before the birth of James's son on 10 June, William had been third in the line of succession. |
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Mary must have died shortly after the birth of Elizabeth, although there does not appear to be any surviving record of the date. |
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William inherited the principality of Orange from his father, William II, who died a week before William's birth. |
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Children around age 10 are a relatively small group, reflecting the decline in birth rates around the turn of the century. |
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Because all the children had a share in the family's property, there was a declining birth rate. |
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On 20 March 1811, Marie Louise gave birth to a baby boy, whom Napoleon made heir apparent and bestowed the title of King of Rome. |
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With more births within marriage, it seems inevitable that marriage rates and birth rates would rise together. |
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They are officially used while applying for an Irish passport, which requires one to state one's county of birth. |
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The Bainbridge's official ledgers reported revenue by department, giving birth to the name department store. |
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This was the birth of a regulated stock market, which had teething problems in the shape of unlicensed brokers. |
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Physicians began to think of the Pill as an excellent means of birth control for young women. |
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The company was formerly known as Guest, Keen and Nettlefolds and can trace its origins back to 1759 and the birth of the Industrial Revolution. |
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A home birth does not make you a lentil-weaving hippy or a dangerous, selfish nutter who is putting herself and her baby at risk. |
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This was probably the first reported observation of the effects of quantum size, and might be considered to be the birth of nanoscience. |
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The search engine Google marked the 200th anniversary of his birth on 2 November 2015 with an algebraic reimaging of its Google Doodle. |
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At the University of Oxford, a new course in Computer Science and Philosophy was established to coincide with the centenary of Turing's birth. |
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George Stephenson's daughter was born in 1805 but died within weeks of her birth. |
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The approximate location of James Watt's birth in Greenock is commemorated by a statue. |
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We weren't planning to live-tweet the birth, but we felt in that moment that we needed the power of prayer. |
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This was the birth of the heritage railway movement, which has flourished in Britain and around the world in the years since. |
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But Beveridge alluding to the problem of an overall declining birth rate, argued that even the flat rate would be eugenic. |
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Life expectancy at birth takes account of infant mortality but not prenatal mortality. |
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King Numitor was deposed by his brother, Amulius, while Numitor's daughter, Rhea Silvia, gave birth to the twins. |
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My longtime friend, since birth actually, called and gently broke the bad news to me. |
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With the promotion of birth control in the 1980s, the growth rate began to slow. |
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The use of skilled birth attendants, however, has risen between 2005 and 2007 by women in all wealth quintiles except the highest quintile. |
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Ancestry was seen as the most important criterion for being categorised as Cornish, above place of birth or growing up in Cornwall. |
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God loves an humble soul. It is not our high birth, but our low hearts God delights in. |
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This would subsequently be addressed in Mary's case by dogma surrounding the circumstances of her own birth. |
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Liverpool and Manchester grew into its largest cities, dominating global trade and the birth of modern industrial capitalism. |
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Regarding the virgin birth of Jesus among those who denied the preexistence of Christ, some held to it and others did not. |
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On the other hand, Theodotus of Byzantium, Artemon, and Paul of Samosata all accepted the virgin birth. |
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In the early days of Unitarianism, the stories of the virgin birth were accepted by most. |
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Fostering is possibly a sign of noble birth, as are references to his riding a horse when young. |
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Guru Gobind Singh makes it clear that human birth is obtained with great fortune, therefore one needs to be able to make the most of this life. |
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These programs serve children from birth to age five, pregnant women, and their families. |
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Egan made Robin Hood of noble birth but raised by the forestor Gilbert Hood. |
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The intellectual revitalization of Europe started with the birth of medieval universities. |
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Birth is a social event, as the mother and calf need others to protect them from predators. |
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In 1948 she gave birth to Fleming's daughter, Mary, who was stillborn. |
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Pregnant and often ill, Mary Godwin had to cope with Percy's joy at the birth of his son by Harriet Shelley in late 1814 and his constant outings with Claire Clairmont. |
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The birth of a machine age which had made major changes in the conditions of daily life in the 19th century now had radically changed the nature of warfare. |
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There Mary Shelley gave birth to her third child, Clara, on 2 September. |
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The birth of her fourth child, Percy Florence, on 12 November 1819, finally lifted her spirits, though she nursed the memory of her lost children till the end of her life. |
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In 1817, Claire gave birth to a daughter by Byron, Alba, later renamed Allegra, whom Shelley offered to support, making provisions for her and for Claire in his will. |
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However, Elena was placed with foster parents a few days after her birth and the Shelley family moved on to yet another Italian city, leaving her behind. |
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On 10 June 1942, Laura gave birth to Margaret, the couple's fourth child. |
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Blount gave birth in June 1519 to Henry's illegitimate son, Henry FitzRoy. |
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On 8 July 1930 Dora gave birth to her third child Harriet Ruth. |
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Burns postponed his planned emigration to Jamaica on 1 September, and was at Mossgiel two days later when he learnt that Jean Armour had given birth to twins. |
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The following year, 1537, Jane died after giving birth to a son, Edward. |
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In the last week of April 1555, Elizabeth was released from house arrest, and called to court as a witness to the birth, which was expected imminently. |
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Thanksgiving services in the diocese of London were held at the end of April after false rumours that Mary had given birth to a son spread across Europe. |
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At birth, Elizabeth was the heir presumptive to the throne of England. |
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From his birth, Edward was undisputed heir apparent to the throne. |
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To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens in 2012, the Museum of London held the UK's first major exhibition on the author in 40 years. |
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They simply insist that his Persian-tinged pronunciation, grammatical usages, and vocabulary were the result of a birth and education in Iranophilic Afghanistan. |
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In March 1943 Caitlin gave birth to a daughter, Aeronwy, in London. |
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Birth control, also known as contraception and fertility control, is a method or device used to prevent pregnancy. |
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In 2014, to celebrate the centenary of Thomas's birth, the British Council Wales undertook a year long programme of cultural and educational works. |
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Birth control also improves child survival in the developing world by lengthening the time between pregnancies. |
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In 1921, Sanger founded the American Birth Control League, which later became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. |
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Countries new to the twenty most reported countries of birth for Birmingham residents since 2001 include, Iran, Zimbabwe, the Philippines and Nigeria. |
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Birth control is also being considered as an alternative to hunting as a means of controlling overpopulation in wild animals. |
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The Revolution also witnessed the birth of total war by organising the resources of France and the lives of its citizens towards the objective of military conquest. |
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Known as the unofficial national anthem of the Isle of Man, the brothers performed the song during their world tour to reflect their pride in the place of their birth. |
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Birth control, such as the pill or intrauterine devices, can be used immediately following abortion. |
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As a result, an authentic ecosensitive spirituality is coming to birth, a spirituality that will no doubt effect the content and form of our prayer. |
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Clementine gave birth to her fourth child, Marigold Frances Churchill, on 15 November 1918, four days after the official end of the First World War. |
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Only a few years before his birth on May 18, 1824, in the baronial castle, the tiny but largely autonomous knightdom had been annexed by Bavaria during the Napoleonic wars. |
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The name of that county then appears in both Irish and English on the passport's information page, as opposed to the town or city of birth on the United Kingdom passport. |
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During their marriage she gave birth to a son, Claudius Drusus. |
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This was not, as the Victorians asserted, the birth of the English Navy. |
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Andrews and Walton headed back to Britain in September 1962 to await the birth of daughter Emma Katherine Walton, who was born in London two months later. |
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And it was a fitting victory for Liverpool as Anfield celebrated the 100th anniversary of the birth of their legendary Scottish manager Bill Shankly. |
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The Wisselbank's innovations helped lay the foundations for the birth and development of the central banking system that now plays a vital role in the world's economy. |
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By the eve of the Great War, some Canadians, including many of English birth, were searching for literary and artistic forms that better expressed a sense of Canadianness. |
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Tennis is the highest profile sport for the two weeks of the Wimbledon Championships, but otherwise struggles to hold its own in the country of its birth. |
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The virginity of Mary means that incarnation is about the conception and birth of higher consciousness without the intercedence or necessity of any human agency i.e., ego. |
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Night of your birth. Thirty-three. The Leonids they were called. God how the stars did fall. I looked for blackness, holes in the heavens. The Dipper stove. |
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Not long before his birth, his parents had moved from his father's native Ireland to Cornwall, where his mother came from, in order for his father to find work as a policeman. |
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The 19th century marks the birth of the first beach resorts. |
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From 1 January 1983, a child born in the UK to a parent who is a British citizen or 'settled' in the UK is automatically a British citizen by birth. |
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There are a number of cases of ligers and ligresses in the world but experts say it is impossible for males to conceive and exceptionally rare for females to give birth. |
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National Birth Defects Prevention Study found no association between loratadine and hypospadias. |
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The user inputs his date of birth and the computer displays his age. |
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He had been called to see his sister after she had given birth. |
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Niven often claimed that he was born in Kirriemuir, in the Scottish county of Angus in 1909, but his birth certificate shows this was not the case. |
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The Statute of Rhuddlan established England's authority over Wales, and Edward's son was proclaimed the first English Prince of Wales upon his birth. |
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Helen, 29, recreated Botticelli's Birth of Venus and her impressive performance scooped first prize for the gallery in a shopfront competition. |
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Baby beef is the term applied to young very fat and light beeves that have been on full feed practically from birth, never having been allowed to lose their baby fat. |
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Anyway, Dee Hock explained a bunch of this stuff in his book The Birth of the Chaordic Age. |
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Pakistan has had a long history of feminist activism since its birth. |
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Wollstonecraft soon became pregnant by Imlay, and on 14 May 1794 she gave birth to her first child, Fanny, naming her after perhaps her closest friend. |
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On 30 August 1797, Wollstonecraft gave birth to her second daughter, Mary. |
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The date of Smith's baptism into the Church of Scotland at Kirkcaldy was 5 June 1723 and this has often been treated as if it were also his date of birth, which is unknown. |
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Additionally, people could record Cornwall as their country of birth. |
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Herbs, such as Squaw Vine and Birth Root, have been used by women for centuries. |
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A Welshman of noble birth, Saint Petroc was educated in Ireland. |
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Pope Paul VI called her Mother of the Church because, by giving birth to Christ, she is considered to be the spiritual mother to each member of the Body of Christ. |
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The thistle is an ancient Celtic symbol of nobility of character as well as of birth and is the symbol of the Order of the Thistle a high chivalric order of Scotland. |
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It believes that a fetus should progressively be accorded rights as it develops through its stages of gestation, culminating with full respect as an individual at birth. |
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Since the 1970s, Germany's death rate has exceeded its birth rate. |
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Her birth name was Elizabeth, but everyone called her Lizzie. |
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The rivalry between England and Australia gave birth to The Ashes in 1882 that has remained Test cricket's most famous contest, and takes place every two years. |
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However an increasing birth rate and higher levels of inward migration to Scotland have reversed the decline and contributed to the recent population growth. |
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Famous American Unitarian William Ellery Channing was a believer in the virgin birth until later in his life, after he had begun his association with the Transcendentalists. |
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He was saved by his mother Rhea, who concealed him among a flock of lambs and pretended to have given birth to a colt, which she gave to Cronus to devour. |
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In the climactic scene of the poem, Edyff, the sister of King 'Athelston' of England, gives birth to Edmund after passing through a ritual ordeal by fire. |
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This cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth is called samsara. |
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Standard passports may contain information such as the holder's name, place and date of birth, photograph, signature, and other identifying information. |
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Vaisakhi is one of the most important festivals of Sikhs, while other significant festivals commemorate the birth, lives of the Gurus and Sikh martyrs. |
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Upon a child's birth, the Guru Granth Sahib is opened at a random point and the child is named using the first letter on the top left hand corner of the left page. |
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The back of the card also contains the person's registered address where official correspondence is sent, place of birth, and the names of parents and spouse. |
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Sae Beatrice wis ready whan she wis cried on in the middle o the nicht tae halp the howdie. It wis a saicont bairn, an Derriakin wis muckle-boukit, sae the birth gaed quick. |
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Find out if you owe birth to an Albert Einstein or a Homer Simpson! |
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Had I given birth to a daughter of my own, I'd like to have called her Grace, a classic and poetic name, one that illuminates a person of dignity and poise. |
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Einstein gave birth to a famous equation relating energy to mass. |
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His place of birth is supposed to be in or near Bourne in Lincolnshire. |
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However, it may take several generations for a change in the total fertility rate to be reflected in birth rate, because the age distribution must reach equilibrium. |
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Mortality rates are low, birth control is understood and easily accessible, and costs are often deemed very high because of education, clothing, feeding, and social amenities. |
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Premature Birth Screening can take away a lot of the guess work, giving mums-to-be an accurate prediction of their chances of going into early labour. |
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Catherine became pregnant and miscarried at least three times, and during a severe illness in 1663, she imagined, for a time, that she had given birth. |
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The two paintings to which professor Levi D'Ancona refers in the title of this fascicle are Botticelli's Primavera and Birth of Venus. |
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It contains the full name, gender, nationality, date of birth, photograph of the data subject, right thumb print, ID number, and personal signature. |
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Around the statue are fountains and lights, installed in 2000, arranged in the pattern of a star chart at midnight on the night of Reynolds' birth. |
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Perhaps I would be able to help him recapture the well-being and emotional closeness he fantasied his brother had experienced with his parents prior to his birth. |
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The birth of lyric poetry in Latin occurred during the same period. |
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On the island, a project of alleged sustainable urbanism is giving birth to an urban river park with possibilities for recreation, culture, water and nature. |
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Children of Orthodox families are normally baptized shortly after birth. |
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Henry's uncle Jasper Tudor, the Earl of Pembroke and Edmund's younger brother, undertook to protect the young widow, who was 13 years old when she gave birth to Henry. |
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On the desk lay the final version of the Birth Control speech, mastered and canalized by the skilful Maisie. |
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