Luke, who has faint freckles and coarse curls, suggests they tie the bibs into do-rags. |
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Indeed, sections of the Grand Canal have some of the best coarse angling in the country. |
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Anglers can also enjoy the open spaces and easy access to excellent coarse fishing. |
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The owner keeps an eye on coarse anglers to make sure all the trout are returned. |
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It is also known that the lake holds a very large population of coarse fish including roach. |
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For the return of the salmon in most Yorkshire rivers comes at the expense of coarse fish. |
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Tench are one of the few species of coarse fish which can be sexed accurately at any time of the year. |
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Most species of coarse fish can feed on a whole variety of different kinds of food. |
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I was pleased and thought that my dad had found a lake or river where we could fish for coarse fish. |
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It has also produced most species of coarse fish with an interesting sprinkling of sea and game species. |
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As with all coarse fish, grass carp begin feeding upon invertebrates before moving on to a wider diet including soft plants. |
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This appeared to indicate that sea and coarse fish were cohabiting quite happily together. |
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Pennsylvania marks are a coarse incuse or zig-zag border that speak of handmade stamps, and are often large. |
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The dry fly acts as a float would in coarse fishing and clearly shows a take as it is gets pulled under. |
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Even for such a simple purpose as tyeing a Rosebud in position, it is often used far too coarse and too long. |
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There are roses, leopards and paisleys, reds, golds and indigos, fine weaves and coarse weaves. |
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Soils high in organic matter or clay are more adsorptive than coarse sandy soils. |
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Just whiz some of the bread in a food processor until it becomes a pile of coarse crumbs. |
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Once a dull, coarse material, today khadi is a multicolored wonder fabric with weaves as fine as muslin. |
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Madala, Dixira, Cleo and five other warriors were handed coarse wool sheets and kindling for a fire. |
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He was never at a loss for the wounding remark, the inappropriately coarse joke, the cold put-down. |
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The second heating refines the coarse grains and leaves the steel in a softened condition. |
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Cut lath and plaster with a reciprocating saw fitted with a coarse, wood-cutting blade. |
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With the Ladder flipped down, you have a usable, albeit coarse, fixed battle sight zeroed for 50 meters. |
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Mid-whorl gently convex bearing three coarse spiral cords, the uppermost of which forms an angulation, the base is not preserved. |
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While I found it to be full of antic spirit and coarse entertainment, she just couldn't get into it. |
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It is in very good condition with a round cairn 8 m. in diameter revetted by a kerb of coarse walling, and a partially infilled chamber. |
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Cleo was dumped next to him, her hands and feet bound with coarse rope that caused friction burns on her skin. |
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Cliffs within rock-bound estuaries can be local sources of coarse debris, which can form beaches. |
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The preferred soil is coarse to fine, preferably hard, compact clay or silty clay loam. |
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Crabro advena nests in soils ranging from coarse sand and loamy fine sand to silty loam and gravelly loam. |
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In fact, many hire companies provide the tackle for coarse fishing, so it's very easy to try your hand at catching bream, perch, roach or rudd. |
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Lodge Bay is the new coarse fishery with roach, silver and gold rudd and several species of carp ranging between 2-14 lb. |
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His hair, through inattention, becomes long, coarse, and bushy, and loosely dangles upon his shoulders. |
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Having a coarse run, she carried a huge body of water in her wake, in which the rudder was useless. |
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Grey and smooth, the rocks have a fabric imprint, resembling coarse canvas sacking. |
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Maybe it is wise to stock up on coarse soap and plastic sheeting and duct tape for creating safe rooms. |
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Today many of you are not only catching the salmonoid species but also coarse and saltwater fish with a fly rod and reel. |
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The coarse texture and mild flavour of the beans contrasted nicely with the saltiness of the smoked ham and the richness of the sausage. |
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Once the worst pitting and damage is filed away, he sands the metal with a coarse sandpaper. |
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If the surface is slick, such as ceramic tile, sand it with coarse sandpaper. |
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Although magnetometry can be used for coarse delineation of bedrock structure, its resolution is relatively poor. |
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Farina, a coarse gravel-like flour made from cassava, is boiled with sun-dried beef to make a dish known as tasso. |
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Pruning saws have narrower blades with coarse teeth that are designed to cut on the pull stroke. |
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The feather was identified as eagle from its size, color, and the coarse texture of the pennaceous barbs. |
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After a tooth erupts from the gum cavity, the mammoth uses it in grinding coarse vegetation like grass. |
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You lucky ones who boast a full head of coarse hair shouldn't be complaining about bad hair days. |
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The air was always this coarse in the badlands due to continuous sandstorms and complete lack of humidity in the air. |
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Their baleen consists of 260-400 black, coarse, broad, overlapping plates hanging from each side of the upper jaw. |
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The proportion of coarse sediment deposited in the plot drains increased with larger storms. |
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Swamp foxtail, a coarse tussocky native grass with a seed head similar to buffel grass, is the native host of this insect pest. |
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The woman wore a tignon of brightly colored madras cotton and a dark kersey shawl over a long dress of coarse linen. |
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The man, beneath his coarse and bluff exterior, is haunted by a sense of his own inadequacy. |
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The poodle, Bedlington terrier, and Kerry blue terrier have long, wooly or coarse coats that tend to shed less. |
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Between this outer husk and the nut is a thick, loose layer of coarse brown fibres, the mesocarp. |
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My hands and ankles were bound together by coarse rope so there was no way I could run. |
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Sediments from the Oliva host contained coarse sand and microscopic shell fragments but no complete microfossils. |
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She was always waving her red hands about, either gesticulating, or setting to rights her coarse, straight, tow-coloured locks. |
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Sprinkle a very little water on top and shake the mixture lightly so that coarse lumps appear. |
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Growers should liaise with merchants and coarse ration millers in their areas with a view to growing beans as an alternative source of protein. |
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Here colorless to yellow crusts of mimetite coat open spaces and coarse fragments in brecciated dacite. |
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Looks a great colour in the pan, tastes of proper beef, lovely coarse mince. |
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Scrubbing with the coarse cloth and mineral spirits may take the sheen off the door. |
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During the Middle Ages, thick blocks of coarse stale bread called trenchers were used in place of plates. |
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It was washed in water and ground to a coarse powder in a tungsten carbide ball mill. |
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Ok, as you know, I like some fresh tomatoes, olive oil and garlic layered on some toasted coarse Tuscan bread as much as the next man. |
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Miniature gnocchi for putting into soup can be made by pressing the dough through a coarse sieve or a perforated spoon. |
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The powder is filtered through a coarse sifter and put away in canvas bags. |
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Pilot Cloth is a coarse, heavy, stout twilled woolen that is heavily napped and navy blue. |
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There are chapters on amphorae, mortaria, and coarse and fine wares, with particular emphasis on Colchester products. |
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Even before those rumors started, people thought of him as coarse, ungentlemanly, and shallow. |
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The presence of goiter, coarse hair, dry skin, carotenemia, and myxedema indicates hypothyroidism. |
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He had just finished Modern Painters and realised that great and beautiful works of art were often associated with coarse or unrefined artists. |
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The steed carrying it brayed, its coarse voice bellowing out like a foghorn. |
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They may recognize unwholesomeness when it is coarse, but not when it is more subtle. |
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The pitch-black bark with coarse texture is well weathered and full of the verve of unyieldingness. |
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The names bracken and brake are sometimes also applied to other large, coarse ferns and, as general terms, to a thicket of such plants. |
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Despite the coarse nature of the fabric, the pieces are delicate, soft to touch and look brilliant. |
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I took the coarse, bristly rope in my hands and held it tight, hoping to still the uncontrollable shaking I felt. |
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It also exterminates coarse and sour grasses, destroys couch grass and acts powerfully upon rye grasses. |
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The basal, coarse layer of a varve is commonly overlain by microlaminared silt and clay, reflecting variable streamflow during summer. |
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Also evoking the sensation of just-harvested ingredients is a coarse amatriciana of tomato, chili, and pecorino atop al dente bucatini. |
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The poet who was so courtly and gentle in his verse could be coarse and vulgar in his everyday speech. |
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It has a huge number of synonyms, ranging from coy euphemisms to joking proxies, to coarse vulgarities. |
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Her jaw was square and appeared even squarer with her coarse black hair pulled from her face and twisted into a knot at the back of her head. |
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These may be coarse grey hair, prematurely grey hair, or the grey hair around the temples and hairlines. |
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A shelf held a rush burner of coarse iron, next to a candleholder of finely wrought bronze, and another of horn trimmed in sliver. |
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Galena is also found as larger isolated octahedral crystals within the coarse calcite cement in breccias in the upper parts of the core. |
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Because cassia and canella are very coarse and difficult to grind without commercial equipment, they are most often sold in powdered form. |
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In the process of making fine mealie-meal, Maize that is washed clean is put aside, while coarse Bran chaff is separated out. |
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The flesh is a little coarse, very juicy, sprightly, subacid, and desirable for either dessert or culinary uses. |
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She saw herself chained to a coarse wooden pole, the straw on the floor pricking her legs as she kneeled, head bowed submissively. |
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Her wide dark brown eyes and her thick coarse hair that she keeps styled in a professional bob accent the highness of her cheekbones. |
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He's still coarse and unsympathetic but when he starts taking the moral high road, the film goes downhill. |
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Unique among rhinos, the Sumatran rhinoceros is covered with a conspicuous coat of coarse, reddish brown hair. |
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She slipped it over her head and loved the feel of such smooth fabric after more than a month of coarse homespun. |
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Cover the base of the pot with a layer of coarse grit, stone chippings or the expanded clay granules often sold for houseplants. |
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The current surface of the car park is coarse rolled stone chippings, which can create surface noise when cars are driven over it. |
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We were on a pallet with a mattress of straw, with a coarse but warm blanket over us. |
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This is a small holopid with rounded whorls, deep sutures and a body whorl bearing coarse collabral threads. |
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A Chinese hostess will usually say to her guests she has nothing to offer them but some coarse food and plain tea. |
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The cilice mentioned in the novel is a thigh-mounted type, but i guess the original cilices were coarse hairy shirts. |
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Six of the 11 patients had coarse, bibasilar rales, and two reported orthopnea and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea. |
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The Castle Eden is an extremely scenic old steamship, lying in 33m on a clean bottom of mussel shells, clams and coarse gravel. |
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Coir is a coarse fibre obtained from coconut husks and used in the manufacture of rope and other products. |
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Instead their masters gave them half-a-dozen pints of coarse flour, rice, or pease, and half-a-dozen herrings. |
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He watched Trudy as she carefully peeled the coarse linen away and rolled it up like a map. |
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With their lion-shaped faces and coarse hair, Pekinese are used to being considered something of a bad joke. |
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We added a sack of sugar, a pouch of coarse black tobacco, and got his grudging acceptance. |
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She stared at herself, and then pulled on her own clothes, feeling safer in the thick coarse fabrics, the rough knitted jumper. |
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Dulse is a seaweed native to the British Isles that has a reddish-brown color and coarse texture. |
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Today, refined wheat and rice have virtually displaced coarse grains and millets as the staple cereal. |
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Her coarse black hair was pulled into two cute pigtails, and she smiled shyly. |
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They wore flannel shirts over loose-fitting pants fashioned of droguet, or drugget, a durable and coarse woolen fabric. |
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In fact it was rather ugly, with coarse brown scales and thick awkward looking fins. |
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In his most characteristic works he carved directly in stone, preferring a hard stone with a coarse texture. |
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I can see the depths of his chestnut eyes, the coarse texture of his jet black hair, and the shape of his slightly muscular figure. |
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The coarse white sand of the sea floor contrasted with the pinkish walls with their splattering of yellow, orange and red anemones. |
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Just lay it on the ground in the cleared area, and fill it with a coarse grade of sand. |
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Beneath her she could feel the coarse grit of sand and pebbles, and in the air she could smell the ocean. |
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Lard in particular has a coarse, crystalline structure which makes a highly effective barrier. |
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Water used for domestic purposes can be easily recycled by passing it through layers of charcoal and coarse sand. |
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Blend this all together using the tips of your fingers, until it resembles coarse sand. |
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Inhalation of coarse, ambient particulate matter may also contribute to the exacerbation of reactive airways disease. |
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If your soil is poorly drained, it may be necessary to put a little coarse sand at the base of the hole. |
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A ragged, yellow-green plant had pushed its way through the coarse, black soil. |
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Some sift sand from millet, while others pound the grain into a coarse flour. |
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For container gardening use a fast draining potting soil mixed with a little coarse sand. |
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There are places where the sand is coarse and hard instead of soft, worn by years of the sea and her moods. |
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Grain orientation also plays a large part in determining toughness of alloys containing coarse particles. |
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Because of the fragmentation of nuclei and the disruption of cellular membranes, coarse granular particles are formed. |
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These coarse particles indicate that the decorator prepared his paint poorly. |
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Some biologic links between coarse particles and exacerbation of respiratory problems support these findings. |
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These observations explained the presence of the coarse suspended particles found in the present study. |
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Grain size in the intrusion remains coarse right up to the contact with metasedimentary host rocks. |
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In this type of sediment, relatively coarse sand grains are mixed with silt and clay. |
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At a microscopic scale, at the surface of the deposit, coarse particles roll on a deposit of fine particles as a result of particle segregation. |
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The male figures here, as before, are represented as coarse, even brutal in feature. |
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The food was meager, coarse bread and a single cup of water along with a small bowl of some kind of stew, long gone cold. |
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Elderly people often describe the hard days of the past with examples of how they struggled with inadequate and coarse food. |
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It was Julian, the urchin who had once served the coarse wine in The Oranges bar. |
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The Romans considered the leek a superior vegetable, unlike onions and garlic which were despised as coarse foods for the poor. |
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The people whom he met, besides his own kin, were coarse in speech and thought. |
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The ogres, unable to see her, began to look around, still roaring and shouting in their coarse speech. |
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Or, you could argue that our language has become downright coarse, offensive and rude. |
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These treasure hunters were coarse and greedy types whose only intention was plunder. |
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A crude culture makes a coarse people, and private refinement cannot long survive public excess. |
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A maid hurries towards the coarse fellow with the bowl of charcoal used as a pipe-lighter. |
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This created peer pressure and the cultivation of rough manners, coarse language and status symbols like the body tattoos. |
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If there was one place that Angel detested it was the village, full of smelly houses and coarse women. |
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You are never coarse or vulgar, and people who display such traits offend you. |
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He sees a woman much like himself, a coarse merchant's daughter who guffaws loudly at a dirty joke. |
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Though she is coarse and stupid, she imagines she is cut out for a job in the movies. |
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The missives were framed in particularly coarse language to make the point. |
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She had become like all the other strong, hard, coarse women of poor households. |
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Once the river levels were back to a fishable condition, coarse and game anglers experienced some good fishing. |
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Many more anglers are now going out fly fishing for the coarse and sea fish species. |
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Before putting away my coarse fishing gear until June 16th I made sure it had all been cleaned. |
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You can also increase your catch numbers by copying our coarse fishing colleagues and employing swim feeders. |
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The fixed spool reel is the most versatile reel in coarse fishing and as such is the most popular reel. |
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Working-class coarse angling was also becoming more accessible thanks to the railways. |
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Angling, both fly-fishing and coarse fishing, is governed by intricate rules, which justify the catch as the end-point of a contest. |
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The microcline and quartz are sometimes intergrown as graphic granite and become very coarse grained near pockets. |
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It's been replaced with a grim collection of non-locales and coarse interpolations. |
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Talking to locals on the fishery there is no shortage of coarse fishing in the area. |
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Many of these forms had high cardinal areas and coarse plications, although others were much more like conventional spiriferids. |
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A small minority of the Atrypacea have smooth shells, others being rather finely costate or having medium to coarse plications. |
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The welding process produces a complex mixture of irritant gases, coarse metal particulates, and fine metal oxide fume. |
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Sift in the flour, cornflour and ginger, blend briefly until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs. |
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Wall thickness is 10-26 m, becoming thicker at the corners of the chamber where it may bulge outwardly to produce coarse longitudinal costae. |
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The coarse texture of the concrete is counterpoised to the silky surface of aluminium kitchen fittings and gleaming expanse of woodblock floor. |
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Visible everywhere since they are sold by street vendors are the cracknels, often dusted with coarse salt or poppy-seeds. |
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But the cretonnes and tapestries of Merton are coarse and almost clumsy compared with these exquisite stuffs. |
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The Franciscans wore gray, blue or brown habits and cowls made of coarse fabric, with simple ropes for belts. |
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A loose covering of coarse straw will help prevent frost heave during the winter. |
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Add about three-quarters of a cupful of normal rolled oats, and a little less than half a teaspoon of coarse seasalt. |
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To them, the Galileans were provincials whose accent seemed coarse and unrefined. |
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The grayling is a game fish with a coarse fish close season, March 15th Until June 15th, both days inclusive. |
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If I wanted to visit the area and fish either for coarse or game fish this is where I would want to stay. |
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And I can't think of any better vehicle for crunchy grains of coarse salt than pretzels. |
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Others were as coarse as sandpaper, and while they stayed knotted you usually drew blood when you tied one on. |
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The gilded frame gleamed, here and there patches of the coarse wood underneath shone through. |
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But the key words in understanding swearing, as opposed to coarse language or mere profanity, are taboo and shock. |
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They have been known, like other members of this group, to swallow grit to help grind coarse food in their gizzards. |
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The pigmented tumor demonstrated widely scattered, coarse pigment that was nonreactive with Prussian blue and reactive with Fontana. |
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The list of crops affected by the delayed monsoon is long, and oilseeds, coarse cereals and pulses top it. |
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The wind cut sharp over the cracked, coarse and grassless landscape without mercy. |
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Garlic has shallow, coarse roots that do not obtain soil nutrients as efficiently as many other crops. |
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He had a coarse laugh, and joked grossly with the peasant women, young or old, who came to the window. |
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Estimates of their abundance are based on examination of coarse plant detritus obtained by dip net. |
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Formerly in Crete, the dipper had appeared exclusively as coarse kitchenware and may have been used only for cooking. |
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Cashmere is the fine, downy wool that grows beneath the coarse outer layer of hair, called the guard hair, of the cashmere goat. |
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Use a scraper, wire brush, or coarse emery cloth to remove any bubbled paint finish and loose rust. |
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The fruit of the loofah, also known as the sponge or dishcloth gourd, is familiar as a coarse mesh sponge used in the bath. |
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Disorderly adolescents made coarse gestures with their thumbs and forefingers. |
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The main reservoir will be used for coarse fishing and there will be an additional trout lake and a junior pond. |
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The native fish will then be reintroduced in time for the coarse fishing season which starts in the summer. |
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Let me tell you about one of the greatest day's coarse fishing I've had for many, many years. |
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There are so many great places to fish for pike and coarse fish in this area, so why not try some of the small lakes and ponds round Newry. |
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Like so many coarse fish, gudgeon are only naturally found in the South of England, but have been introduced to Wales, Scotland and Ireland. |
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Barbel spawn between May and July, although unlike many species of coarse fish they can in exceptional years spawn more than once. |
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For coarse fish this means no fishing from the 15th March to the 15th June inclusive of these dates. |
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Chub are probably the best adapted of our coarse fish for using cover, as any angler will tell you. |
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The material is coarse and rough, the fabric verdant and winter green. |
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After the coarse calcite was replaced by fluorite, the titaniferous magnetite rims remain as partly martitized magnetite rims around the fluorite ore pods. |
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To such as these the everyday language of the factory workers will sound shocking, and their general behaviour appear coarse and vulgar, but it is not so in reality. |
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He also needs to know the fineness, because coarse particles don't work. |
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He was far too coarse and obvious to make that necessary, wasn't he? |
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Low flows have made it more and more difficult for coarse fish such as chub and dace to make their way to their customary spawning grounds in the Kyle. |
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For images that would otherwise be printed with a coarse screen ruling, mezzotinting can yield greater detail and a sharper image, while adding beauty and reducing file size. |
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After days without respite from the coarse gruel and dairy produce that was the usual fare of a herdsman, I was more than ready for some good meat. |
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The dominant non-clay mineral composition of the coarse fraction consists of biotite, quartz, and sanidine with lesser amounts of apatite and zircon. |
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This trend is evident at a coarse scale in a comparison of the combined rarefaction curves for sites from the uppermost 15 m of the Cretaceous against all Paleocene sites. |
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The bark was extremely coarse and the branches were thorny and brittle. |
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To make matters worse they had stiff, coarse, scrubbing brushes to wield. |
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Then four-inches of gravel, followed by a layer of geotextile material, if desired, and a one-inch coarse sand setting bed screeded with a 2x4 should be laid. |
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You would not expect a smooth surface from coarse grit sandpaper. |
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Because coarse fish are all fairly closely related, its fair to assume that many chemicals cause the stimulation of a number of species, even if it is to differing degrees. |
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The output for these furnaces was pig iron, a coarse and brittle product that could be used only for casting crude heavy items such as kettles, stove plates, and firebacks. |
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He could hear the low hum of voices and the occasional coarse laugh. |
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He was a rather tall boy with a head full of coarse black hair. |
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In late spring, when the herring disappear from the shallows, and head off to sea, the pike have to satisfy their appetites with the vast shoals of the resident coarse fish. |
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On a weight basis, a billion ultra-fine particles are about equivalent to one coarse particle 10 micrometres in diameter, but have one thousand times the surface area. |
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Sheeted traces with curved spreite have been described as Heimdallia from mid-Palaeozoic coarse sandstone units in the Beacon Supergroup and the Tumblagooda Sandstone. |
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He had long coarse grey hair that was plaited in a braid down his back. |
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His voice was coarse and scratchy, filled with malice and hunger. |
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The feel of the dark silk against his skin was welcome after the years of coarse sackcloth, and having the weight of the chains taken away lifted his spirits. |
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The majority of English coarse fishermen naturally tend to think of French fishing in terms of carp alone but this couldn't be further from the truth. |
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For plants that need free drainage I add very coarse sand or fine gravel. |
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In the mouth the wine has a soft, slightly coarse mousse, with a papery quality, and flavors of quince paste, baked apples, and a yeastiness that surfaces in the finish. |
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Bring up the heat to medium-high, then toss in the potato bits and the rosemary, and add a couple pinches of coarse salt and five or six twists from the pepper mill. |
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The coarse lake at Tewitfield continues to produce plenty of small carp, tench, roach, rudd and skimmers using maggot and casters fished on the drop. |
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I chatted with Mai through the door as my jeans joined the shirt and I gave myself a cursory rub-down with a washcloth almost coarse enough to hurt. |
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Using your hands, rub the butter into the flour mixture, until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs and butter pieces are between the size of a pea and a dime. |
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This large, coarse, branched plant can grow up to nine feet. |
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These traits of spoken language belong to a vulgar household, filled with the clamour of a large family fond of coarse jokes and prone to sentimental effusions. |
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We went down the footpath to her house between a small army of native boys who were cutting the coarse grass with scythes, known in West Africa as pangas. |
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The presence of coarse and fine sand in greater or less amounts will also be thus readily ascertained, allowing estimates of the percolative properties. |
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This wider mix of particle sizes is important because how much sediment a river carries also depends on the relative mix of coarse and fine grains. |
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The woman's face seemed to recede in an illuminated cobweb of coarse hair that, most likely, has been free of interference from hairstylists for years. |
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Sprinkle the coarse salt over a sheet pan and arrange the clams on top. |
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Unless it's required to pulverize all the coarse material, normally only a portion is taken to the next stage and pulped using a special tungsten carbide mill. |
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And, for the record, I've found my perfect sandwich loaf a mixture of Carrs strong white, coarse brown and wholemeal with caraway, pumpkin, sesame, sunflower and linseeds. |
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We use linishing pads to flatten the welds, then a conditioning pad, then a coarse scotchbrite wheel mouted in a handheld polisher to regrain and clean the fillets. |
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Beneath these lies a floor of coarse granite sand and broken shell. |
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The dizzying altitude, schizophrenic temperatures, lack of rainfall, and coarse terrain make it one of the most grim of all the places that humans call home. |
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Cattle are everywhere, roaming freely in a coarse variety of pampas grass. |
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The poor were bearing the brunt of this policy as production of coarse and cheaper grains like ragi and corn had shrunk, making them dependent on the more expensive rice. |
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If exposure is continued and repeated, diffuse interstitial fibrosis will result with medium to coarse reticulation, volume loss, and honeycomb pattern. |
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He thought of their merry singing, their coarse and wheezy whistle. |
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Patient and determined night fishing at Bigland Hall coarse fishery brought due reward for a skilled local angler who is pictured with his best catch, a 25 lb 2oz mirror carp. |
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We see an angler fish within a minute of reaching the bottom, many tompots under the plating, and wrasse and dragonets in the coarse sand to the landward side of the wreck. |
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Heavy duty brooms densely filled with medium coarse African bass fibre are used in mills on brick and concrete surfaces under wet or dry conditions. |
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Fluidization experiments show that as flow velocities increase small grains can be carried through fluidizing beds containing a mixture of coarse and fine grains. |
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In short, the skin can take on a coarse and leather-like appearance. |
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Take the glasspaper and roll it around the screwdriver coarse side in. |
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I sighed, moved to stroke the slightly coarse fur on her shoulder. |
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If your rivers are not fishable then why not turn your attention to fly fishing for some of the coarse fish species, such as pike, carp, perch, chub and barbel. |
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I should stress at this point that my own interest is in coarse fishing on lakes and rivers and all that I write here is done so with this in mind. |
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Even if you are a coarse angler these fish are a sight not to be missed. |
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The medium coarse grating surface is terrific for zesting citrus fruit, grating nutmeg or ginger, and shredding hard cheeses like parmesan or pecorino romano. |
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Separations along the top and bottom of coarse aggregate particles were a result of their slight movement in semi-rigid paste during application of the dry shake. |
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Everyone always wants to touch the cloth because it looks so rough and coarse, but I can assure you, there is nothing so comfortable for the climate! |
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Natural African bass fibre is coarse, stiff and provides good flexibility for use in upright floor sweeps and as a blend with other fibres for other applications. |
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From the servants I had heard that she was very coarse looking and rude. |
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Thorax auscultation revealed bilateral scattered crackles, coarse rhonchi, friction rub on the right lower lung fields and normal heart sounds. |
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A Cypry QT Excel Dome one-man bivvy with a Cypry deluxe bedchair is the pounds 155 prize package for the coarse fishing winner. |
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Gasping, Nancy clasped her bedjacket to her ample bosom as, amid coarse laughter, her husband disappeared into the breaking dawn. |
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The reflectance spectra of the lumpy or cloddy soil and of coarse sandy soil are shown in Fig. |
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Its flower consists of a coarse calyx with styloid and perennial structures. |
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Distinction between coarse and fine grained algorithms is in ratio of subpopulation count versus subpopulation size. |
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Use a coarse sugar, like turbinado, mixed with olive oil as a DIY softener. |
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Unfortunately, anchusas have the defect of being coarse in appearance, with hairy leaves and stems which are neither elegant nor graceful. |
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As Lehman, Breuler is sluggish, coarse, and lumpy, huffing and puffing his way arthritically about the stage like some 1930s crime-movie heavy. |
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Clusters of strong flowers rose everywhere above the coarse tussocks of bent. |
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Use the 'pulse' button to turn these ingredients into a coarse sort of breadcrumby, dry mixture. |
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Johnny kenned at once the coarse brute was drunk same as father was Friday nights when he got his money from the Broo. |
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There came the farmer on his plough-horse, in his coarse striped breeches, blue homespun coatee, and broadbrimmed hat. |
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Chickens cannot digest coarse or dry grass, and it is likely to cause them to become cropbound. |
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Once relegated to guybrows as men tend to have coarse hair, women are now choosing to wax their eyebrows than thread them more than ever. |
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Jeremy Cox, barelegged, hyperathletic and coarse, gets his kicks by kicking into 180-degree splits. |
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The most widely practised form of angling in England and Wales is for coarse fish while in Scotland angling is usually for salmon and trout. |
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The western hills are home to juniper, tamarisk, coarse grasses, and scrub plants. |
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Sea water was pumped into shallow ponds, producing coarse salt when the water evaporated. |
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First a small layer of coarse concrete, the rudus, then a little layer of fine concrete, the nucleus, went onto the pavement or statumen. |
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After three or four mincings with a coarse blade the product was passed two or three times through a fine blade. |
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He had a coarse wit, which he was too free of for a Man in his Station, as it is always inconsistent with dignity. |
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This comprises an outer ring of coarse granite and an inner core of finer grained granite, which was intruded later. |
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The coarse sediments, gravel, and sand, generated and moved by rivers are extensively used in construction. |
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When the magma solidifies within the earth's crust, it cools slowly forming coarse textured rocks, such as granite, gabbro, or diorite. |
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The winter coat consists of long, coarse bristles underlaid with short brown downy fur. |
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A type of extensive parabolic dune that lacks discernible slipfaces and has mostly coarse grained sand is known as a zibar. |
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Boulder sized clasts are found in some sedimentary rocks, such as coarse conglomerate and boulder clay. |
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Here it was sucked from tiny one-shot bottles wrapped in coarse paper, taken between drafts of good East German beer. |
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This sedimentation often includes very coarse debris such as huge blocks from rock falls, as well as fans of sediment from the basin wall. |
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Starting with trade in coarse woollen fabrics, the Hanseatic League had the effect of bringing both commerce and industry to northern Germany. |
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Our native water arum has long-stalked, thick, coarse leaves that are ovalish and about three inches long. |
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The fur is coarse and usually brown or dark grey, while the underparts are lighter grey or brown. |
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In winter, the fur on the back and flanks is long and coarse, consisting of bristly guard hairs with a sparse, soft undercoat. |
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The tail has long and coarse hairs, and is generally the same colour as the back. |
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