Even if he was as cold as ice, she believed that she could melt him with her warmth. |
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Mama can be as cold as ice when she wants to be, and this is obviously one of those times. |
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In a low pressure system the warm front is the first to pass over. This occurs when warm air meets cold air and the warm air rises above it. |
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There were fountains spouting cold water enough to make one's teeth chatter. |
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He gathered her against him, felt that she was as cold as ice as well, and held on to her tightly. |
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On the other hand, if a cold air mass is retreating and warm air is advancing, a warm front exists. |
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The book reveals the cold calculations that were behind the government's policies. |
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That was it. No phone call. No good-bye. Nothing. She was as cold as ice! |
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She was unfriendly and as cold as ice when I tried to talk to her earlier. |
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He was as cold as ice as he lay in his bed during his final moments. |
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The clear green water looks cold enough in a hot August noon to make one's teeth chatter, so that it requires some resolution to venture upon a bath. |
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The convection between the relatively warm water and cold air in the winter plays an important role in the Arctic climate. |
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In the deeper parts of the fjord the cold water remaining from winter is still and separated from the atmosphere by the brackish top layer. |
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Snow and glacier melt occur only in areas cold enough for these to form permanently. |
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Apart from sandy and stony reefs, extensive cold water coral reefs, mostly of Lophelia, are growing in Skagerrak. |
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The cold water flows near the surface and at first doesn't mix with the warmer, green waters of Upper Lake. |
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Due to the cold climate and proximity to major forests bordering the city, skiing is a popular recreational activity in Oslo. |
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Winds near the glacial margins were strong and persistent because of the abundance of dense, cold air coming off the glacier fields. |
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Winter temperatures are brought near freezing from the cold North Sea flows. |
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With the cold water concentrated around Antarctica, sea surface temperatures and, consequently, continental temperatures would have dropped. |
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At that time a cold reversal caused a replacement of much of the arboreal vegetation with Magellanic moorland and Alpine species. |
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In the deep sea, food chains centered on hydrothermal vents and cold seeps exist in the absence of sunlight. |
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Pandalus borealis is a species of caridean shrimp found in cold parts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. |
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The southernmost auks, in California and Mexico, can survive there because of cold upwellings. |
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Because skin blood vessels constrict in cold water, the walrus can appear almost white when swimming. |
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There were low groans of pain as the field plunged into the perishingly cold water. |
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Nevertheless, as far as Imperial Russian plans of settlement were concerned, cold was never viewed as an impediment. |
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Evidence of this cold period is also found in dendrochronology and ice cores. |
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It appears that in cold winters wood work stopped and partly completed timber work was buried in mud to prevent it drying out. |
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The climate of Siberia varies dramatically, but all of it basically has short summers and long and extremely cold winters. |
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A cold water immersion experiments at Dachau concentration camp were performed by Sigmund Rascher. |
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The oil was very viscous in cold weather and needed to be warmed up before it could be pumped onto the tugs. |
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Considering its position, the climate is quite cold in relation to south and east coast locations in England year round. |
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As such, summers are almost subtropical in nature, but winters are cold enough to ensure plant hardiness is very low. |
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The northernmost zone, Hokkaido, has a humid continental climate with long, cold winters and very warm to cool summers. |
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Strabo, based on theory alone, states that Ierne is so cold that any lands north of it must be uninhabited. |
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Sedimentary dykes can also be formed in a cold climate where the soil is permanently frozen during a large part of the year. |
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Atypical colourations in red foxes usually represent stages toward full melanism, and mostly occur in cold regions. |
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Males and females may share the same nest for short times during the breeding season, and during cold winter spells. |
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Bats are present throughout most of the world, with the exception of extremely cold regions. |
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In cold climates, the gray wolf can reduce the flow of blood near its skin to conserve body heat. |
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Most kingfishers die of cold or lack of food, and a severe winter can kill a high percentage of the birds. |
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As newly hatched house sparrows do not have sufficient insulation, they are brooded for a few days, or longer in cold conditions. |
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The oxygen uptake through the skin suffices to sustain the needs of the cold and motionless frogs during hibernation. |
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Saint Mungo's Well was a cold water spring and bath at Copgrove, near Ripon, North Yorkshire, formerly believed effective for treating rickets. |
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In the theory of the four bodily humors, water was associated with phlegm, as being cold and moist. |
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During the winter, cold Alaskan winds blow over the Chukchi Sea, freezing the surface water and pushing this newly formed ice out to the Pacific. |
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Weather fronts rarely penetrate far into the continent, leaving the centre cold and dry. |
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This means that it is a very cold continent where water is mostly in the form of ice. |
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East Antarctica is a cold region with a ground base above sea level and occupies most of the continent. |
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The cold East Greenland Current passes through the strait and carries icebergs south into the North Atlantic. |
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The relative strength of these systems also limits the amount of cold air arriving from northern regions during winter. |
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Then, the Baffin Island Current and Labrador Current transport cold and less saline water southward along the Canadian coast. |
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Several expeditions set out to find the way, generally with whaling ships, already commonly used in the cold northern latitudes. |
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These form where fluids released from the downgoing plate percolate upwards and interact with cold mantle lithosphere of the forearc. |
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Chemosynthetic communities thrive where cold fluids seep out of the forearc. |
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Another unusual feature found in the abyssal and hadal zones is the cold seep, sometimes called a cold vent. |
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The majority of the country has a cold or severely cold winter climate, but southerly areas are warm in summer. |
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The probability of cold winters with much snow in Central Europe rises when the Arctic is covered by less sea ice in summer. |
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This cold water moves along the ocean floor towards the equator, while warmer water on the ocean surface moves in the direction of the poles. |
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This regime is known as an arid subtropical climate, which is generally located in areas adjacent to powerful cold ocean currents. |
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Mild climate variants are generally located in areas adjacent to powerful cold ocean currents. |
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This December was not as cold as the past few Decembers have been. |
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Increasing salinity lowers the freezing point of seawater, so cold liquid brine is formed in inclusions within a honeycomb of ice. |
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Fog is formed when warm moist air moves over a cold surface. |
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Warm core rings are known to have lower primary productivity than surrounding cold waters. |
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It is cold and relatively fresh, flowing below 3500 m in the DWBC and spreading inward the deep Atlantic basins. |
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A unique feature of Antarctic bottom water is the cold surface wind blowing off the Antarctic continent. |
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The cold Labrador Current mixes with the warm waters of the Gulf Stream here. |
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In addition to the effects on nutrients, the mixing of the cold and warm currents often causes fog in the area. |
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She fell into the cold water and nearly died from hypothermia. |
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In late spring and summer, large amounts of cold freshwater accumulate from melting ice and are mixed downward during convection. |
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Weak convective periods are associated with more heat in the water column and deep convective periods are characterized by cold water. |
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The warm layer is called the epilimnion and the cold layer is called the hypolimnion. |
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Subarctic climates are cold with continuous permafrost and little precipitation. |
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The relatively warm, moist air meets cold air coming southward from Canada. |
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Third, air outflows and loses heat via infrared radiation to space at the temperature of the cold tropopause. |
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We stay active during the cold winter months by skiing and ice skating. |
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Many of these relate to the superior adaption to cold environments possessed by the Neanderthal populations. |
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It is the ocean region where the warm Indian Ocean and the cold Atlantic Ocean meet. |
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It is cold underground so there is little evaporation but some does take place leaving a trace of limestone on the roof. |
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It was characterized by a cold and dry climate, the existence of humans in association with the reindeer, and the extinction of the mammoth. |
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Extremely cold temperatures, especially when prolonged, can freeze the internal sap of trees, killing them. |
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Budyko published his work in a Russian journal and during the cold war in 1967, most North American scholars ignored Budyko's paper. |
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The Clovis culture was replaced by several more localized regional cultures from the time of the Younger Dryas cold climate period onward. |
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It has also been hypothesized that the Clovis culture saw its decline in the wake of the Younger Dryas cold phase. |
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In the high villages people live in homes built according to medieval designs that withstand cold winters. |
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Many springs and summers were cold and wet but with great variability between years and groups of years. |
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Scientific works point out cold spells and climate changes in areas of the Southern Hemisphere and their correlation to the Little Ice Age. |
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A mother abandoned an infant in hopes that someone less desperate might find and adopt the child before the cold or animals killed it. |
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The volume of the balloon in the video shrinks when the trapped gas particles slow down with the addition of extremely cold nitrogen. |
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The compressibility factor image illustrates how Z varies over a range of very cold temperatures. |
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Ocean currents are rivers of relatively warm or cold water within the ocean. |
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Deep waters sink into the deep ocean basins at high latitudes where the temperatures are cold enough to cause the density to increase. |
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This is due primarily to upwelling and strong cold coastal currents that reduce water temperatures in these areas. |
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The benthic species are attracted to structural oases, such as hydrothermal vents, cold seeps, and shipwrecks. |
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Fortunately, once in the beergarden with the good Doctor and a cold and frothy schooner of the amber nectar, everything fell into place. |
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The cold weather meant a slower growing rate for many crops. |
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Elevations around the world that have cold climates similar to those of the polar regions have been called Alpine. |
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The axion is a candidate particle for the cold dark matter that constitutes a large fraction of the mass of the Universe. |
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What could be more whimsical than Baked Alaska, the flamboyant assemblage of hot meringue and cold ice cream? |
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When Nancy entered, she was clutching a bedhanging, her cold toes curled on the threadbare India rug by her bed. |
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Why should anyone imagine that bewigged judges in The Hague will succeed where cold steel has failed? |
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The bricks absorb most of the heat from the outgoing waste gases and return it later to the incoming cold gases for combustion. |
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I tell you he's the stuff that will take 'em over the top and make the boches feel cold in the pit of their fat tumtums when they see him coming. |
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Patients can be lethargic, and might have sunken eyes, dry mouth, cold clammy skin, or wrinkled hands and feet. |
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Bull did not hesitate to obey, for the broad, cold blade of a bowie rested lightly against the back of his neck. |
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This may result in sunken eyes, cold skin, decreased skin elasticity, and wrinkling of the hands and feet. |
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This morning was a brisk fall day. It wasn't cold enough for frost, but you wanted to keep moving. |
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Miami's latest cold front slipped on out over the ocean early yesterday, leaving behind more than a slight chill, brisky winds and a few showers. |
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Who, requiring a remedy for his gout, received no other counsel than to refrain cold drink. |
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A cardboard cakebox on the cold counter would be the swap bag and when next seen it would have a cake in it. |
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Let them be gutted, washed, and soaked, in cold water for an hour, then put them into the boiler in cold water. |
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Sarima drew her robes about her, and traced a pattern in the cold dust on a nearby stack of codexes. |
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I had always supposed that playboys didn't give a hoot for anything except blondes and cold bottles. |
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What a deal of cold business doth a man misspend the better part of life in! |
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Outside, frost glimmered. November, cold as a witch's kiss. Cold as his heart. |
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Descend some twenty feet through the pleasant warmth of the ocean's upper layer and you are in water as cold as a witch's kiss. |
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I got a cold call in the middle of dinner from someone trying to sell encyclopedias. |
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But statistics are cold comfort when the latest explosion has leveled a nearby building. |
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This creates a horizontal plane of weakness called a cold joint between the two batches. |
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Water has a higher heat capacity than acid, and a vessel of cold water will absorb heat as acid is added. |
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The best way to find out how the series you're writing for uses teasers or cold opens is to get your hands on a script. |
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He found that the current model being installed in London houses had a tendency to freeze in cold weather. |
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Half a thousand colonists had left Sol system in cold sleep, with twenty crew. |
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Yet the caracole had struggled against cold steel throughout the 16th century and had come off the victor. |
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Attempts to use anthracite as a fuel had ended in failure, as the coal resisted ignition under cold blast conditions. |
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These types of mills are commonly used to hot roll wide plates, most cold rolling applications, and to roll foils. |
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There are perhaps more variations of the dao than there are of any other cold weapon. |
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Both bills provide for a new cold war hostile fire pay, similar to wartime combat pay. |
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Long an outsider in Western politics, Portugal came in from the cold after the 1974 Carnation Revolution. |
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It was watching her with cold animal curiosity, something demonish and conscienceless. |
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When cold they are used for russoles, minced cutlets, croquettes, cottage pies, and souffles. |
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The output from a strip mill is coiled and, subsequently, used as the feed for a cold rolling mill or used directly by fabricators. |
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In each hand he holds a parcel, one containing a lukewarm pig's crubeen, the other a cold sheep's trotter, sprinkled with wholepepper. |
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Cold rolled steel is then annealed to induce ductility in the cold rolled steel which is simply known as a Cold Rolled and Close Annealed. |
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In cold weather rosaceous cheeks often tend to become mauvish and take on a cyanotic tinge. |
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As a dirtsider, the idea of dying in the cold of space terrified him, though he'd never admit it to his space-loving mate. |
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If the temperature of the metal is below its recrystallization temperature, the process is known as cold rolling. |
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In the bathroom they immersed him in a tub of warm water, and then pulled him out and put him under a cold douche. |
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In winter a douse in cold water helps the looks and adds to the style of the carcass, but they should be thoroughly dried before packing. |
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It looked a dreich, cold place as you rode by at night, near as lonesome as the old Mill was, and not near as handy. |
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Their palette was covered with heavily effected guitars, synthetic loops and samples, electronic drums, and cold industrial sound effects. |
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This pumping of airstream in with bellows is known as cold blast, and it increases the fuel efficiency of the bloomery and improves yield. |
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In Watt's design, the cold water was injected only into the condensation chamber. |
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The condenser remained cold and below atmospheric pressure at all times, while the cylinder remained hot at all times. |
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We shivered miserably throughout the night. Now and again fitfully slept, but the pain of the cold always aroused me. |
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At the top of the stroke the steam valve was closed, and cold water was briefly injected into the cylinder as a means of cooling the steam. |
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Its hilltop location means less pooling of cold air on calm clear nights, and lower maxima during summer. |
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Meanwhile, rinse the freekeh very well under cold water, tip it into a pan and cover with lots of salted water. |
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I rush inside as quickly as I can, not waiting for Eric as he trails behind me. I am a freeze baby, cold and I do not blend well at all. |
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This light, friable type of material offered excellent insulation against both desert heat and also the cold of darkness during the winter. |
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Meteoritic iron is comparably soft and ductile and easily forged by cold working but may get brittle when heated because of the nickel content. |
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Everyone is full of the miracles done by cold baths on decayed and weak constitutions. |
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Upstate New York experiences warm summers, marred by only occasional, brief intervals of sultry conditions, with long and cold winters. |
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He embraced the cold statue and by his touch, it grew into youth, health and beauty. |
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He hadn't the faintest idea what to with a cold in the head, he just took quinine and continued to blow his nose. |
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These are believed to live in an area where hydrocarbons are released from the sea bed, known as a cold seep. |
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I seem to remember that he never stopped talking, and I had given him the cold fish eye. |
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This is in accord with facts, for I can by cold put to sleep special parts of the nervous mass without putting other parts to sleep. |
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Tropical shipworms were eliminated in the cold Atlantic waters, and at each unloading, a profit was made. |
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Flat shoes. As she pushed off her left heel and pressed the sole of her foot to the cold floor she looked forward to them. |
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Ocean currents influence climate by transporting warm and cold waters to other regions. |
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This results when cold polar maritime air that has travelled over a large expanse of warmer ocean is forced to rise over high country. |
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Even cold weather makes potatoes more susceptible to bruising and possibly later rotting, which can quickly ruin a large stored crop. |
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During the winter that followed, families starved to death and thousands of peasants died of cold and hunger. |
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These locations are selected for their cold hard winters that kill pests and long sunshine hours in the summer for optimum growth. |
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Today, tobacco is sown in cold frames or hotbeds, as their germination is activated by light. |
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Is it a hot bench or a cold bench? Do the particular judges on the panel ask a lot of questions? |
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The instant his feet touched the cold metal floor of the storage room he felt a hot-flash pass through his body. |
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The western part appears to have been very active, with wet basal conditions, while the eastern part was cold based. |
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Its geographical range expanded and contracted with the alternating cold and warm cycles, forcing populations to migrate as glaciers receded. |
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They bathed shivering in the cold waves, green hyaline swells in which they stood to the hips savage, intimate, comradely. |
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The region is blanketed by dry and cold Arctic air masses for most of the year. |
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Because of its lowland location York is prone to frosts, fog, and cold winds during winter, spring and very early summer. |
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The ocean beneath the arctic ice cap hosts many unique organisms adapted to the cold and shortage of light. |
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Woke up feeling illish and to my despair found it was pouring with black, cold rain. It all looked depressing and dingy. |
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From this phlegm proceed white cold tumours, viscidity, and consequently immeability of the juices. |
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A cold and impersonal doctor, unless he's just a mechanical implanter, can't work successfully with these patients. |
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His cold experience tempers all his heat, And inbred worth doth boasting valour slight. |
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The lowlands around Oslo have the warmest and sunniest summers, but also cold weather and snow in wintertime. |
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North of the Kandalaksha Gulf, in Murmansk Oblast, the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet was mostly cold based while south of the gulf it was warm based. |
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We find a renitency in ourselves to ascribe life and irritability to the cold and motionless fibres of plants. |
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The pieces of stagnant water may be divided into jeels which contain water throughout the year, and chaongre which dry up in the cold season. |
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During this period, Nelson was reported as being cold and distant to his wife and his attention to Emma became the subject of gossip. |
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The temperature entering the nozzle may be as low as sea level ambient for a fan nozzle in the cold air at cruise altitudes. |
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Our young friends in the KOR invited us for a Christmas Eve feast in a cold but cheery apartment. |
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Reed Boardall have the UK's largest cold storage site on the west side of the A1 at Boroughbridge. |
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Northerly winds can also be cold but are not usually as cold as easterly winds. |
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Most hairless animals cannot go in the sun for long periods of time, or stay in the cold for too long. |
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They feature warm to hot summers and cold winters, with a large interseasonal temperature variation. |
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In South America, cold steppe can be found in Patagonia and much of the high elevation regions east of the southern Andes. |
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Most maternity dens are in snowdrifts, but may also be made underground in permafrost if it is not sufficiently cold yet for snow. |
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Protected from the cool onshore coastal breezes east of the region, Cambridgeshire is warm in summer and cold and frosty in winter. |
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It's cold now but it will warm up this afternoon. Make sure you wear layers. |
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Martin presented the list to the 30-member House Republican Policy Committee, laid the facts on the line in cold political terms. |
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Summers are cool while winters can be cold with below freezing temperatures at night. |
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The best lexicographer may well be content if his productions are received by the world with cold esteem. |
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Occasionally, the northern Gulf of California will go through significantly cold winters. |
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Hardy was extremely shy as a child, and was socially awkward, cold and eccentric throughout his life. |
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That Maine water was so cold that he came to like sixty sore as a pup and wanting to fight Joe. |
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The process of cooling and creating the vacuum was fairly slow, so Savery later added an external cold water spray to quickly cool the steam. |
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Winters are cold and snowy throughout the state, and are especially severe in the northern parts of Maine. |
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This may increase cria survival by reducing fatalities due to hypothermia during cold Andean nights. |
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This energy was wasted because later in the cycle cold water was injected into the cylinder to condense the steam to reduce its pressure. |
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However, it remained in use into the 1970s where a satisfactory cold chain was available. |
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The most common cold chocolate beverage is pozol, served fresh or fermented. |
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Where CHP is not used, steam turbines in stationary power plants use surface condensers as a cold sink. |
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The Quasiturbine is a uniflow rotary steam engine where steam intakes in hot areas, while exhausting in cold areas. |
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In colder climates where heating and lighting is required during the cold and dark winter months, the heat byproduct has at least some value. |
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Place a cupful of the soaked beans in a liquidizer, add a cupful of cold water and blend. |
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Chocolate is still found in preparations which have not changed since pre Hispanic times mostly as hot and cold beverages. |
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It was a label, at the dawn of the cold war, meant to suggest that anybody advocating universal access to health care must be a communist. |
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However, on rare occasions, a combination of cold moisture and freezing temperatures can result in snowfall in the farthest northern regions. |
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These forests are unique in the world for having developed in a climate with such cold summers. |
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Winters are very cold in the west, and it snows in the mountain ranges, while in the western regions, windy days are more common. |
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Venezuela brought up again the settled claim, during the 1960s cold war period, and during Guyana's Independence period. |
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Ecod, I thank your worship, I'll make a shift to stay my stomach with a slice of cold beef in the pantry. |
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The silk fabric is soaked in extremely cold water and bleached before dyeing to remove the natural yellow coloring of Thai silk yarn. |
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The labrum held cold water, for pouring upon the bather's head before he left the room. |
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In the northern places like Britain, where it got cold in the winter, they would make wood or stone barracks. |
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Thatch is also a natural insulator, and air pockets within straw thatch insulate a building in both warm and cold weather. |
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This was because to be faithful to medieval design would have left the houses cold and dark by contemporary standards. |
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A zit, after all, isn'ta cold sore on your lip, making you look like a diseased manslut. |
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Lamb tongue is popular in Middle Eastern cuisine both as a cold cut and in preparations like stews. |
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Fresh bacon may then be dried for weeks or months in cold air, or it may be boiled or smoked. |
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On the other hand, men born in cold countries are, indeed, ready to meet the shock of arms with great courage and without timidity. |
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In addition to the standard Latin American sausages, dried pork sausages are served cold as a snack, often to accompany beer drinking. |
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It is usually made in a large diameter, and often thinly sliced and eaten cold in sandwiches. |
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Mettwurst is usually sliced, and eaten cold on sandwiches or alone as a snack. |
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They may be eaten hot or cold straight from the can as they are fully cooked. |
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Isolated fjords in this harsh land offered sufficient grazing to support cattle and sheep, though the climate was too cold for cereal crops. |
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In the valleys it is relatively mild, while it can be severely cold above 1,500 metres, with copious snowfalls. |
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He was buried that same day, in Aachen Cathedral, although the cold weather and the nature of his illness made such a hurried burial unnecessary. |
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Shortly afterwards Johnson caught a cold that developed into bronchitis and lasted for several months. |
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He made a partial recovery, but in early April he caught a violent cold which therapeutic bleeding, insisted on by his doctors, aggravated. |
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Ada, in turn, is cold to him and is determined to be reunited with her piano. |
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The medtech intercepted Rett's hand before it made contact with her face and shoved something cold and damp into it. |
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The central plateau is characterized by a continental climate, with hot summers and cold snowy winters. |
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Olivier was devoted to his mother, but not to his father, whom he found a cold and remote parent. |
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He also insisted that crew members throw cold water at him and verbally abuse him. |
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Also, openings such as doors and windows were secured closed as to protect patrons against cold drafts. |
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Its important to note though that Austria in general does not get very cold in winter but rather cool in summer at higher altitudes. |
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The process by which plants become acclimated to cold temperatures is called hardening. |
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Working in damp and cold conditions often is inevitable, although ships try to avoid severe storms while at sea. |
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The Inland Northwest has a continental climate of warm to hot summers and cold to bitter cold winters. |
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Danish dishes are highly seasonal, stemming from the country's agricultural past, its geography, and its climate of long, cold winters. |
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Climatic forcing moved cold air into the northern portion of the American interior, much as it did the Northeast. |
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An abrupt cold spell in Northern Europe known as the Younger Dryas, which occurred between 10,900 BC and 9700 BC, may have depopulated Ireland. |
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Both cold periods are comparable in duration and intensity with the Older Dyras and began and ended quite abruptly. |
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The climate is affected by cold fronts which come from Scandinavia and Siberia. |
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The presence of a distinct cold period at the end of the Late Glacial interval has been known for a long time. |
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In some regions, especially in northern Eurasia, there is evidence for a cold period known as the Older Dryas interrupting the interstadial. |
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His cold sesame chicken seasoned with chili is finely shredded and served in carefully wrought clusters around a salad of mizuna. |
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The coldest month on record since the data series began is December 2010, during a severe cold wave affecting the British Isles. |
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In cold winters there is good ice climbing on the hills of Craignaw, Merrick and Cairnsmore of Fleet. |
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However, it is a myth that the nights are cold after extremely hot days in the Sahara. |
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The seas surrounding South Georgia are cold throughout the year due to the proximity of the Antarctic Current. |
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Ice mantles that formed on top of dust grains are photoprocessed by the secondary ultraviolet field in cold and dense molecular clouds. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to keep warm in the cold water, and, other than the walrus, all species are covered in fur. |
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The troops suffered greatly from cold and sickness, the shortage of fuel led them to start dismantling their defensive Gabions and Fascines. |
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Over 700 men were rescued from the open ocean despite cold seas and stormy weather. |
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And so we went through the cold beef and chocolate mousse with a good Morgon and curacao. |
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Even those that live in warm or tropical climates live in areas that become cold and nutrient rich due to current patterns. |
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Introducing cold water into a boiler reduces power, and from the 1920s a variety of heaters were incorporated. |
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The resistance of a carbon filament is higher when it is cold than when it is operating. |
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Baird suffered from cold feet, and after a number of trials, he found that an extra layer of cotton inside the sock provided warmth. |
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Sold under the Walker's name and under UK retailers own brands such as Tesco, over three million hot and cold pies are made each week. |
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The plateaus in Santa Cruz province and parts of Chubut usually have snow cover through the winter, and often experience very cold temperatures. |
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Detection is, or ought to be, an exact science and should be treated in the same cold and unemotional manner. |
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He watched the performance from a balcony with cold beer and cigarettes, heckling Noel's singing between songs. |
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As we came from the warmth of the hall into the cold room we started to shiver and just couldn't get warm, so we didn't get much sleep. |
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The image of boats in peril contrasts the cold light of the moon with the firelight glow of the fishermen's lantern. |
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This can occur with other alkali metals, but caesium is so potent that this explosive reaction can be triggered even by cold water. |
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Many cast members came down with colds, flu, or kidney infections after spending hours in cold water, including Winslet. |
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She climbed the Red Hill one cold day and dug oose root with which to bring a new luster to her long black hair. |
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Yet was there nothing Narcissine in her spirit. Her love for her own image was not cold aestheticism. |
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Drenched were the cold fuchsias, round pearls of dew lay on the flat nasturtium leaves. |
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The frequent winds from the northwest are cold in winter and hot in summer. |
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The northern mountainous regions have cold winters with occasional heavy snows, sometimes causing extensive flooding. |
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Hot works are those where there is a potential of generating fire or extreme heat, cold ones are all the others. |
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Some poor people even forced themselves to live in cold dark rooms in order to avoid paying these taxes. |
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The planet Mars is too cold and has too little atmospheric pressure to permit the pooling of liquid water. |
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The island's interior, the Highlands of Iceland, is a cold and uninhabitable combination of sand, mountains, and lava fields. |
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During that time, cold winters, ash fall from volcanic eruptions, and bubonic plagues adversely affected the population several times. |
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The Sudestada usually moderates cold temperatures but brings very heavy rains, rough seas and coastal flooding. |
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In 2013 the event was held in March, when unusually cold weather meant that relatively few of the plants were in flower. |
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The main ceremony involved pouring hot wax from a candle through the hole in a key into cold water. |
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But after two or three hours and nil results, you have to accept that the trail is cold and you can't justify that level of manpower. |
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It covers most of the latest period of repeated glaciation, up to and including the Younger Dryas cold spell. |
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It has hot and cold running water, with showers and toilets, in an adjacent building. |
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The Cairngorms represents an unusually cold area of mountains in a maritime climate at 57 degrees north. |
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North Atlantic Deep Water forms when the relatively warm and salty North Atlantic Ocean cools as cold winds from northern Canada sweep over it. |
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Northern gannet colonies can be found in the far north in regions that are very cold and stormy. |
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They have a layer of fat, or blubber, under the skin to maintain body heat in cold water. |
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They have feathered legs, especially in the cold season, for protection against cold. |
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In cold and rainy weather the chicks need to get warmed by the hen every few minutes and all night. |
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Most of Antarctica is too cold and dry to support vegetation, and most of the continent is covered by ice fields. |
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The cold climate of the alpine tundra is caused by the low air temperatures, and is similar to polar climate. |
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New technologies and the end of the cold war led to the base being deemed unnecessary. |
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