Normally elder would come into leaf in late February or March, and into blossom in late April or May. |
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He could not comment on when Mr Smith handed in his resignation or when it will come into effect. |
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It exhibits dated fidelity, there's very little channel separation, no bass activity, and the surrounds rarely come into play. |
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Did he say that he had suddenly come into some funds before October after denuding his fund for paying the creditors, or what? |
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When differing versions of that line come into conflict, the result can be rancour, frustration, and political cynicism. |
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Touches such as real cuff buttonholes or hand-finished lapels now come into play. |
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Without a hostile Iraq towering over it, Jordan's pro-Western Hashemite monarchy would likely come into full bloom. |
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Maybe thin, shaky male voices will come into style, but I was hoping more for a real show-stopper that never came. |
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This line leads to the stern, where the first part of the ship to come into view is the afterdeck. |
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For the closing ceremony, Monroe called upon the elder midwives to come into a healing circle. |
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Set to come into use in September, the jab will protect babies against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, Hib and polio at two months. |
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Paper bags, wallpaper, construction paper, newspapers and magazines all come into play as wonderful woven artworks take form. |
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The alkali boil idea while not exactly a wartime result has come into vastly increased use in these more recent bleachless days. |
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Much more interesting is the fact that Larkin waited so confidently for his methods and preoccupations to come into focus. |
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Greg convinces Seth to come into JT Marlin for an interview, which is conducted by Ben Affleck in a bit of a star turn. |
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We come into the world thirsty for love, and we're going to look all over for it. |
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Now certain companies have come into existence which employee residential wiremen to serve their customers. |
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When health workers come into contact with suspected cases they and the patients will wear surgical masks. |
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The second is satisfied if the occupier knows that the claimant may come into the vicinity of the danger. |
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More calls come into the call center where customer service representatives take product orders. |
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A 13-point code of conduct governing all buskers working in Oxford is expected to come into force next month. |
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The last time I saw him a little gray had come into his sideburns but he still looked handsome in his dark suits and expertly knotted ties. |
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New national air-quality standards which require regional councils to reduce air pollution come into effect today. |
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We come into this world as babes and have to organize the chaos of our sensory input. |
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If 2 or more players play discards to a trick that are the same denomination, suits come into play. |
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By the time the matter came before the Court of Appeal, in December 2000, the Act had come into force. |
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A female may come into her brief period of estrus at any time during the mating season, which runs from late November through mid-January. |
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Here are some great tips that come into play when the rubber meets the road. |
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New regulations that come into force at the beginning of 2004 will bring even tougher standards for drinking water quality. |
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If any intruders were to come into the house at that particular time, I'd have whacked them. |
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Whenever a negative thought concerning your personal powers come into mind, deliberately voice a positive thought to cancel it out. |
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Murray, long a comedic dreadnought, has in recent years come into his prime as a dramatic actor. |
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The right shoulder moves out and over on the downswing, causing the club to come into the ball on an outside-in swing path. |
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We see children come into the shop, asking us to blow their tyres up, and we find brakes that don't work, forks badly bent and wheels buckled. |
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What is so enjoyable about this is seeing him come into his own, and make a vitally valid contribution to music. |
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When the forms of production come into conflict with existing social relations, a revolutionary epoch arises. |
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However, this might not be suitable for the many people who come into town on their electric wheelchairs or with double buggies. |
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If one leaves the town by the South Gate, walks 14 paces due south, then walks due west for 1775 paces, the tree will just come into view. |
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I knew the extra money he made doing odd nixers didn't come into our house. |
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In an information age, where time is of the essence, perhaps Poetry, the very distillation of life itself, has come into its own. |
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One dissatisfied customer leads to many disillusioned persons who will never come into your store. |
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Immediately, Maria snatched her hand back quicker than if it had just come into contact with a briar bush. |
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New legislation which will make it illegal for businesses to discriminate against workers on grounds of age is due to come into force next year. |
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It was as if a new species, a new breed of humans had come into my knowledge. |
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This has seen a large number of electronics and components firms come into the UK from abroad. |
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It's clear that the federal law prohibits anybody from inducing anyone to come into the United States illegally. |
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These include taking care on farms, where children may come into contact with the bug if it is present in animal droppings. |
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Throughout my course of investigation, I have seen this tenet come into play many times. |
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There comes a point in the refurbishment process where the law of diminishing returns come into play. |
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I just thought there would be quite a bit of reporting whether or not that law would come into play here. |
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The concern for our joint responsibility to encourage rehabilitation should come into play in borderline cases. |
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Most notably, at least two helicopters that have rescue hoists, you know, which obviously could come into play. |
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Proximity doesn't come into play in the case of Japan, which produces 5 million of our visitors. |
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At the start of next year, the third phase of tax reform is due to come into effect. |
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Nefarious tactics such as keeping wet landing nets or weigh slings out of sight might come into play. |
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If you own stock in an insurance firm, pray that she doesn't come into contact with unguarded threshing machines. |
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In addition, when you do come into a relatively large sum of money, you have to decide what to do with it. |
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Imagine you've come into a sum of money, such as a bequest or a lottery win. |
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Ever since the inception of this great competition Munster have come into their own. |
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I heard him grab something out and come into the room, carrying an ice water in one hand, a can of lime seltzer in the other. |
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And should he come into the ring in peak condition and mindful of the game-plan of his excellent trainer, a very good contest this may well be. |
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As I come into town, I pass the local mechanic's place, a pathetic excuse for a garage. |
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Much of this activity goes on at the synapse, or the regions where two neurons come into contact. |
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As the showers wet the parched roads and the soil becomes damp, the earth's true colours come into view. |
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When he'd anxiously come into work a few days ago, he'd expected the campus to be swarmed with police. |
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About the same time the papakainga had come into the purview of the Auckland City Council who wanted to compulsorily acquire the settlement. |
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For a hunting rifle, however, the advantages of moly simply don't come into play. |
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Farmworkers who come into contact with insecticides and pesticides are prone to chronic illnesses. |
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House plants come into their own in winter and also bring life to entrance halls and landings, which are often cold, ill-lit and draughty. |
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When you know that you are not a people person, you avoid situations which may cause you to come into contact with way too many people at once. |
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Animals like this only come into the open when the natural food supply is short. |
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It is the medium in which objects and subjects actually come into existence, and is the medium in which their virtuality resides. |
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The classic Kiwi beach holiday would surely come into its own within a matter of days, or, at the outside, a week. |
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The man's grin was sheepish and he rubbed his sore thigh that had painfully come into contact with the table's leg. |
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Religions come into disrepute when manipulated by unscrupulous politicians. |
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He's come into the Scotland team, as an overseas player, and dealt with the pressure very well. |
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Once B cells have come into contact with an antigen they proliferate and differentiate into antibody secreting cells. |
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It is a wonderful sight throughout the summer months as the different species come into flower. |
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I am going to try lifting and transplanting some now, before they come into flower. |
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Tragically, it took the victory of National Socialism for the popular front which he proposed to come into existence. |
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His mother, Helen, says that by doing hippotherapy for the last three years, James has come into his own. |
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They say that Arabs are Semites, and therefore should come into the purview of those scholars who look at anti-Semitism. |
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The new rental policy will not come into effect until the outcome of a court appeal which is expected tomorrow. |
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However, the barriers to entry aren't large, and new companies have come into being to take the slack. |
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If the cracks extend deep enough, the seawater can come into contact with mantle rocks that underlie the crust. |
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The new regulations will come into effect on July 1 from which date a taximeter must be installed in each vehicle. |
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For mine own part, I never come into any room in a taphouse, but I am drawn in. |
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To begin with, when you first come into church, bless yourself with holy water. |
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Unless one believes that there is an absolute obligation to obey every law, moral duty and legal duty will sometimes come into conflict. |
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When two or more larvae recruit to the same substratum, stolons of different colonies may eventually come into contact. |
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Various factors come into play in producing this situation, including the general rightward lurch by the political and media establishment. |
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Peonies, irises, daylilies, and delphiniums peak as phlox come into bud and astilbes begin to light up shady garden spots. |
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The etiology of most anxiety disorders, although not fully understood, has come into sharper focus in the last decade. |
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These muscle groups come into play when you are bending, twisting or straightening up your body. |
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In the first place, a large number of people, machines, and materials must converge and act together for it to come into existence at all. |
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There would have been more pressure on me if I had come into a team that had won every single game on the bounce. |
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He mentioned that he and a number of other Frenchmen had come into Oneida hands during the Seven Years' War. |
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She stroked the surface of the shell, crooning nonsense words to the tiny baby inside, encouraging it to come into the world. |
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In periods of political reaction, innumerable forms of social backwardness, ignorance and stupidity come into their own. |
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Willingham had come into the ring where Sabrina had attached a lunge line to the filly's bridle. |
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Zero carbs, low carbs, carb depletion and carb rotation are all diet strategies that have come into vogue as ways to help rid midsections of fat. |
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How does such a system of brain-washing come into being without a cruel, omnipotent dictator? |
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Wiltshire County Council's Cabinet agreed the increases which will come into effect in April. |
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But her sister, Caroline won't allow the secret to come into the light of day. |
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Well done, you've come into form at the right time ahead of a busy summer schedule. |
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The new school year has begun at Summerhill and hence the new traffic plans have come into force. |
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Mother has a green house out there and there's an automated feeder for the deer who come into town foraging. |
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New Zealand banned smoking in all workplaces last December and a similar ban has just come into force in Italy. |
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For many it was an emotional day as the ban, which many believed would never come into force, finally arrived. |
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If approved, it is hoped it will come into force within the current financial year. |
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This is the third set of powers contained in the Anti-Social Behaviour Act to come into force locally. |
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Mary looked at him then, looked at him for the first time since he'd come into the room, and she felt a brief flash of pity. |
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Each of these two ladies is entitled to come into England without let or hindrance provided that she is truly the wife of her husband. |
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Dobson, very impressive during his last spell with the Wasps in 1998, will also come into the reckoning against the newly-formed Eagles. |
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The town's pay parking system is due to come into operation early next year. |
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Continuing with Millar's book, one of the most striking passages early on is the almost random way he seems to have come into his kingdom. |
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Please note that most of the VAT amendments have come into operation on 1 October. |
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Mansi, Kashmira and Anu come into the dancing space and start jiving to the music. |
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It is unfortunate that most people are not in a position to come into contact, let alone sympathize, with radical musical ideas. |
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Spring is when the apple tree blooms, and beneath it hundreds of white daffodils and tulips come into flower. |
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Drunken louts could have all their booze confiscated under new police powers that have come into force. |
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Re-pot greenhouse ferns and other foliage plants as they begin to come into growth. |
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He had come into the first team and played a few games at just 16 but like a few of the lads he totally lost the place and went off the rails. |
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Young had come into the ring weighing much more than his usual light-welterweight limit of ten stone, as Jones is a full welterweight, and more. |
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He is new to Nova Scotia, he is a retread that has come into provincial politics. |
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They experience pain, transgress borders and limits, and come into existence in situations that are stimulated by pain. |
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These responses can occur when materials containing latex come into contact with the skin, mucous membranes, or internal tissues. |
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This spring the lilies have come into flower at the same time as a nearby royal fern has begun to unroll its crosiers. |
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Sweden's continued exclusion from the eurozone is bound to come into sharp focus. |
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The new routes will come into use in August, with 98 buses arriving over the summer in time for the launch. |
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Some of them may have come into the profession attracted by the glamour of being singers and entertainers. |
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The term diaspora has come into vogue in the last decade because it captures the ambiguities of contemporary social belonging. |
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This equipment will be vital for decontaminating people who have come into contact with toxic or chemical materials. |
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Those changes come into force the day after the date on which the bill receives royal assent. |
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These bills have been presented to the governor-general for royal assent and will come into effect 28 days following his decision. |
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The only alternative left was to leave Fluffy at home and have a pet sitter come into our house. |
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He's crying out for his own chat show, where his facility for quickfire repartee would come into its own. |
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Whether or not such a market can ever come into being sponsored by government is a debatable question. |
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For Geist to come into play this self-development needs to be connected to the national culture of Germany. |
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Since most nations have outlawed the use of fetus material for genetic use, an alternative has come into use, umbilical cords and placentas. |
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Bluegrass, once so studiously ignored by Nashville tastemakers intent on erasing the roots of country music, has come into its own. |
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Beginning with insights packaged as part of women's studies and family history, this subject gradually has come into its own. |
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She'd come into his room and found him making out with one of the cheerleaders at her school. |
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That line had come into your mind for no apparent reason and then you had the answer. |
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A challenger must come into the open and secure swift support across all wings of the party against the incumbent. |
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If these substances come into contact with bird feathers they are impossible for the bird to preen or wash out. |
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Use of power drills or saws should be avoided if they are likely to come into contact with high-infectivity tissue. |
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People need to feel safe in the knowledge that our justice system works well and is fair to all who come into contact with it. |
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It's a mistake for journalists to come into this business because they see pound signs. |
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After they come into the world, they are cleaned right in the room and then put on a special bed. |
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Forty minutes after Mia had come into the world, her identical twin sister Mona was born. |
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Devotion and worship are supposed to be spiritual and other worldly and money should scarcely come into the picture at all. |
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I always come into these things with an open mind, but they need to be justified. |
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This means there would be a shadow cast to the north and the directional orientation of the picture would come into play. |
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In one he mixed oil-and water-based paint to create tiny rivulets where the two come into contact. |
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The fishing behind the boxes has slowed down considerably due to the havoc caused by the seals that come into the Ridge Pool with the high tide. |
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But the value of side spin is only apparent when rail shots come into play. |
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The question is, can the federal courts come into the state of Alabama and threaten fines to release our inalienable rights? |
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The move was to come into effect in tandem with a policy to persuade car owners to shift from low-cost fuel to Pertamax. |
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Their mission is to blow up bridges, block roads and generally harry and destroy any enemy forces with which they come into contact. |
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Knotty or mundane national topics often come into relief through a current reference. |
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Different types of jasmine come into flower and turn your evenings magical. |
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Their reasons for making a request don't even come into it and requests are only refused if they have a clear, negative impact on the business. |
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Ironically, at the very end of this millennium, demotions, warnings, and anathemas have again come into vogue in several regions of our nation. |
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Bravery and heroism come into play when a person potentially puts the safety of others before their own. |
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It will also mean that your home will come into line with the latest building regulations. |
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After a dead body turns up in a camper, the two police forces come into competition for clues, leads, and solutions to the vicious crime. |
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An FA spokesman confirmed yesterday that English football was likely to come into line with the rest of the world next season. |
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Could the Leader of the House give us some indication of when the Responsible Gambling Bill might come into the House? |
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When the three species come into contact, they defend territories from one another and do not interbreed. |
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The other 220 owners have agreed to sell, but the deal may not work if the others don't come into line. |
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This, I notice, has come into leaf which could be an indication that roots have formed. |
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Lilies are better planted in the autumn as they come into leaf very early in the spring. |
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Many said they believe that it's unnecessary to drastically prune trees in the summer just as they come into leaf. |
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But if you prune back hard or after the tree leafs out in spring, it may be slower to come into bloom that year. |
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In my view, however, the committee should only take them into account insofar they come into that category. |
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This is in spite of government pressure for the university to come into line with other universities which charge overseas students higher fees. |
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The house is light and airy with lots of glazing and three balconies on three levels let the garden come into the house. |
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Suddenly and surprisingly, his trademark insincere grin and reflexive eyebrow-raising have come into their own. |
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We're providing very little incentive for students from social and economically disadvantaged backgrounds to come into education. |
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The six-year interim period will come into effect once a comprehensive peace agreement is signed. |
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The Readmission Agreement is the first bilateral agreement of its kind signed by Britain and is due to come into effect this summer. |
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They have tiny hairs which contain toxins and if you come into contact with enough of them you can come out in a nasty rash. |
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They release tiny hairs which can cause a severe rash if they come into contact with a person's skin. |
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Only in service of that primal vision does the manifoldness of the created world come into being. |
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Thousands of tons of food began to come into Poland for distribution by the Polish premier. |
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Only after the ornithologists began banding birds on a large scale did their migration patterns begin to come into focus. |
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In the animal kingdom there are many phyla, and the mammals come into a phylum called the chordates. |
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If you've already had it, your body has produced antibodies that fight the virus if you come into contact with it again. |
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The directional effects here are utilized fully when the songs and dance numbers come into play. |
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Of course, there are other considerations that come into play when choosing between a bagged or bagless system. |
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I've found that tent caterpillars and army webworms come into orchards in spotlike fashion. |
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Some people do happen to have things like penknives in their pocket when they come into court. |
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The biceps come into play quite strongly to supinate your hands, as well as to flex the arms. |
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If you have a deeper television set, the depth of the tabletop may also come into play. |
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A grape vine needs five years to come into commercial production, so leasing is not a practical option. |
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Any towels used to dry the affected eye after washing should not come into contact with the other eye or be used by other people. |
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If the fact that their kitten was scratching and meowing to come into my place is anything to go by, it's not pretty. |
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Most of the young people he'd come into contact with thought any music which wasn't loud and obstreperous was a waste of ears. |
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Once that decision is made, airlines will then have a year to put their houses in order, before the new legal requirements come into force. |
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Your risk of exposure to rabies in the United States is greater when you come into contact with a wild animal. |
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Agents and go-betweens are also marketing testimony from those who have come into contact with the teenagers while in custody. |
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What about the idea, Michael, of psyching your opponent out, does that actually come into any formal analysis of performance? |
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But the court decided yesterday that the rules to tighten controls on the growing market in vitamins and minerals can come into force on August 1 as planned. |
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They have to come into town to do their shopping and that costs money. |
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One by one, other houseboats come into view and join our convoy astern. |
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As described there may also be a trapping zone into which the insects fall and come into contact with a fluid, a powder, a desiccant, a chemical toxicant or a sticky surface. |
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Cost did not come into it, except as a reason to justify inaction. |
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From April a new system of collecting garden waste will come into force. |
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Maintaining good personal relations with everyone is very important as favors, bribes, kickbacks, and connections all come into play when making the final deal. |
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They are in second place, only 11 points adrift of Surrey, but fourth-placed Leicestershire could also come into the reckoning if they defeat Yorkshire. |
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Many other factors would come into play, including the competency and platforms of her opponents, both Democrat and Republican. |
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This news arrived just as a ceasefire was about to come into effect. |
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I had an email earlier today from my friend Mariella in Auckland, who says that the place is jumping with the extra people come into town for the Big Day Out. |
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We have magnetometers checking people that come into the stadium. |
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The first pedestrian-operated robot will come into use tomorrow. |
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At halftime somebody had come into the dressing room and told us Pearl Harbor had been bombed by the Japs. |
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Not until the second half of the nineteenth century did the valuation of scientific knowledge come into conflict with more conservative religious values. |
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The landlord of our office tower checks everyone's temperature as we come into work in the morning, and we are offered a squirt of alcohol to sterilise our hands. |
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The word citronette has come into vogue to denote vinaigrette made with citrus juice in place of all or part of the vinegar. |
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The baby will come into the world, perhaps kicking and screaming, but babyhood will only be the beginning of a continuing process of growth and change. |
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They have created a public debt of such appalling magnitude that our descendants, for whom we had such high hopes, will come into this world as poor as church mice. |
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In other words, we come into the world bearing with us an archetypal endowment which enables us to adapt to reality in the same way as our remote ancestors. |
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Will is someone who has come into an unfeasible amount of money, and whose hand will come to ache from writing his signature on traveller's cheques. |
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When music had come into the discussion, the emphasis invariably was on rock sounds and players. |
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Many times when I have been in sorely trying situations, the memory of that little one has come into my mind, and has buoyed me. |
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A more sophisticated student may surmise that, as the parents are replaced by their parents, the binary encoding and continued fractions come into the play. |
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The skin on the side of his face burned suddenly and the brunette slapped a hand to his cheek, expecting it to come into contact with a mosquito or a gnat. |
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As health care changes come into play in our society, bioethical needs, decisions, and guidelines will change to meet the new requirements of the societal ambience. |
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Forty people who are thought to have come into contact with the substance have been tested and all results have been negative, Selebi said in a statement. |
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Patients should bathe and wash their hair before they come into hospital. |
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Interspersing songs with humorous anecdotes in which his bawdy humor and racy wit come into play, audiences never know what's going to happen when Kan Kan takes to the stage. |
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Although Kelly was unwilling to name players who might come into the reckoning, it seems certain that there will be new faces and some surprises when the invitations go out. |
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That idea is often invoked in regards to the tricks memory plays, but I wonder how it might come into play in other ways. |
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Here fundamental human moral intuitions will inevitably come into play. |
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Fortune is smiling on you because you will come into an inheritance. |
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The different circumstances of a public-sector strike also come into play. |
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They should avoid contact with clothing, boots and utensils, which have come into contact with sheep at lambing, with newborn lambs, with aborted lambs or the afterbirth. |
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Horned larks appear to come into the Hamlet to feed on grit and seeds. |
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If the Government has to steamroller the ban through using the Parliament Act it will come into force immediately, bringing the prospect of huge protests and rural unrest. |
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The road police examines all cars that come into Moscow and leave it. |
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Wherever there is an injury to the blood vessel, clotting factors in the blood come into play, and the wound is sealed by a fibrin plug otherwise called a clot. |
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The whole issue of software patents recently came up in Europe as the EU debated whether to change its laws in order to come into line with the US and Japan. |
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Those briefings you will remember was where we had dozens and dozens and dozens of new reporters come into the Pentagon who were asking frankly dumb questions. |
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It is the principle of being a medium of exchange and only because of this that secondary functions come into being, such as the role of money as a store of value. |
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The more radical elements of the gay community place unreasonable and unconscionable demands on essentially private persons who come into public view. |
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The regulations, which come into effect from August 13, will see an environmental management charge added to the cost of all electrical goods from toasters to televisions. |
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They will come into place when all the conclusive maps of access land have been published and the Secretary of State has authorised their commencement. |
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This is where the heavy-duty plastics and polymers come into play. |
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Deep within Earth, some diamonds come into contact with radioactive materials, such as thorium or uranium, that can impart a unique signature known as a radiation halo. |
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I would come into New Zealand, trawl for sea snails, and accidentally catch 20 tonnes of orange roughy, scampi, or whatever it is that happens to be valuable. |
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The big bucks come into play when you graduate to more advanced levels. |
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Some people who come into contact with the bacteria will develop the less serious Pontiac fever, which causes a flu-like illness, which only lasts for a few days. |
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You have some scenarios where it doesn't work out and then again, you have some players who stay in school for four years, come into the NBA and are a total flop. |
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The omega-rule, which Carnap proposed in The Logical Syntax of Language, has come into widespread use in metamathematical research over a broad range of subjects. |
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Although it germinates in May along with everything else, it seldom comes into flower before September, and if the weather is cold and wet it may not come into flower at all. |
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She never read me a bedside story, but fortified by Liebfraumilch she would come into my room and talk long into the night. |
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In a normal chess game, rooks are tucked in the edge of the board and come into play after castling and are exchanged off or captured only in the middle game. |
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A noncontact fiber has a quartz center covered with polytetrafluoroethylene and silicone and does not come into contact with blood vessels and tissue. |
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I would strongly encourage people to come into my office or call for a copy to join the state-wide push for a fair go for country cancer patients. |
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Hence, it means that principally there are no mysterious incalculable forces that come into play, but rather that one can, in principle, master all things by calculation. |
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That has come into vogue and you have players who used to be considered tweeners, really just undersized defensive ends, being projected to what is a need position now. |
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Public enterprises formed in order to enhance the economic and social health of a nation, parastatals come into being through a variety of means and circumstances. |
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Mr. Yu clapped his hands to signal his butler to come into the room. |
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The best guy out there to ever come into wrestling has passed away. |
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While tens of thousands race mountain bikes each year, it is truly a preciously small clutch of people who ensure these events ever come into being at all. |
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Obviously when people come into the church and they see a double-bass and a drummer and piano player, it has that look of being a jazz combo right from the start. |
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Adding to the complexity, state ethics rules also come into play. |
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It is possible that the fathership of the child born to the woman who remarries before the expiration of this waiting period can come into question. |
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I think how you think of yourself and what your parameters are as a human being really come into focus at that period of time. |
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Suggestions that medical treatment might sometimes come into this category have been disapproved, although it might cover some aspects of nursing care. |
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How much time pell and Kwan have spent actually living in Rhode Island has come into question. |
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If his proposed constitutional changes come into force, he will be able to change the prime minister and dissolve the cabinet and parliament unilaterally. |
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Then three stars come into the sky, the family gathers for Havdalah. |
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The firm's research had established that 75 retailers had requirements for space in York, some of whom would want to come into the city from outside. |
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This is because they like to frequent the shallow waters of river estuaries and harbours, so often come into close proximity to man where there is poor visibility. |
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Jim Maddox waited like a cat on hot bricks for the car that held the remaining hopes of a Court Bennett win to come into view then watched it past. |
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Perhaps also the bass-oboe or heckelphone come into this way of thinking, although some solo and chamber works for these instruments are coming to be known. |
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The characters are very personal, sort of outgrowths of my own experiences, and obviously based on people I've come into contact with, one way or another. |
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It's the fact that such considerations would even come into play at all. |
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For the first time single action sixguns were safe to carry with six rounds as the firing pin does not come into contact with the primer of a loaded round. |
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It allowed passengers to come into the country without being in sight of a detector dog and without being within cooee of a soft-tissue X-ray machine. |
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Like many other giants, they are also wonderful to watch through the season as they keep on growing and then come into flower when more growth would seem impossible. |
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Bulbs planted late in winter come into flower in early summer. |
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The changes, which could come into force as soon as October, would require cosmetic body piercing businesses to register with local authorities and adhere to by-laws. |
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In the past red and white dead-nettles have been cooked like spinach but they're probably don't come into the gourmet class as they've also been used in making pig-swill. |
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Informational framing is nothing else than a part of informational gestaltism by which various causal possibilities of formulas come into existence. |
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And it wants to remind dog owners that it is an offence not to clear up after their pets and dog dirt is dangerous for children who may come into contact with it. |
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I predict that someone tall, dark, and handsome is going to come into your life. |
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In Commons's work two opposing resultants of underlying, real economic forces do not impersonally, mechanistically interact and come into static equilibrium. |
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Napoleon's army had a record of continuous unbroken victories on land, but the full force of the Russian army had not yet come into play. |
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That represents tax deferral, as those withdrawals will come into account on final encashment, in calculating amounts subject to income tax. |
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The references especially come into play in Heartfire, the fifth book in the series, where much of the story occurs in Camelot. |
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Even before the Norman Conquest of England, the Normans had come into contact with Wales. |
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Such petrifactions come into being because a son shames his mother or father with degrading behaviors. |
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Abrasion eventually destroys all parts of a plough that come into contact with the soil. |
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Orkney and Shetland have significant wind and marine energy resources, and renewable energy has recently come into prominence. |
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I have never seen a member of staff come into the opposition's technical area to celebrate a goal as he did. |
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Compact evergreen skimmia come into their own in winter with a show of red buds. |
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Walking north on Hazeltine Avenue toward Fashion Square, two Norfolk Island pines come into view. |
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