Here, we draw together recent data on diverse centriole movements to decipher common themes in how centrioles move. |
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I would guess that it is iambic tetrameter, just because that's probably the most common form for an 8-syllable line. |
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These findings illustrate that a prokaryote possesses a signal trafficking system with features common to those used by higher organisms. |
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The most common cause of goitrous hypothyroidism in adults is: A. Graves' disease. B. Riedel's thyroiditis. C. Hashimoto's disease. |
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The Assassins kill without remorse in the name of the common folk, but they do so in secret, answerable only to each other. |
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In narratology and comparative mythology, the monomyth is the common template of a broad category of tales that involve a hero who goes on an adventure, and in a decisive crisis wins a victory. |
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It is common practice for one town's fire department to help another town when there is a big fire. |
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The software includes templates for common marketing documents like pamphlets and flyers. |
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You really should go to see a doctor if your leg hurts that much. It's just common sense! |
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It was a terribly wifty idea, devoid of any rationality or common sense. |
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The lack of parking spaces is a common complaint among the city's residents. |
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It is a common superstition that a black cat crossing your path is bad luck. |
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Some people think it is wrong to end a sentence with a preposition, but the construction is quite common in English. |
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Three experiments assessed four variables that may affect verbal irony processing: people’s expectations of events, event outcome, evaluations of outcome, and shared common ground. |
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The rotor material, like that of a common nail, will stay magnetized, but can also be demagnetized with little difficulty. |
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Such pumps were common already, powered by horses, but required a vertical reciprocating drive that Savery's system did not provide. |
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The two pistons shared a common four way rotary valve connected directly to a steam boiler. |
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In its strictest sense, petroleum includes only crude oil, but in common usage it includes all liquid, gaseous and solid hydrocarbons. |
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Tropical cyclone formation is common over the Gulf Stream, especially in the month of July. |
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The most common reaction propulsion engines flown are turbojets, turbofans and rockets. |
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Before the discovery of Mendelian genetics, one common hypothesis was blending inheritance. |
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Rowing and sailing clubs are common along the Thames, which is navigable to such vessels. |
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This was a common occurrence as Emperors such as Julian employed famous physicians such as Galen. |
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In Europe, only the common viper is frequent, though in other regions moorlands are commonly home to dozens of reptile species. |
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It is a common misconception that the term 'cathedral' may be applied to any particularly large or grand church. |
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Upon the whole, as the author seems to share all the common miseries of life, he appears to partake likewise of its lenitives and abatements. |
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The present day common lies parallel to the shore from Clarence Pier to Southsea Castle. |
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Initially France attempted to work with other countries towards the adoption of a common set of units of measure. |
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The most common of all malware threats is SQL injection attacks against websites. |
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Another common application is the control of the throttle of an internal combustion engine in conjunction with an electronic governor. |
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In addition, some concepts from Roman law made their way into the common law. |
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The dumping of raw sewage into the Thames was formerly only common in the City of London, making its tideway a harbour for many harmful bacteria. |
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The term Greater London has been and still is used to describe different areas in governance, statistics, history and common parlance. |
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One of the first acts of many of the new state legislatures was to adopt the body of English common law into the law of the state. |
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Alternatively several small parishes can be grouped together and share a common parish council, or even a common parish meeting. |
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The most common forms of life, however, were trilobites, snails and shellfish. |
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The objective of a common market is most often economic convergence and the creation of an integrated single market. |
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These changes are the same as those involved in the operations of sensation, common sense, and thinking. |
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Tin was much less common than lead and is only marginally harder, and had even less impact by itself. |
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Judges are bound by the law of binding precedent in England and Wales and other common law jurisdictions. |
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Citation to English cases was common through the 19th and well into the 20th centuries. |
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It hears a wide range of common law cases and also has special responsibility as a supervisory court. |
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They had a common linguistic, religious and artistic heritage that distinguished them from the culture of the surrounding polities. |
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The speech is meticulous in details, a common mark of all his extant works, and he goes into long digressions on related matters. |
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The most common symptoms associated with hyperprolactinemia are excessive galactorrhea, infertility, and hypoestrogenemic amenorrhea. |
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In common with much of the rest of the UK today, Liverpool's economy is dominated by service sector industries, both public and private. |
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The need for a common name came to be felt because of the common marine biology, geology and hydrology. |
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Eelgrass, formerly common in the entirety of the Wadden Sea, was nearly wiped out in the 20th century by a disease. |
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This scenario may well have been the source of syntactic features in English, which the latter has in common with Celtic. |
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Limestone is very common in architecture, especially in Europe and North America. |
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In fact, Roman surgery was quite intuitive, in contrast to common thought of ancient surgery. |
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However the label 'cathedral' remains in common parlance for notable churches that were formerly part of an episcopal denomination. |
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Blackcurrant and guelder rose are frequent but alder buckthorn a common constituent of East Anglian carr is very rare. |
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Most products have some kind of brand identity, from common table salt to designer jeans. |
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All airframes were planned to undergo avionics upgrades to a common standard. |
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The common owes its existence to the demands of the military in the early 19th century for a clear range of fire. |
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A road map which would lead to a common vision and strategic planning in the area of space exploration was discussed. |
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In this article, Crick reviewed the evidence supporting the idea that there was a common set of about 20 amino acids used to synthesize proteins. |
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So inconscionable are these common people, and so little feeling have they of God, or their own souls' good. |
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Multiple web pages with a common theme, a common domain name, or both, make up a website. |
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One of many popular theories suggests the common broom, planta genista in medieval Latin, as the source of the nickname. |
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The second most common transmission type is a form of continuously variable transmission, called the hydrostatic transmission. |
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We define a knitalong as any organized event where people knit together for a common purpose or goal. |
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Some countries, such as Germany, have multiple public insurance organizations linked by a common legal framework. |
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We are only a small and young nation, but we march with a union of hearts and souls to a common destiny. |
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The Indian subcontinent has been a term particularly common in the British Empire and its successors. |
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Northern Ireland is a common law jurisdiction and its common law is similar to that in England and Wales. |
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This would have upset the gentry, who regarded the common law as reinforcing their status and property rights. |
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Extended months of rain and cloudy conditions are common in oceanic climates. |
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Yet they've proved that common men can show astonishing fortitude in chasing jam tomorrow. |
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The common modern understanding of a political community as a modern state is quite different from Aristotle's understanding. |
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Increased negative keratometric diopters and oblate asphericity of the PCC are common after LASIK leading to mild keratectasia. |
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Due to a common history and culture, former colonial powers created institutions which more loosely associated their former colonies. |
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In common parlance, the term jet engine loosely refers to an internal combustion airbreathing jet engine. |
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Cladistics aims to identify holophyletic groups comprising all the descendants of a common ancestor. |
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At the time Bede wrote the Historia Ecclesiastica, there were two common ways of referring to dates. |
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A common market is usually referred to as the first stage towards the creation of a single market. |
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A common market allows for the free movement of capital and services but large amounts of trade barriers remain. |
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In Portugal, the Aveiro Lagoon hosts Recurvirostra avosetta, the common ringed plover, grey plover and little stint. |
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The ordinary hot saw, for sawing iron at a blight red heat, differs but little from a common circular wood-saw. |
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The two major legal traditions of the western world are the civil law courts and the common law courts. |
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Generally, a common law court system has trial courts, intermediate appellate courts and a supreme court. |
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Although lead is a common metal, its discovery had relatively little impact in the ancient world. |
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As part of the United Kingdom, the area joined a common market initiative called the European Economic Community which became the European Union. |
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Law professors in common law traditions play a much smaller role in developing case law than professors in civil law traditions. |
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Thus common law systems are adopting one of the approaches long common in civil law jurisdictions. |
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Major changes in design did not become common until the Age of Enlightenment, when there was rapid progress in design. |
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After lighting a common fuse, the hwacha fired as many as a hundred arrows, all of which landed in a precise spot. |
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Triplicity is a common theme in Celtic cosmology, and a number of deities were seen as threefold. |
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Philip sent ambassadors to Hannibal's camp in Italy, to negotiate an alliance as common enemies of Rome. |
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Heavy snowfall is not common in the lowlands, but becomes more common with altitude. |
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The use of the words Scots and Scotland to encompass all of what is now Scotland became common in the Late Middle Ages. |
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As the name suggests, the churches of the Anglican Communion are linked by bonds of tradition, affection, and common loyalty. |
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English law is regarded as a common law system, with no major codification of the law, and legal precedents are binding as opposed to persuasive. |
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People who do not support the common good, such as dole bludgers fall outside the mateship fold. |
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The most common reason for such episodes is that a student takes a job before completing a thesis, usually after attaining ABD status. |
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Blotch is one of the most common and serious diseases of A. bisporus and is responsible for considerable losses. |
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Henry had more in common with Charles, whom he met once before and once after Francis. |
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The common or harbour seal and the grey seal are both resident in the Irish Sea. |
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Likely they never used medical texts, as it was not common place even in the civilian field. |
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England was divided in shires with sheriffs in each enforcing the common law. |
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This makes sandstone a common building and paving material including in asphalt concrete. |
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Because of the type of injuries that would have been commonly seen, surgery was a somewhat common occurrence. |
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Drainage of excess water and waste were common practices in camps as well as the permanent medical structures, which come at a later date. |
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Gildas called them Saxons, which was probably the common British term for the settlers. |
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Hercules is sometimes used appellatively, that is, as a common name, to signify a strong man. |
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Autogas is the common name for liquefied petroleum gas when it is used as a fuel in internal combustion engines in vehicles. |
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Bans is common and ordinary amongst the Feudists, and signifies a proclamation, or any public notice. |
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Back in Maisel, I was a biloquist. A common street performer. What you would call a ventriloquist. |
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The legs are of the heavy bulbous type common at this time, turned in the cup and cover form, and carved with nullings and acanthus leafwork. |
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They were discalced to a man like pilgrims of some common order for all their shoes were long since stolen. |
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Furthermore, women were then eligible for different occupations, particularly the common school teacher. |
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Catoptromancy was a species of divination performed by the aid of a mirror. This..was common among the Achaians. |
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There are many varieties of congee but the most common is this salted pork with century egg. |
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The theory of evolution states that all life on Earth has a common ancestor. |
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This climate is also common in Northern Norway but there usually in lower altitudes, all the way down to sea level. |
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In making the case for common descent, he included evidence of homologies between humans and other mammals. |
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From Fig. 22 it will be seen that a common crossing consists of four rails, i.e. one point rail, one splice rail, and two wing rails. |
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By the early 1160s, Ailred of Rievaulx was writing that intermarriage was common in all levels of society. |
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Lefse is a Norwegian potato flatbread, usually topped with large amounts of butter and sugar, most common around Christmas. |
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It was only in the late 17th century that it passed into common usage among historians. |
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Marriage with a deceased wife's sister was forbidden by ecclesiastical law, though permitted by common law. |
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An acceptance of our common creaturedom is essential not just to the health of the planet but to our ordinary happiness. |
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It is common policy to order no more diet than will be used within one month. |
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Blood product contamination, while rare, is still more common than actual infection. |
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Contamination is also more common with longer duration of storage, especially if that means more than 5 days. |
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The majority of Anglicans, however, have in common a belief in the Real Presence, defined in one way or another. |
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Whether it is a tenancy in common or a joint tenancy, there are several ways to end the co-ownership. |
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The Statute of Rhuddlan introduced English common law to the principality, albeit with some local variation. |
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In common law legal systems, the common law is crucial to understanding almost all important areas of law. |
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England did not experience the same trend of roving bands of flagellants, common on the continent. |
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There is an innate light in every man, discovering to him the first lines of duty in the common notions of good and evil. |
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General law common to a country as a whole, as opposed to special law that has only local application. |
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The population increase was common throughout Europe in the 13th century, but in Wales it was more pronounced. |
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In common law systems, judge made law is binding to the same extent as statute or regulation. |
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Colors such as black lettering on an international orange background are common and are easily visible in most conditions. |
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In common law systems, a single decided case is binding common law, under the principle of stare decisis. |
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Interracial marriages are getting more common these days thanks to globalization. |
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In common law jurisdictions, scholarly work is seldom cited as authority for what the law is. |
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Even in the most informal Anglican services it is common for set prayers such as the weekly Collect to be read. |
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For many years it was common not to give the translation any specific name. |
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The main alternative to the common law system is the civil law system, which is used in Continental Europe, and most of the rest of the world. |
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The table to the right shows the most common countries of birth of London residents. |
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A crown was not part of the arms but use of a crowned harp was apparently common as a badge or as a device. |
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Enclosure of common land and the related agricultural revolution made a supply of this labour readily available. |
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It was common to hear the sound of a brass band whilst strolling through parklands. |
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Moving further inland, frosts during winter gets more common due to the higher elevation and distance to the sea. |
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There were also petty schools, more common in rural areas and providing an elementary education. |
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Moorman, claimed the first extant work of English literature, Beowulf, was written in Yorkshire, this view does not have common acceptance today. |
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These were usually attached to cathedrals or a collegiate church and were most common in the developing burghs. |
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Downstairs there was a kitchen common to all lodgers, with free firing and a supply of cooking-pots, tea-basins, and toasting-forks. |
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A common bee will sting and kill another common bee, for cause, but when it is necessary to kill the queen other ways are employed. |
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There are several species of the Fireback pheasant, the most common of which is the Siamese, which inhabits parts of Siam. |
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Instead of a true sea, the Baltic can even today also be understood as the common estuary of all rivers flowing into it. |
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This was another common procedure on the part of the ladies of the Hole, when heated by verbal or fistic altercation. |
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The table below displays the common inflected endings for the indicative mood in the active voice in all six tenses. |
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The common things are terrible and startling, death, for instance, and first love. |
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Many of the most common polysyllabic English words are of Latin origin through the medium of Old French. |
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Aquatic wildlife, such as species of sea turtle, shark, seal, whale, and dolphin, are common off the coast. |
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It proved to be nothing more that a lizard of the geckotian family, hideously ugly, but, in common with all of his kind, perfectly harmless. |
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Wars of the Roses came into common use in the nineteenth century, after the publication in 1829 of Anne of Geierstein by Sir Walter Scott. |
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Huge populations of the sea duck, common scoter, spend winters feeding in shallow waters off eastern Ireland, Lancashire and North Wales. |
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Welsh emerged in the 6th century from Common Brittonic, the common ancestor of Welsh, Breton, Cornish and the extinct language known as Cumbric. |
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The ings are flood meadows along the Ouse, while the strays are open common grassland in various locations around the city. |
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Case law, in common law jurisdictions, is the set of decisions of adjudicatory tribunals or other rulings that can be cited as precedent. |
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This system is in especially common use in schools due to its simplicity, and in Patagonian Welsh. |
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In the Sado Estuary are dunlin, Eurasian curlew, grey plover and common redshank. |
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Some point to the creation of Magna Carta as the genesis of English common law. |
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Global governance would be essential in tackling mankind's common challenges but it is hard to achieve among extremely different kinds of actors. |
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This pass is extremely abrupt, and is covered with glaucus, the low scrub I have noticed as common to the sand-stone formation. |
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The different roles of case law in civil law and common law traditions create differences in the way that courts render decisions. |
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In general, court decisions of common law jurisdictions give a sufficient ratio decidendi as to guide future courts. |
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The Corded Ware Culture shared a number of features with the Bell Beaker Culture, derived from their common ancestor the Yamna culture. |
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The jaws were furnished with hooks or hamated teeth, in the manner common to snakes. |
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Even headerless LOADs will work with the Sprint, though be warned, it can't cope with the now common turboload. |
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Clog dancing, traditionally a male dominated art, is now a common part of eisteddfodau. |
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Large scale Roman agriculture replaced them in lowland Britain and they are more common in less accessible regions such as the West Country. |
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The Iron Age is not an archaeological horizon of common artefacts, but is rather a locally diverse cultural phase. |
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The hawk boy's server is about the size and shape of a common garden hoe, but the handle is in the direction of the instrument. |
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The myth that the Celtic monetary system consisted of wholly barter is a common one, but is in part false. |
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Some common symptoms are tiredness, nausea, and loss of appetite. |
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I lifted one of the skins from the mortar and held it close to the candle. Even I could recognize it as that of the common hyla tree frog. |
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McFarlane, who argued that this was not only the common policy of the age, but also the best. |
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Traditional theories have emphasized the supposedly central role in Germanic culture of clans or large groups with common ancestry. |
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The ceremony was marked by a terrible snowstorm, but the common people were undecided as to whether it was a good or bad omen. |
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Determination of minor head loss is simple and straightforward, and a standared nomograph in common use is included at the end of the chapter. |
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The infosheets were intended to answer common questions asked by people in these situations, questions gathered from the people themselves. |
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It has no formal powers but operates as a forum for discussing matters of common concern between the respective legislatures. |
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Bill for dividing and inclosing certain open common fields, ings, common pastures, and other commonable lands. |
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It would become the most common rule throughout the Middle Ages and is still in use today. |
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Obey the laws and use common sense when operating your boat. |
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No peaks with two Kdo residues were found, since the ketosidic bond is much more acid-labile than the common aldosidic bonds. |
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It became common practice for landowners to bind their mesnie knights to their service with annual payments. |
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Shortness of breath was a common complaint among the patients. |
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She's very smart but she doesn't have a lot of common sense. |
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I think some of the most common flowers are also some of the prettiest. |
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The BBC, the common abbreviation of the British Broadcasting Corporation, is the world's largest broadcaster. |
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However, in the 19th century, the language was seen as a common heritage, with Ulster Protestants playing a leading role in the Gaelic revival. |
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In Japonia 'tis a common thing to stifle their children if they be poor, or to make an abort, which Aristotle commends. |
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It is a common practice to adjourn the reformation of their lives to a further time. |
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The numerous absentee ownerships made it difficult for the owners to make common cause. |
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And such an order is observed in the aculeous prickly plantation, upon the heads of several common thistles. |
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Afara is the common Nigerian name and a British Standard name for the commercial timber. |
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This was considered a custom of the time, and was quite common for households to take in wounded soldiers and tend to them. |
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Like sand, sandstone may be any color, but the most common colors are tan, brown, yellow, red, grey, pink, white, and black. |
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Thousands of persons suffer from agitophasia in some degree. This, in fact, is the most common of speech defect. |
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Cod, haddock, whiting, saithe, plaice, sole, mackerel, herring, pouting, sprat, and sandeel are all very common and are fished commercially. |
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The words Arkansan, Arkansawyer and Arkie are in common use. Each term has its partisans and its detractors. |
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The most common technique used for allotype determination is hemagglutination-inhibition. |
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The thrips are the first or most primitive order to harbor allantonematid nematodes, which are more common in the higher Coleoptera and Diptera. |
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Another common bush delicacy was the alunqua, some call it the bush cucumber. |
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They assume that peasants are antimarket, prefer common property to private, and dislike buying and selling. |
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I need not dwell on the effect of the antitravel tax on our common carrier transportation services in the United States. |
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Apostle spoons were a common baptismal gift in the 16th and 17th centuries. |
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But do orientations like aromanticism deserve to be discussed to the same extent as other, more common non-heteronormative ones? |
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For example, the pattern associator and the auto associator are two common architectures. |
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Meditation appears to have something in common with biofeedback and autosuggestibility. |
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For greate men hurt not the common weale so much by beeing evil in respect of themselves, as by drawing others unto evil by their evil example. |
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A simpler version of the common bend with its ends in the same direction is used to join binder twine in a hay baling machine. |
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Let it be no bank or common stock, but every man be master of his own money. |
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These are now the fashion, and so berattle the common stages that many wearing rapiers are afraid of goose-quills and dare scarce come thither. |
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Berothids, beaded lacewings, are fairly common in the warmer parts of North America where termites are abundant. |
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The most common poly budget in use for games at the time of this writing is between 5,000 and 10,000 tris. |
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I've always grazed my animals on the common land and I'm not going to stop now. |
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It really brings home the amount of deprivation you lived through, and it's very common for grief to come up like this. |
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It is common in urban areas that a great many borings exist from prior construction work. |
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It is the most common of all capsica, and its fruit is particularly pleasing to the feminine palate. |
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The commonest game animals are vervet and colobus monkey, baboon, common duiker, bush-pig and grysbok. |
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Most common cask wines were a blend of the third, fourth, and fifth cuttings, and they were sold inexpensively and as quickly as possible. |
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This is a spicy variation of Kung Pao Chicken using cashews rather than the more common peanuts. |
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However, most major salmon farming areas have observed resistance to common chemotherapeutants. |
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One common ceratopsian feature is a frill extending from the back of the skull. |
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Ciderkin is made for common drinking, and supplies the place of small beer. |
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The first thing to do is to find common ground with the person you just met. |
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The monarchs of Spain and the UK have a common ancestor namely Queen Victoria. |
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The dorm offered students the choice of retreating to the privacy of their rooms, or mingling in the common area. |
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The common buzzard often spots prey by waiting on a prominent perch and scanning the ground for movement. |
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The drawback of these common crossings lies in the difficulty of welding them to the adjacent rails. |
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This activity likely led to the extinction of the Atlantic population of the once common gray whale. |
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The single most common proportional mistake in both compositry and fine art portraits is making the nose too long in relation to the face drawn. |
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Like any common or garden racist would seek to do to someone he or she deems as different, or lesser. |
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While the common man is holding the brunt of the taxes, there are groups, special-interest groups, that are getting off with paying none. |
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The admiral is the first enlisted man to lead the Navy, and Navy aides are busy cultivating his image as a four-star officer with a common touch. |
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The loan demonstrates, in regard to instrumental resources, the competency of this kingdom to the assertion of the common cause. |
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By 1725 the Newcomen engine was in common use in mining, particularly collieries. |
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Spreads on bond yields in a common currency today comove across emerging markets to a much higher degree than they did in the past. |
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In schools it is common for teachers to confiscate electronic games and other distractions. |
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Nothing was too small to receive attention, if a supervising eye could suggest improvements likely to conduce to the common welfare. |
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Aggressive behavior, for instance, is quite common in a confusional state but is often transient and quickly resolves as confusion clears. |
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There vas an old covey as lived in Wapping, at the time I'm telling you of, who vas connected vith us by ties of common interest. |
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Trepanned into the West India Company's service by the crimps or silver-coopers as a common soldier. |
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The gardens, with digging for novelties, are turned over and over, because we will not eat common cribble bread. |
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The most common type of material has been woody fragments which have been cut into granules by pulp refiners. |
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The article of the resurrection seems to lie marvellously cross to the common experience of mankind. |
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Most sandstone is composed of quartz or feldspar because these are the most common minerals in the Earth's crust. |
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It is the third most common native language in the world, after Mandarin and Spanish. |
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It was formerly a common custom to wear a cross made of paper or ribbon on St Patrick's Day. |
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Henry II had to get Marie out of her convent first, which had been a common practice in England since the Normans. |
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Barley and wheat were the most common agricultural products and were used for baking a certain flat type of bread as well as brewing beer. |
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Village life consisted of free men assembled under a chieftain, all of whom shared common cultural and political traditions. |
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English law is the common law legal system governing England and Wales, comprising criminal law and civil law. |
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For example, murder is a common law crime rather than one established by an Act of Parliament. |
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Today, one third of the world's population live in common law jurisdictions or in systems mixed with civil law. |
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The Dandelion has a number of common names in Newfoundland. These include Dumbledore, Faceclock, and Piss-a-beds. |
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Madam has gone quite definitely doolally tap, if you'll pardon the rather common expression. |
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However, until the Destruction of the Second Temple, about two thousand years ago, taking Nazirite vows was a common feature of the religion. |
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Interactions between common law, constitutional law, statutory law and regulatory law also give rise to considerable complexity. |
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In practice, common law systems are considerably more complicated than the simplified system described above. |
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It is not only the teacher's play with single words, phrases, and double entendre that are common in my classroom data. |
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One example of the gradual change that typifies evolution of the common law is the gradual change in liability for negligence. |
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These damages need not be set forth in statute as they already exist in the tradition of common law. |
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The main sources for the history of the common law in the Middle Ages are the plea rolls and the Year Books. |
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Crucially, the English common law was sufficiently flexible to adapt its archaic contractual rules into new formats suited to modern commerce. |
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Their common complaint is that, except for its outcome, very few details of the battle are found in the chronicles. |
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Jeffersonians decried lawyers and their common law tradition as threats to the new republic. |
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Immediately after the American Revolution, there was widespread distrust and hostility to anything British, and the common law was no exception. |
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Well into the 19th century, ancient maxims played a large role in common law adjudication. |
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One of the major reforms of the late 19th century and early 20th century was the abolition of common law pleading requirements. |
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The Slavic peoples' ancestors entered Eastern Europe between the 5th and 7th centuries from their original common homeland. |
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When a dispute arises, it is common to see a page protected to avoid edit warring. |
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Except on Constitutional issues, Congress is free to legislatively overrule federal courts' common law. |
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This brought in a distinctly common law principle into an essentially civil law jurisdiction. |
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Each province and territory is considered a separate jurisdiction with respect to common law matters. |
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In Goa, a Portuguese uniform civil code is in place, in which all religions have a common law regarding marriages, divorces and adoption. |
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Roman Dutch Common law is a bijuridical or mixed system of law similar to the common law system in Scotland and Louisiana. |
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Roman Dutch common law is a development of Roman Dutch law by courts in the Roman Dutch common law jurisdictions. |
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The most common misuses of e-mail are fakemail and spam. Fakemail is the act of sending an e-mail that appears to be from another individual. |
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Those names that the schools forged, and put into the mouth of scholars, could never get admittance into common use. |
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This is just another piece of common sense about philosophy, the one to which the pragmatists herostratically sacrificed everything else. |
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Scots common law covers matters including murder and theft, and has sources in custom, in legal writings and previous court decisions. |
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A hateful tax levied upon commodities, and adjudged not by the common judges of property, but wretches hired by those to whom Excise is paid. |
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Identical twins are more common than heteropaternal twins, and less common than fraternal twins. |
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A common method was for someone to make a study tour, gathering information where he could. |
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Study tours were common then, as now, as was the keeping of travel diaries. |
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Although the majority of journeys involving central London are made by public transport, car travel is common in the suburbs. |
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When I got fibro, the Internet was not in common use, so I didn't have the resources that a newly diagnosed person would have now. |
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Elements like fell, thwaite and tarn, which are particularly common in Cumbria, are all Norse. |
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The EU also operates the Schengen Information System which provides a common database for police and immigration authorities. |
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By 1814 the Leblanc process of making alkali from common salt was introduced to Britain. |
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Mutations leading to the loss of function of a gene are much more common than mutations that produce a new, fully functional gene. |
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