The Italian election was a farrago of farce and consequence that reaches far beyond the Alps and the Apennines. |
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Hitchcock had met or known about everyone of artistic consequence over the last 60 years. |
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Great American leaders have long contributed profound thoughts of tremendous consequence to the public discourse. |
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They wanted members of the public to see the consequence of what can only be described as their barbarous acts. |
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But the consequence of ignoring him is that abolitionists seem indifferent to his pain. |
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Demisexuals experience sexual attraction as a consequence of romantic attraction but not independently of it. |
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If we had been deprived of it, the most serious consequence would be that we'd be deprived of philosophy. |
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Sullen, desponding, and foreboding nothing but wars and desolation, as the certain consequence of Caesar's death. |
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In consequence they imposed green bans, a move which effectively prevented the execution of policy and forced a stay on proceedings. |
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As a consequence, several communities actually reside within both entities. |
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The consequence of this complex orthographic history is that learning to read can be challenging in English. |
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The Chronicle, as well as the distribution of copies to other centres of learning, may be a consequence of the changes Alfred introduced. |
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According to ancient records, the dynasty ended around 1600 BC as a consequence of the Battle of Mingtiao. |
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As a consequence, our final models did not include any autocorrelating variables. |
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However, once an illness is pronounced to be the consequence of magic, prayer is performed independently of counter-magic. |
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One consequence was that the crossopterygian fishes were dethroned from their privileged position as ancestors. |
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This is in no way a manifestation of crypto-sexism but a simple consequence of the direction of the precession of the equinoxes. |
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Celibacy, as a consequence of the duty to observe perfect continence, is obligatory for priests in the Latin Church. |
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As a consequence of taking part in the EU single market they need to adopt part of the Law of the European Union. |
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The process of political othering was not simply a rhetorical consequence of the Revolution's own unifying political culture. |
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Armouring often has the unintended consequence of moving the problem to another part of the coast. |
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As a consequence, the shifting extensions of material cultures were interpreted as the expansion of peoples. |
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In this view, the most important consequence of Jutland was the decision of the Germans to engage in unrestricted submarine warfare. |
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Although this system does not sit well with the judicial nature of the body, it is usually of little practical consequence. |
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This was a consequence of the platform design, which did not include blast walls. |
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Nourishment may have the unintended consequence of promoting coastal development, which increases risk of other coastal hazards. |
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As a consequence, planning from the highest ranks in preparation for the raid was minimal. |
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Longitude was beyond Pytheas and his peers, but it was not of as great a consequence, because ships seldom strayed out of sight of land. |
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A profound consequence of seafloor spreading is that new crust was, and still is, being continually created along the oceanic ridges. |
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As a consequence of these blooms, benthic macrophyte populations were deprived of light, while anoxia caused mass mortality in marine animals. |
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Biological sampling of the deep, hard bottom is difficult under the Gulf Stream with the consequence that the fauna is relatively poorly known. |
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One relevant consequence is that the submarine canyons eroded are now far below the present sea level. |
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Their findings suggested that precipitation increases in the high northern latitudes, and polar ice melts as a consequence. |
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The most important consequence of their increased melting is the speed up of the ice streams on land which are buttressed by these ice shelves. |
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As genetic drift occurs more frequently in small populations, diversity is an observed consequence of isolation. |
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As a further consequence, Pacific bluefin tuna stopped moving into the region to feed. |
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In consequence, injurious reports, probably calumnies, were vigorously circulated against Priscillian and his retinue. |
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As a consequence of this concentration of mining wealth, Penzance became a centre for commercial banking. |
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The consequence was a dynastic union of the Crown of Castile and the Crown of Aragon in 1479 when Ferdinand ascended to the Aragonese throne. |
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By consequence, modern research is based mostly on interpretations of the concrete physical evidence of this version of the Mary Rose. |
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One immediate consequence was a series of epidemics of European diseases such as measles, smallpox and tuberculosis. |
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Technology is often a consequence of science and engineering, although technology as a human activity precedes the two fields. |
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As a consequence, the weather tends to be sunny, dry and stable with a minimal risk of rainfall. |
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As a consequence, references to them are disjoint and offer little useful information about them. |
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Strabo was an admirer of Homer's poetry, perhaps a consequence of his time spent in Nysa with Aristodemus. |
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As a consequence, Domitian was popular with the people and army, but considered a tyrant by members of the Roman Senate. |
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As a consequence of education and media like radio and television, Romanesco became more similar to standard Italian. |
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Italy was also affected by the Enlightenment, a movement which was a consequence of the Renaissance and changed the road of Italian philosophy. |
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Some researchers regarded the rise as largely real, a consequence of worsening health conditions and services. |
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As a consequence, there was a crisis in international confidence in Greece's ability to repay its sovereign debt. |
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The consequence was that eunuchs were unable to gather enough support to initiate projects opposed by the civil government. |
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As a consequence, the offering is usually destroyed in the ritual to transfer it to the deities. |
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Krishna Iyer, the rise of Kozhikode is at once a cause and a consequence of Samoothiri's ascendancy in Kerala. |
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An equally important consequence of the Commercial Revolution was the Columbian Exchange. |
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Recognizing the value of the Emperor as a hostage, Pizarro blocked the attack and received a sword wound to his hand in consequence. |
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Higher prices are a necessary consequence of the company's new services. |
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An important consequence of the influence SPE had on phonological theory was the downplaying of the syllable and the emphasis on segments. |
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One consequence of this is that there is no dental variety of grammatischer Wechsel in Middle Dutch. |
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The alleged common features of all creoles would then be the consequence of those innate abilities being universal. |
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The colon introduces the logical consequence, or effect, of a fact stated before. |
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As a consequence, Luther was excommunicated by Pope Leo X on 3 January 1521, in the bull Decet Romanum Pontificem. |
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The consequence of the altered form of the doctrine was a metamorphosis in the nature of popular Protestantism. |
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If someone's act is to have any consequence legally, it must have in some way caused a victim harm. |
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If the answer to both questions was in the affirmative, an inference could be drawn that the defendant had intended that consequence. |
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He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee. |
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However, certain indirect protections have been recognised by implication or as a consequence of other constitutional principles. |
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In consequence the new British Raj was constructed in part around a conservative agenda, based on a preservation of tradition and hierarchy. |
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The proposed final draft of Article 2B met with controversy within the ALI, and as a consequence the ALI did not grant its assent. |
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One was Attlee, but as their political primes did not overlap this was of minor consequence. |
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In consequence, Parliament passed the Parliamentary Papers Act 1840 to establish privilege for publications under the House's authority. |
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As a consequence, growth in the model can occur either by increasing the share of GDP invested or through technological progress. |
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It has a high carbon content and as a consequence it is brittle and could not be used to make hardware. |
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The Block Mills have remained in constant Navy occupation ever since and in consequence are not open to the public. |
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A consequence of this is that to keep trying to be as close to the equilibrium as possible. |
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A consequence of the marine influence is a cloudy and wet climate with low sunshine hours. |
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As a consequence the Taliban has remerged more powerful and Iraq has been exposed to civil war. |
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As a likely consequence, it was after that that the first disciples of Confucius were appointed to government positions. |
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As a consequence, it is believed that deeper understanding of the universe can be achieved by understanding oneself. |
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Mrs. Green, aged 33 years, had been six weeks pregnant, and suffered exceedingly from retchings in consequence. |
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As a consequence, for most practical purposes, the difference between the total and seawater scales is very small. |
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The way through the wood was shorter, but it was also sinuous. He missed his way, and, as a direct consequence, missed his train. |
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As a consequence, the equivalence preserves defect groups and categories of subpairs. |
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Now, this repeal was not an afterthought or an unintended consequence. |
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Boxwood is a pretty tough cookie. Wind, cold, wet, exhaust fumes, and industrial pollution are of no consequence. |
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In the 1980s, AIDS was not a treatable disease, and as a consequence the mortality rate at that time was very high. |
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The uncertainty surrounding tupaiid phylogeny is a consequence of an inadequate fossil record. |
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As a consequence, the turbiditic currents of marly mud are not able to cause erosion similar to those of siliciclastic mud. |
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The points I have been making are one consequence of accepting the undetachability of predicates. |
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If people are upminded about future possibilities, present tragedies diminish in psychological consequence. |
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Most ominous of all was the consequence of Northern anticlericalism. |
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There is an enormous neurological consequence to mechanorecptor dysfunction, which is related to how these cells are wired into the spinal cord. |
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As a consequence, military duty began to appeal most to the poorest sections of society, to whom a salaried pay was attractive. |
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One consequence was that it was considered a capital offense to harm a tribune, to disregard his veto, or to interfere with a tribune. |
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As a consequence many of the routes inside the city walls are designated as car free during business hours or restrict traffic entirely. |
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In consequence of this, our troops in their engagements with the Goths were often overwhelmed with their showers of arrows. |
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The immediate consequence of William's death was a war between his sons Robert and William over control of England and Normandy. |
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Another consequence of William's invasion was the sundering of the formerly close ties between England and Scandinavia. |
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Rumours of a plot to kill Henry were circulating and, possibly as a consequence, Henry decided to return to Normandy for a period. |
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The most immediate consequence was a halt to the campaigns of the Hundred Years' War. |
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It is shown that an improvement of interarea transport facilities may encourage trade and as a consequence decrease the disparity in area size. |
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As a consequence, the king was excommunicated by the Pope Paul III on 17 December of the same year. |
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In consequence, James was expelled from France and forced to leave Turenne's army. |
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The Botha regime was attempting to make itself look less horrible, but I don't regard it as having been of the faintest political consequence. |
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It also had the permanent consequence of empowering German princes at the expense of the German emperors. |
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As a consequence, conversion rates between different currencies could be determined simply from the respective gold standards. |
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It was introduced in 1973, in consequence of Britain's entry to the European Economic Community, at a standard rate of 10 percent. |
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From 1648 Charles Louis was able to take up his position as Elector of the Palatinate on the Rhine, as a consequence of the Peace of Westphalia. |
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As a consequence, engines equipped only with this governor were not suitable for operations requiring constant speed, such as cotton spinning. |
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As a consequence, notions of 'Englishness' and 'Britishness' are often very similar. |
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As a consequence, the 2007 conference decided not to move towards having bishops at present. |
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As a consequence, loan repayments are only made when the former student has income to support the repayments. |
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If the Authour will but persist in his assumption, the consequence shall make directly against him. |
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In consequence, it seems probable that the Robin Hood legend actually originates from the county of Yorkshire. |
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Historically produced in Scotland, it was introduced across Britain during World War II as a consequence of rationing. |
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If the outcome is already known, it is called a consequence and should have already been considered while formulating the hypothesis. |
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As a consequence, the prose literature of dissent, political theory, and economics increased in Charles II's reign. |
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A consequence of this anonymity is that a great many poems, some of them of merit, are unpublished and largely unknown. |
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As a consequence, Herbert's personal troubles increased as he subsequently failed as a draper and also, later, as a chemist's assistant. |
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The consequence was that he had to appear, fiddle in hand, to acknowledge the genuine and hearty applause of the audience. |
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Most of the artists nominated for the prize selection become known to the general public for the first time as a consequence. |
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But even in 1776, this concept was thought to be mentionable only as the consequence of a bitter struggle. |
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Germany and Japan were prevented from qualifying for the 1950 FIFA World Cup as a consequence. |
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As a consequence of this the entry from Hangar Straight into Stowe Corner was modified in 1995 so as to make its entry less dangerous. |
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As a consequence, it was decided to give Mansell's car a red number to make it more distinctive. |
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As a consequence, the Royal Arms of England and Scotland were combined in the king's new personal arms. |
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The consequence under this definition, according to Keith Ferdinando, is a fatal compromise of the dominant religion's integrity. |
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In these examples, we notice a clear consequence of bilingualism, that sometimes even changed the first syllable of the Latin words. |
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As a consequence, neither EU bodies nor diplomats have to pay taxes, since it would not be possible to prosecute them for tax evasion. |
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The Irish Civil War was the consequence of the creation of the Irish Free State. |
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A consequence of this northern latitude is that it both endures short winter days and enjoys long summer evenings. |
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In consequence, it is apparent that contemporaries regarded the incomers as English, despite the fact that they weren't exactly as such. |
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As a consequence, inexperienced officers sometimes found their way into positions of high responsibility. |
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Such useful instruction to Indians had the added consequence of making them more suitable for the Company's burgeoning bureaucracy. |
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In consequence, many working conditions are not negotiable due to a strong legal protection of individuals. |
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The bitter division in public opinion provoked by the British intervention in the Middle East has already had one disastrous consequence. |
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This was not achieved leading the assembly to be suspended on a number of occasions as a consequence of unionist objections. |
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This custom also occurs in other Westminster Systems in the world, in consequence from the influence of British colonial rule. |
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As consequence of the war the Valdivian Fort System, a Spanish defensive complex in southern Chile, was updated and reinforced from 1764 onwards. |
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The consequence of this is that contract prices are far higher than those of any other country building oceangoing ships. |
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Economic inequality would be a natural consequence of the wide range in individual skill, talent and effort in human population. |
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Following Darwin's primary usage, the term is used to refer both to the evolutionary consequence of blind selection and to its mechanisms. |
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One important consequence of the equations is that they demonstrate how fluctuating electric and magnetic fields propagate at the speed of light. |
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However, as a consequence, it predicts that a changing magnetic field induces an electric field and vice versa. |
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As a consequence, the majority of submitted papers are rejected without review. |
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The second survey estimated that there had been 654,965 excess Iraqi deaths as a consequence of the war. |
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The brethren teach that the consequence of human sin is condemnation to eternal death in hell. |
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As a consequence, sequential notes can be played without altering the bellows direction. |
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The particular bad consequence of an action, is the mischief which that single action directly and immediately occasions. |
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A serious nervous disorder appeared in 1877 and protracted insomnia was a consequence, which Marx fought with narcotics. |
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As a consequence, detailed rules on the management of the pitch are necessary. |
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Blunt injury to the larynx is an infrequent consequence of contact sports despite protective equipment and stringent rules. |
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As a consequence of Alexander's conquests, koine Greek had become the shared language around the eastern Mediterranean and into Asia Minor. |
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The consequence of this was that he finally left the southeast to itself and intruders were only fought when they threatened his own territory. |
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As a consequence, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston now houses the finest collection of Japanese art outside Japan. |
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As a consequence, the number of names is expanding rapidly and will continue to expand. |
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The consequence of this is that northern gannets need to warm up before they begin flying. |
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As a consequence the town has numerous parks, the largest being Balbirnie Park, Carleton Park, Gilvenbank Park, Riverside Park, and Warout Park. |
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The move to Enlargement directorate was a consequence of the advancement of the Stabilisation and Association process. |
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In consequence of its association with the British aristocracy and military, tartan developed an air of dignity and exclusivity. |
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As a consequence Edinburgh Reivers became simply Edinburgh Rugby and Glasgow became Glasgow Rugby. |
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In consequence, Russia agreed that it would acquire the USSR's seat as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. |
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All electoral systems have thresholds, either formally defined or as a mathematical consequence of the parameters of the election. |
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So, the decline in trade between 1929 and 1933 was a consequence of the Depression, not a cause. |
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The Edwardian castles and town walls in Gwynedd were built as a consequence of the wars fought for the control of Wales in the late 13th century. |
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As a consequence, for much of the 20th century, historians regarded these sites as the evolutionary pinnacle of scientific military architecture. |
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Distributed generation from renewable resources is increasing as a consequence of the increased awareness of climate change. |
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As a consequence of its industrial heritage, there are extensive areas of contaminated ground along the shores of the estuary. |
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In consequence, predictions using these constants are less accurate for minuscule samples of atoms. |
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Arctic methane release from permafrost and methane clathrates is an expected consequence and further cause of global warming. |
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In 1799, as a consequence of the Napoleonic Wars in Italy, the Savoy royal family left Turin and took refuge in Cagliari for some fifteen years. |
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As a consequence, the individual islands in the Canary archipelago tend to have distinct microclimates. |
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The mouldboard plough greatly reduced the amount of time needed to prepare a field, and as a consequence, allowed a farmer to work a larger area of land. |
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Runoff can wash out the mineral nitrogen and phosphorus from detritus and in consequence supply the water bodies leading to slow, natural eutrophication. |
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From English Dutch has borrowed words since the middle of the 19th century, as a consequence of the increasing power and influence of Britain and the United States. |
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In consequence, Rome punished her and her daughters by flogging and rape. |
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The flag, created as a consequence of the union of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1800, still remains the flag of the United Kingdom. |
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If the plot or intrigue must be natural, and such as springs from the subject, then the winding up of the plot must be a probable consequence of all that went before. |
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As a consequence, many documents that could reach other European countries included fake dates and faked facts, to mislead any other nation's possible efforts. |
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As a consequence, it ceased to be recognised as common land. |
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The economy was in ruins by 1450, a consequence of the loss of France, piracy in the channel and poor trading relations with the Hanseatic League. |
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In 2009, Shell was the subject of an Amnesty International report into the deterioration of human rights as a consequence of Shell's activities in the Niger Delta. |
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As a consequence Indian languages were changed greatly, with the large scale entry of Persian and its many Arabic loans into the Gujarati lexicon. |
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And the family he exploits takes things pretty hard too, which has the verbal consequence of putting too much weight on the more twittersome lines. |
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As a consequence, a very sophisticated culture developed, with impressive achievements in the arts and architecture, rivaling those of northern Italy. |
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This results in a transient actin network, that naturally accommodates intranetwork flows of the actomyosin dense regions as a consequence of filament unbinding and rebinding. |
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Charlemagne's successor, Louis the Pious, reportedly treated the Saxons more as Alcuin would have wished, and as a consequence they were faithful subjects. |
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As a consequence of the Salamanca campaign, the French were forced to end their long siege of Cadiz and to permanently evacuate the provinces of Andalusia and Asturias. |
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As a consequence, with world technology available to all and progressing at a constant rate, all countries have the same steady state rate of growth. |
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Many of the results listed in this table are the direct consequence of implications concerning the unsolvability or solvability of certain problems. |
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As a consequence, the resulting Gulf Stream is a strong ocean current. |
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As a consequence, silver flowed out of the country and gold flowed in, leading to a situation where Great Britain was effectively on a gold standard. |
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An apparent consequence of the evolution of an absolutely large eye in a relatively small skull is that the eye of the owl has become tubular in shape. |
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His prison sentence was the natural consequence of a life of crime. |
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After a quarter of a century of holding the British at bay, the Dervishes were finally defeated in 1920 as a direct consequence of Britain's new policy of aerial bombardment. |
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The awkward negative operations were a consequence of the SSEM's lack of hardware to perform any arithmetic operations except subtraction and negation. |
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As a consequence, investors that wished to liquidate their interest in the interim could only do this by selling their share to others on the Amsterdam Stock Exchange. |
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A consequence of describing electrons as waveforms is that it is mathematically impossible to simultaneously derive the position and momentum of an electron. |
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As a consequence, for example, within a shell of uniform thickness and density there is no net gravitational acceleration anywhere within the hollow sphere. |
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The lobule margins, furthermore, are arched away from the lobe, with the consequence that the abaxial leaf surface forms the interior lining of the lobule. |
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Another consequence of the Protestant understanding of man is that the believers, in gratitude for their election and redemption in Christ, are to follow God's commandments. |
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He has another rotative scheme to add, which I could have told him of long ago when first invented by William Murdock but I do not think it a matter of much consequence. |
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With the rise of a large commercial slave trade, driven by European needs, enslaving your enemy became less a consequence of war, and more and more a reason to go to war. |
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In consequence, Indians were drawn into government at a local level. |
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As a consequence the army was poorly positioned to adapt quickly. |
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A third consequence of popularization of printing was on the economy. |
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The immediate consequence of the high-wire political manoeuvrings of the past two weeks is that today MPs are returning to a destabilized Parliament. |
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In the Arabic, aorist aspect is the logical consequence of past tense. |
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The only consequence that came of the bill was that Hobbes could never thereafter publish anything in England on subjects relating to human conduct. |
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The Glenrothes Development Corporation were able to use this status to attract a plethora of light industries and modern electronics factories to the town as a consequence. |
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As a consequence Ford eventually lost market share to General Motors, who introduced annual model changes, more accessories and a choice of colors. |
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However, as a consequence the strength of the concrete develops slowly. |
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Unusually for Dickens, as a consequence of his shock, he stopped working, and he and Kate stayed at a little farm on Hampstead Heath for a fortnight. |
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As a consequence of bipedalism, human females have narrower birth canals. |
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One consequence of poor gas flow is hopper sweepage. High gas flow near the bottom of the precipitator and improper baffling can cause gas flow into the hopper area. |
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War, viewed as the most severe consequence of the manifestation of alienation from others, is also a core element of The Wall, and a recurring theme in the band's music. |
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In consequence of their absence, Britain being overcome by foreign nations, the lawful heirs were cast out, till God interposed with his assistance. |
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As a consequence, by the beginning of 1821 he was deep in debt, and in May of that year he was tried and committed to the King's Bench Prison, a debtors prison in Southwark. |
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The railway station, once on the main line of the Cambrian Railways, was closed as a consequence of the 1960s' Beeching Report on British Railways. |
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However, Leeds narrowly failed to qualify for the Champions League in two successive seasons, and as a consequence did not receive enough income to repay the loans. |
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One consequence of the FHLBB's lack of enforcement abilities was the promotion of deregulation and aggressive, expanded lending to forestall insolvency. |
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As a consequence, RAG Aktiengesellschaft, the owner of the two remaining coal mines in Germany, announced it would close all mines by 2018, thus ending coal mining in Germany. |
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It permitted anyone to kill Luther without legal consequence. |
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These formulas are a direct consequence of the law of cosines. |
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However, the industrial revolution largely bypassed Dorset which lacked coal resources and as a consequence the county remained predominantly agricultural. |
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In 1202, Gerald was accused of stirring up the Welsh to rebellion and was put on trial, but the trial came to nothing in consequence of the absence of the principal judges. |
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Food, real food, not nut cutlets then, and not too many women, as a consequence, of this highly individualistic life style. The idea of being a yoghurt knitter had no appeal. |
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As a consequence, the Parliament of Scotland merged with the Parliament of England to form the Parliament of Great Britain, which sat at Westminster in London. |
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At the time when I received the extract I happened to have a slight attack of rheumatism, and, in consequence, I commenced the trial of the gunjah upon myself. |
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Common Brythonic, on the other hand, split into two branches, British and Pritenic as a consequence of the Roman invasion of Britain in the 1st century. |
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In consequence they may prefer to hunt the prey they saw before hatching. |
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The king's financial need contributed to the extension of the role and membership of the English Parliament as taxes were needed to be raised in consequence. |
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As a consequence, Spain increased the issuing of privateering contracts. |
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Other crimes require the act to produce a legally forbidden consequence. |
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This means that in case you have a value statement as a consequence of your reasoning, there must have been at least one value statement among your premises. |
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As a consequence, spoken mutual intelligibility is not reciprocal. |
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In March, most of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force's British infantry and Yeomanry cavalry were sent to the Western Front as a consequence of the Spring Offensive. |
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As a consequence, India became the sixth de facto nuclear weapons state. |
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She came forward, a henhussy in her middle forties, shaped somewhat like a thick Letter S as a consequence of upper frontal stick-out and lower rear protrusion. |
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As a consequence, governments established controls over printers across Europe, requiring them to have official licenses to trade and produce books. |
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As a consequence, many civilians had fled to areas under his control. |
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Most of the mines in the valleys were sunk between the 1850s and 1880s, which, as a consequence, meant they were far smaller than most modern mines. |
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As a consequence, Kolsky Uyezd was abolished and merged into Kemsky Uyezd. |
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They deny that mental states and events actually possess the qualitative properties attributed to them by qualia friends and, as a consequence, they advocate quining qualia. |
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The unfortunate consequence is that document elements cannot be wildcarded because a schema needs to provide a closed list of possible document elements. |
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As a consequence, women's financial security at that time depended on men. |
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