It prettifies revolution, ennobles change, and gives disruption credibility. |
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The demonstration was peaceful and there was minimal disruption to traffic. |
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Dolly took full advantage of the outrageous disruption to vent her bad temper and to express her extreme displeasure in all directions. |
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At least with United Utilities local traders were fully consulted and the work was phased to minimise disruption to business. |
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Meanwhile, dams associated with hydroelectric plants can cause radical disruption of area ecosystems. |
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Travellers face disruption by road and rail this weekend as maintenance and upgrading take place. |
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He said the ratepayer should also benefit in the event of a vehicle breakdown with little disruption to the service. |
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Wary of being kettled, we chose to stay mobile, causing disruption on Oxford St and the surrounding area. |
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Mixed ice is the most dangerous kind of airframe icing due to its weight and disruption to the airflow. |
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A period of post-procedure recumbency is needed to avoid disruption of the arterial puncture site. |
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We will do our level best to resolve this issue and avoid any disruption for our customers. |
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It all points to disruption on rather a large scale and uncertainty at least in the medium term. |
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Keeping in mind the goal of minimizing disruption on the page, analphabetic marks frequently require extra attention. |
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If there is a serious disruption in supply, then those reserves will be tapped. |
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Marksmen using high-powered rifles should shoot gas cylinders damaged by flames to prevent major disruption, according to fire chiefs. |
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Everyone knows what has to be done and how it is to be done with the least civil disruption. |
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Some disruption was expected in the months after the bankruptcy filing as the retailer scrambled to restock its shelves. |
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Reports in early 1985 indicated that menstrual cycle disruption, leukorrhea, and dysmenorrhea had occurred in gas-exposed women. |
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These results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of membrane disruption by antimicrobial peptides. |
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Such mutants have been generated by chemical mutagenesis, gene disruption, and antisense gene silencing. |
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I think that a very important point to stress is that these are weapons of mass disruption rather than mass destruction. |
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A disruption of the distal matrix may cause problems with the deeper layers, resulting in ridging or splitting. |
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If houses were built right next to the youth club, how long before the new owners object to the noise and disruption? |
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The move might seem like nothing more than a disruption, but the director is looking on the bright side. |
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He can only envisage disruption occurring from the lower middle classes, embodied, in the novel, in the figure of Leonard Bast. |
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His speeches could go on for hours and caused great disruption to what were seen to be the sacrosanct ways of Westminster. |
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Hope has been replaced by magical thinking that augurs a second and more terrible level of social disruption and anger not far down the road. |
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Inhibition of cell wall synthesis by penicillin resulted in disruption of the cell wall and lysis of the cell. |
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The scheme's aim is to have essential maintenance work done in the summer holidays, causing the least disruption to classes. |
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Those metonymies repeat some disruption of order that incites the narratable. |
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Rail chiefs warned of major disruption to services on the East Coast main line following the derailment. |
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Radiographs may reveal malleolar fractures, talar dome fractures or disruption of the ankle syndesmosis. |
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For most of this period JNR suffered from overmanning and union disruption, whilst considerable investment had been made in new infrastructure. |
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When and where such a puncture occurs is manifestly incalculable, which is precisely what makes the object capable of such disruption. |
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At the disruption they were obliged to move from the manse to a derelict cottage, to enable them to stay in the parish. |
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It is also forging links with medically oriented areas of developmental biology such as teratology and endocrine disruption. |
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Cars were banned from the park all day in a bid to keep traffic disruption to a minimum. |
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These protests were invariably portrayed by the various governments as selfish or sectionally motivated and as a disruption of patient care. |
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With the benefit of hindsight, we can see that the disruption was permanent. |
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Meanwhile, a dispute which threatened to cause similar disruption in Tralee has been averted. |
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Chronic use of statins has reduced thrombogenicity during PCI-induced plaque disruption and lessened distal embolization of microdebris. |
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Conceivably, the disruption of intrinsic chromatin states by alien DNA insertion could affect genomic stability in myriad ways. |
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Commuters today faced severe disruption following a major blaze at a timber yard. |
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People rearranged meetings, opted to work from home, or got up earlier to beat the rush and so prevented major disruption. |
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Are the border areas more sensitive to any disruption to their own French identity? |
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But the police soon moved them on because they were causing disruption to the flow of traffic. |
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Any major disruption to shipping and air traffic can and will leave us without a supply of food. |
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The disruption of peaceful protests in Genoa by a few mindless thugs acting in the name of anarchy should concern us all. |
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As a result, the council has decided to shelve plans for the e-voting trial in case it caused any disruption. |
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Instead, a year of planning has gone into ensuring the absolute minimal amount of disruption to traffic while the work has been in progress. |
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Change is minimised where possible, to allow for as little disruption to the practice as possible. |
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It's a thought that's particularly popular among those who are shielded from the risks that disruption always brings. |
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She said there were still many food shortages because of the disruption to supplies. |
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He also finds that war is a triggering influence on inflation, political disorder, social conflict and economic disruption. |
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We don't want to cause disruption to the public but we are short-staffed and our pay rise wasn't good and people are upset. |
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Anything to generate more trade is positive but it depends how much disruption there is. |
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Some residents are concerned that new bus stops being sited outside their homes will bring noise and disruption. |
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All its talk of expansion will inevitably be bogged down in bureaucratic delay, and the building will itself cause disruption. |
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There was traffic disruption after bomb disposal experts were called out to remove an unexploded mortar shell found dumped in a ditch. |
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It has been an added bonus that the new building could be done without disruption to the pupils' education. |
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Can the director explain why demolished properties will be subject to unjustified disruption? |
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I have found ways to minimize the damage and disruption that my periods of gloom and nameless grief can cause. |
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It strikes me that you could argue that podcasting now represents a potential bottom-up disruption in the same market. |
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Light seismic frames brace the existing concrete structure with minimal disruption of the original space or the soil below. |
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He said disputes and votes being called on the order of business were causing needless disruption. |
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A small disruption between entoconid and entostylid can be observed in almost all of the unworn specimens. |
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This suggests that the disruption observed is specific to the urochordate lineage. |
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Depression, anxiety, and disruption of social support networks have been associated with menstrual pain. |
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Yes, the logistics of accommodating and transporting the world's best athletes for nigh on a month will mean disruption on a massive scale. |
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To those working on the night shift, this cold feeling should be considered a warning sign of extreme circadian disruption. |
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But as with all space weather, satellites and communication systems will be at risk of disruption or damage. |
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This can be because of the material itself or due to disruption of the villous structure of the small intestine. |
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Therefore, if vitellin and CMP synthesis are under similar hormonal control, CMP expression may serve as a biomarker of endocrine disruption. |
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But she added that building work on the new bus station would cause some disruption in the town centre. |
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Ependymal disruption with glial nodules was noted in the ventricular system. |
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Commuters face more disruption following Midland Mainlines decision to stop one of its trains calling at Bedford. |
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He won 76 caps and scored 30 goals, despite the disruption caused to the game by the 2nd world war. |
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Improvements in electricity and water supply have been offset by disruption caused by sabotage. |
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Dietary change is achieved by a series of small stepwise changes rather than a major disruption. |
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We are all heartily sick of the noise and disruption these fireworks cause. |
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Moreover, the railroads could not be insulated from the serious disruption of heavy industry, a primary customer sector. |
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Wong said there was no chaos during the disruption of service and passengers were orderly. |
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Not a breath, not hint of the idea that the Republican chair of the meeting was doing the disruption! |
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Construction of subways or overbridges for foot traffic will reduce disruption of traffic. |
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They thrive on disruption and chaos, and seek to complicate any chance for a negotiated solution. |
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The massive disruption estimated by the illegal Maori hikoi turned out to be adequately managed by the police. |
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Dissent information pamphlets were available, describing successful disruption tactics used at previous summits and other government meetings. |
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They said there was minimal disruption, although holidaymakers faced much longer baggage check queues. |
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The main step in the pathogenesis of actinomycosis is disruption of the mucosal membrane leading to suppuration and abscess formation. |
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Chapter Four opens with the choir depleted by major disruption caused by military call-up of choirmen. |
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Perhaps, too, this is symbolic of a psychological disruption as Warhol the man attempts to reclaim himself from Warhol the legend. |
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Proteases are a class of hydrolytic enzymes mediating irreversible disruption of protein amide bonds. |
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Snow storms and gale-force winds caused disruption across Greece yesterday, forcing road closures and shutting down ferry services. |
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Because of the fragmentation of nuclei and the disruption of cellular membranes, coarse granular particles are formed. |
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A report from the Chartered Management Institute reveals businesses in London are ill-prepared to cope with disaster and disruption. |
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In her mind, then, the pledge's permissibility hinged on the social disruption or political tumult it might or might not cause. |
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This disruption to farming in Zimbabwe, once the breadbasket of Southern Africa, comes as millions of people in the region face famine. |
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The company's pitch looks promising, but in an industry full of fast followers and riddled with digital disruption, its future remains uncertain. |
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Residents in the area are also annoyed at the disruption being caused by what they consider to be inconsiderate motorists. |
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We've seen serious increases in levels of indiscipline, from low-level disruption and verbal abuse to physical assaults on teachers. |
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They have cited the disruption and policing costs that will result from the inevitable protests. |
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The area of high-magnitude electric field causes disruption of cellular membranes and leads to a loss of cell viability and infectiveness. |
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Both proved fertile forums for disruption within the party, and neither was very effective organizationally. |
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Brecciated ironstone is derived from the disruption of banded ironstone with which it is intercalated. |
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The limiting surface is capable of interferingly engaging at least a portion of the disruption to limit travel of the threaded screw. |
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Contractors pledge that disruption will be kept to a minimum, following widespread complaints during the last excavation. |
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Decision-makers and public opinion in the interwar period yearned for stability and an end to war-induced disruption. |
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The emergent event is an unexpected disruption of continuity, an inhibition of passage. |
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The burst of gamma rays and X-rays even disturbed the Earth's ionosphere, causing a sudden disruption in some radio communications. |
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But any short-term hiccups pale in comparison to the runaway freight train of disruption that is the sharing economy. |
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Pollen tube growth is arrested by a cascade of events associated with an increase in cytosolic calcium and a disruption of the cytoskeleton. |
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Lorries advertising this and that Irish product or activity were slowly easing themselves into their places, causing disruption to the traffic. |
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It is to be expected that the invasion and conquest of these tribes will have caused severe disruption to the upper echelons of society. |
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Reproductive isolation is often caused by the disruption of genic interactions that evolve in geographically separate populations. |
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Using boot from SAN capability, the servers can be deployed or decommissioned with no disruption to applications. |
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In no case could disruption of the glial surface of the optic disc or other evidence of posterior vitreous displacement be identified. |
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This brief disruption of the pitch is a sign of some kind of glottal stricture, short of a full glottal stop. |
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Since it is above ground level, there will be minimal traffic disruption, land acquisition and demolitions. |
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The disruption caused to the hall, added to the cost of replacing the windows has left local people in despair. |
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The government's measures have provoked other forms of disruption, such as go-slows by lorries on motorways and major city roads. |
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Griefers enjoy making mischief in virtual worlds by causing disruption for its own sake. |
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Without electromagnetically hardened equipment, everything from transportation to information is subject to disruption. |
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But the emergent event presents itself as discontinuous, as a disruption without conditions. |
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This could have led to disruption of a turn, and thus disrupting global structure. |
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Farmers are subject to major disruption and families can suffer serious distress and financial loss. |
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If confronted with a disturbance or disruption, simply cover the cage with the blanket to give the bird a feeling of security. |
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Amidst the donkey work, disruption and bills, I was thinking about his suggestion that he might build new nuclear power plants. |
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A computed tomographic scan of the chest showed an expansile, septated, lytic bone lesion with cortical disruption. |
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All three types of subadventitial aortic disruption are at high risk for exsanguination and should be managed with emergent surgery. |
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Flavonoids have diverse toxic effects including disruption of cellular respiration, inhibition of enzyme function, and interference with reproduction. |
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She is taut with prettiness, and when she smiles, I am sure I can hear her jaw click, protesting the disruption. |
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Travellers flying to Orkney for the festive season should face no disruption at Aberdeen Airport, despite the threat of a baggage handlers' strike. |
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To measure the vulnerability of a country to concessional lending disruption, we will first measure the volume of financial benefit from borrowing at concessional rates. |
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However, rather than engage in hasty strike action SIPTU is expected to use the threat of disruption as a bargaining chip in forthcoming restructuring negotiations. |
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On its disruption in 1884 he became head of the seceders, who organized themselves as the Socialist League, and was to lecture and write for the cause with great energy. |
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A local farmer, who asked not to be named, said he lived within a third of a mile of one of the turbines, but it caused little disruption to his life. |
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As we become more reliant on the net to communicate, our civil defence strategy needs to invest far more in technology to counter such potential disruption. |
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Humpback recovery looks strong, but threats such as boat traffic, entanglement in fishing gear, sonar noise, and disruption of habitat and food supply remain. |
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Starting with disruption of traffic, the rain dislocates the people. |
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Systematic disruption of meiotically induced genes and analysis of the resulting sporulation phenotypes has uncovered many genes involved in various aspects of sporulation. |
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He organised Tai chi into 12 forms called Chi disruption forms. |
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Major roads were blocked off, threatening huge traffic disruption. |
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Ministers fear fuel supplies are on the verge of widespread disruption and have drawn up plans to deploy troops to guard refineries and introduce petrol rationing. |
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Trains are terminated here in times of disruption and trackwork. |
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Capital expenditure such as new plant or IT investment should be re-evaluated to assess whether it can be deferred without any serious business disruption. |
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Because of the subsequent geomagnetic disruption, satellite television, mobile phone reception and even pigeon racing could be adversely affected. |
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As mentioned earlier, many companies depend upon tape backup for business continuance while neglecting the impact on recovery, should there be a regional disruption. |
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The Connecting the City team has carefully planned the routes to ensure they are the shortest and safest possible and cause the minimum of disruption. |
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Despite criticism that commuters will face widespread public transport disruption during the marches, bus and rail workers are planning a complete stoppage. |
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Today, where possible, all pipes are laid either using a mole plough or a thrust mole, both of which dramatically reduce ground surface disruption. |
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California dramatically reduced power consumption over just a few weeks and prevented rolling blackouts and the economic disruption they would have entailed. |
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Thousands of drivers, signallers and maintenance workers walked out from 6.30 pm yesterday causing the worst travel disruption in the capital for two years. |
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The city was often loath to change companies, in part because it feared the disruption that canceling their routes might cause. |
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One of the defining characteristics of a Medean extinction is the disruption of the carbon cycle. |
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Worse, disruption of melatonin can contribute to obesity and cardiovascular disease as well. |
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It is clear that within the constraints imposed on them, the design team has done everything to ensure that community disruption is abated as much as possible. |
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Just as there are real rules why global climate disruption is likely causing more floods than usual. |
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It is wanton and pointless vandalism which has caused a lot of disruption to the school, but also those who carry out such attacks are putting their own safety at risk. |
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The practice of extracting payments from natural resource companies by threats of disruption and violence will continue. |
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He said there were contingency plans in place to make sure Post Office services and mail collections and deliveries would face minimal disruption. |
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Commuters travelling on London Underground services last night were facing further disruption in the wake of the terror attacks and security scares. |
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Next, I determined whether the literature distribution is different across different key word descriptors describing environmental endocrine disruption. |
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In future, these businesses could lose big customers if they failed to prove they had appropriate plans to minimise disruption and ensure customer orders could be delivered. |
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And are we expected to believe that when these sleeping policemen are being placed on the road the very same people will not complain at the disruption caused? |
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When you think of the disruption at the Canadian and Mexican borders, not being able to get airfreight into the country, what these guys did was just incredible. |
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Similar inundations were a regular occurrence back then, bringing the added risk of starvation to survivors due to the disruption caused to agriculture. |
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Excerpted from Moneyball for Government, published by disruption Books, and reprinted with permission. |
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Some are genuinely aggrieved by the disruption caused to the transport system. |
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The disruption Machine Jill Lepore, The New Yorker What the gospel of innovation gets wrong. |
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Electricity has remained as before, but a disruption of water services was reported Sunday. |
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They propose bookending the movie with scenes of another character in whose imagination all of the violence and disruption of social order take place. |
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With freedom comes responsibility and the kind of disruption that currently has the recording, and to a lesser extent, film industries in such a lather. |
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Trains, planes, schools, even opera houses faced disruption yesterday as millions of Italians went on strike to protest reforms of the pensions system. |
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Protesters are planning two days of disruption this week to blockade roads, oil refineries and petrol depots unless the government gives in to their demand to cut fuel duty. |
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Eurostar has even switched from Anglo-French crews to all-British staff to avoid disruption in case French SNCF workers decide to down tools on Tuesday and Wednesday. |
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Mobilization is relatively simple, and, because there are no outriggers or other external bracing requirements, the unit can operate with minimal disruption of traffic. |
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In other words, we need people to be civil to each other if social life is to function efficiently and with a minimum of unnecessary conflict and disruption. |
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Severe weather caused disruption to travel and sporting fixtures yesterday as the New Year got off to a damp start and forecasters predicted no let-up for the next 24 hours. |
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Some of the nodules were located in the submucosa beneath areas of mucosal ulceration, but did not show communication with or disruption of the mucosa. |
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Before the new equipment at Slade Lane is commissioned at Christmas, there will be more weekend closures later in the year to finish it, meaning further disruption. |
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The reason behind this is that salt effectively dehydrates the polymer by disruption of hydrogen bonding with water, similar to the effect of increasing temperatures. |
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Most likely galt heard Willie Anschutz rattling the bathroom door, a disruption that doubtless would have tried his concentration. |
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The use of laser for the disruption of ureteric stones is also being used. |
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We are particularly aware of the need to cause as little disruption to the community as possible and would have wished to use local car parks as assembly points. |
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Though currently only dealing with a week's suspension, they may be charged with aggravated vandalism, breaking and entering and causing a disruption to public services. |
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Damage was also caused to the hotel's jetty while several trees in the grounds were felled by the strong winds, although there was not disruption to the electricity supply. |
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Energy bosses have publicly apologised for the disruption to power supplies caused following an explosion at the main electricity substation in Witham. |
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The work has caused a great deal of disruption and the closing off of the traffic lights in the centre has meant long tailbacks on all the roads into the town. |
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New disruption tactics have seen regulators used to strip the frontmen of organised crime of their licences to carry out MOTs or operate in the sector. |
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When an organisation is granted the authority to dig the road and erect lights, is there not also a requirement to ensure disruption is minimised? |
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After training, the degree to which a skill has been automatized has been measured using the disruption that occurs when targets and distractors are changed. |
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Other etiologies of groin pain include sports hernia, groin disruption, iliopsoas bursitis, stress fractures, avulsion fractures, nerve compression and snapping hip syndrome. |
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The Naval Postgraduate School has defined cyberterrorism as the unlawful destruction or disruption of digital property to intimidate or coerce people. |
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However, faced with the disruption we have tried three different route variations to get around the roadworks and to keep the buses running on time. |
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Pupils who are able to turn up for lessons face disruption as stand-in teachers are drafted in to provide cover for staff members who are not able to start work. |
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The scaphoid and hamate are the most common bones to have nonunion after a fracture because their blood supplies are delicate and prone to complete disruption. |
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Because of weather disruption the format of the 2010 contest was altered and it was extended to a fourth day. |
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After the destruction of Plymouth and disruption of the economy, more than half of the population left the island, which also lacked housing. |
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This can lead to widespread disruption across the network and potentially a huge loss in revenue. |
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According to Network Rail, these options would cause massive disruption to passengers for limited improvement. |
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No census was taken in 1921 due to the disruption of the Irish War of Independence. |
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On the outbreak of war in September 1939 the BBC put into effect its contingency plans to minimise disruption of broadcasting. |
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This caused considerable disruption to the train traffic since the railway station did not have capacity for such checks. |
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The resultant cloud of volcanic ash brought major disruption to air travel across Europe. |
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Their disruption of parliament in October led to a renewal of hostilities, which saw the royalists able to trap Simon in London. |
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This decline has been attributed to disruption by grazing and burrowing animals. |
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On 16 June 2016, a Class 165 diesel multiple unit 165 124 was derailed near the station, causing significant disruption to services. |
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More generally, the loss or disruption to tern colonies caused by human activities has caused declines in many species. |
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The work caused problems for local fishermen who asked the Greater Gabbard Offshore Wind Farm for a disruption payment. |
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Incessant bombing of Germany's infrastructure and cities caused tremendous casualties and disruption. |
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It was decided that to minimise financial disruption Reichsmarks would continue in circulation until they could be exchanged for sterling. |
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Concerns have been raised that disruption of ice shelves may result in increased glacial outflow from the continental ice mass. |
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The digital creative process is crying out for innovation and disruption and Ceros provides both. |
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Last autumn's severe disruption in the commercial mortgage-backed securities market is just a memory now. |
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Stability is defined mechanically as resistance to both linear and angular acceleration, or resistance to disruption of equilibrium. |
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There is broad speculation that, without significant changes, mass transit is susceptible to the same type of disruption. |
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A POWER cut caused disruption as homes, businesses and road networks were thrown into difficulties. |
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I urge both parties to resolve the i r d i spute to avoid disruption to passengers and safeguard BA's future. |
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Efficient immunoglobulin gene disruption and targeted replacement in rabbit using zinc finger nucleases. |
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Thus, grasping this stark reality, I am resigned to a certain amount of disruption as my jalopy splutters through no-go Birmingham. |
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Could the real estate owner's bankruptcy or lienholders create a disruption in the conduct of business? |
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Obstructive sleep apnoea is characterized by recurrent sleep disruption and hypoxaemia due to collapse of the upper airway during sleep. |
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On Saturday afternoon, the trustafarians were out in full force, waving placards, making noise, causing disruption. |
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A CT scan then showed the lesion more clearly, a stress fracture of the right trapezoid with no ligament disruption. |
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This Sublative breakthrough technology offers a high dermal impact with low epidermal disruption. |
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While one of the least common mechanisms of antibiotic action, cell membrane disruption is accomplished by the use of the polyenes. |
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These jump cuts are a disruption of the natural flow of the shot and acknowledge that the shot has been manipulated by the film-maker. |
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Major duct disruption may best be treated with early distal pancreatectomy. |
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They had kind of a ringer girl come in and cause a disruption. |
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Displaced acromioclavicular separations involve disruption of the acromioclavicular ligaments and the coracoclavicular ligament complex. |
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For Mannheim, generations were born from historical disruption. |
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Capacity and performance are incrementally scaled, without application disruption. |
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Further, PD participants completed the experimental trials without incident or other disruption, such as festination or freezing. |
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The incus is the ossicle most susceptible to disruption as it has less ligamentous support than the malleus and stapes. |
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The Ilizarov alignment apparatus gradually corrects deformities, with osteoclasis of the long bone and minimal disruption of the periosteum. |
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An anterior osteotomy was made with a 701 fissure bur and completed with fine osteotomes to avoid disruption of the lingual mucosa. |
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The results indicate that any disruption in supplies of REM would have a critical negative impact on the industry. |
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Succeeding in business today is difficult enough without having to cope with disruption and losses due to cybercriminal activity. |
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It was a campaign of disruption, conceived and conducted along classic, Clausewitzian lines. |
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Snowfall occurs occasionally and can cause travel disruption when this happens. |
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Archaeologists suspect that a serious disruption of the tin trade precipitated the transition. |
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There was widespread disruption throughout the western Hallstatt zone, and the salt workings had by then become very deep. |
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In December 2015 the flooding was more extensive and caused major disruption. |
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The fears of terrorism received an extra boost from the disruption of communications and news as facilities were devoured by the fire. |
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They turned to systematic disruption of Liberal Party meetings as well as physical violence in terms of damaging public buildings and arson. |
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The British government grew anxious about the delays and disruption of supplies during the month. |
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This service operates on the Luton to Dunstable Busway which minimizes traffic disruption to its journey times. |
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Rochester's interest was in inversion, disruption, and the superiority of wit as much as it was in hedonism. |
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In spite of dirt and disruption the collections grew, outpacing the new building. |
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Epidemic diseases and famine caused major disruption and demographic changes. |
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In Riede's view the decline was a result from the disruption caused by the Laacher See volcano. |
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Many slaves used the very disruption of war to escape their plantations and fade into cities or woods. |
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Future environmental impact studies should address the impact on disruption and release of methane clathrate deposits in the deep oceans. |
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These changes greatly increased the number of casualties and the disruption of Greek society. |
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In some cases, the vessel can remain underway with little disruption to its original purpose and crew. |
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This disruption to trade led to a dramatic decline in the importance of these cities and the resulting animosity reduced trade considerably. |
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Horses can also be used in areas where it is necessary to avoid vehicular disruption to delicate soil, such as nature reserves. |
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And that willingness could itself threaten to substitute disruption, confusion, and uncertainty for necessary legal stability. |
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Most Chinese mines are deep underground and do not produce the surface disruption typical of strip mines. |
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Sabotage is a deliberate action aimed at weakening a polity or corporation through subversion, obstruction, disruption or destruction. |
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The noise of the whizzing machine might disturb the calm of my stoveside reverie, but the satin texture makes the disruption worthwhile. |
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Immunohistologic demonstration of endothelial disruption in acute atherosis in pre-eclampsia. |
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Then, the wet cell biomass was transferred into 50 mL falcon tubes for the cell disruption method. |
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The disruption from the work to rule in the CRB could be made worse if members back a programme of national pay strikes later this week. |
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To minimise disruption to passengers, affected bus services will operate from nearby bus stops. |
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Pubic diastasis, localized pubic rami fractures, or more complex pelvic fractures may be associated with urethral disruption. |
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It is a sort of disruption in the normal physiological process of peritoneal healing. |
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Alteration of reproductive function but not prenatal sexual development after insertional disruption of the mouse estrogen receptor gene. |
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Supporters of this hypothesis hold that any of these events could lead to a large scale disruption of the dynamo, effectively turning off the geomagnetic field. |
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The wider effects of the eruption were limited, amounting to several years of cold summers and up to two decades of environmental disruption in Germany. |
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The study suggests that anorexia could be caused in part by a disruption in the normal processing of cholesterol, which may disrupt mood and eating behaviour. |
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An indef seems the only way to stem the flow of disruption from this user. |
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I refer to your letter of the 16th inst. in regard to traffic disruption. |
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Aside from toxic effects, when ingested some of these affect animal brain cells similarly to estradiol, causing hormone disruption in the affected wildlife. |
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The situation in Malaysia's Kelantan state continued to remain critical too, particularly in five districts, following the disruption caused by floods. |
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The research design focused in detail on one or two disputes in each case study country in order to draw out the possibilities for routinising disruption. |
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This act has been cited as the end of the Western Roman Empire, although Romulus' deposition did not cause any significant disruption at the time. |
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Rodney Priestley was certain he would pursue a career in marine biology, or perhaps, become a geologist, exploring the behaviors of volcanic disruption. |
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Both the mission system and the presidios had collapsed after the Spanish withdrew from the colony, causing great disruption especially in Alta California and New Mexico. |
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The disruption of circadian rhythms has been linked to many pathological conditions, including sleep disorders, depression, metabolic syndrome and cancer. |
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Countries beyond the war zones were also affected by the disruption of international trade, finance and diplomatic pressures from the belligerents. |
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Then the anterior body line should be assessed, any disruption indicating a listhesis or forward slip of the column suggesting a dislocation or fracture. |
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Flooding has previously caused much damage and disruption to the Wharfage, which accommodates both The Swan and White Hart pubs, and various private homes. |
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Amy Jetton as I investigated endocrine disruption in the domestic chicken. |
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The literal navigation of terrains results in disruption and inconstance. |
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It happens in areas where there has been much geological disruption. |
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Widespread profiteering took place, but commerce also suffered great disruption because of the conflict and because of the ensuing financial instability in Europe. |
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A sixth reason cited against allowing women in combat is that the presence of women will lead to sexual fraternization and disruption of discipline. |
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There were stories about pampas grass, tamarisk, Cape ivy, arundo grass, pepperweed, iceplant, and cheat-grass, all involving relationships in the process of disruption. |
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The agitators, under the banner of Zamin Adhigrahan Andolan Samittee, squatted on rail tracks at Bodaki leading to the disruption of rail traffic. |
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Although heat-induced germination is associated with disruption of the testa allowing imbibition, exposure to smoke has no influence on this process. |
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The laborists profession offers obstetricians predictable and limited work hours, while reducing disruption of their office and operating room schedules. |
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The finest period of the style was brought to an end by the disruption to monastic centres and aristocratic life of the Viking raids which began in the late 8th century. |
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We did not suture the ear because of the large defect, and this avoided disruption of the temporomandibular joint and allowed the patient to chew without discomfort. |
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Anti-social behaviour, bullying and disruption in schools, the list goes on, has been brought about by all these do-gooders from the past and present. |
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Artistic director Garrett Ammon chose to remount his evening-length ballet Intersection, about the disruption of suburban life after a boy disappears, for the season opener. |
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Though Fitzhugh tried to naturalize the Reformation by characterizing it as gradualistic, he deplored the social disruption and destruction that was its heritage in Europe. |
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Te Hikoi ki Waitangi march and disruption of Waitangi Day celebrations. |
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Another concern expressed by some opponents to the sand mine is the threat of Valley Fever, a fungal infection that can spread with the disruption of the soil. |
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In the first study, scientists have discovered that one major consequence of the C9orf72 gene mutation is disruption of RNA export from the cell nucleus. |
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