Segmenting the business into three distinct entities should make it more attractive to buyers. |
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What makes this place distinct is the spirit of community, the friendliness, the helpfulness. |
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While I'm chewing away on this bread I noticed a distinct crunchiness that's not usually expected with breadsticks. |
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There are only fourteen distinct types of Bravais lattices, and these are associated with seven crystal systems. |
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Kant warned that enjoyment of beauty was distinct from other sorts of pleasure. |
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Is that not what is what is happening, as distinct from what is being said to happen? |
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Do you have any objection to being named by your name, as distinct from by an initial? |
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How far have its actions, as distinct from its example, contributed to that end? |
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Indeed, why should there be a history of science distinct from the history of thought and action? |
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Further, this third genus is manifestly different and distinct from the second. |
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It's interesting that there are two very distinct schools of thought on how milk should be frothed. |
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I felt a distinct, self-inflicted pressure to cover the requisite curriculum material. |
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Each molar has three distinct cusps that interlock when their jaw is closed, forming a sieve for straining krill from the water. |
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Are there really two distinct things operating in Medea, her plans and her furious anger? |
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The thick bark is dark gray and deeply furrowed, breaking into distinct ridges. |
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The Anglo-Saxon futhorc used by Tolkien has 31 distinct characters, some of which have variants. |
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Thus, pelagic and early demersal growth appear to represent distinct stanzas in the growth history of these gadoids. |
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Changes in cytoarchitectonics are accompanied by a distinct rearrangement of radial glial fibers. |
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Eosinophils in vitro exhibited different stages of apoptosis, ending with secondary necrosis distinct from in vivo eosinophil cytolysis. |
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This pragmatistic theory of inquiry embraces a distinct conception of truth. |
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The ecclesiastical structures of the churches in the four nations of Great Britain were in important respects distinct. |
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Three Indian cultures lived in pre-Columbian Nicaragua, each living in a distinct region and speaking an indigenous tongue. |
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Each logic gate inside a cell must have a distinct repressor assigned to it, or else the gates would interfere with one another. |
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I got the distinct impression that I was pretty much gatecrashing my own birthday party. |
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The removal is capable of being a distinct operation separate from the winning and working of minerals. |
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The mantle and the core are thought to have entirely separate and distinct convective regimes. |
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We're both nonsmokers, and there was a very distinct smell of cigars about Henri Paul. |
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Burkhard prints his own work and the end result is somewhat grainy with a distinct sense of texture. |
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And then he caught the distinct smell of a rabbit, and made for the gate, oblivious to the fact that the trail was old. |
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The distinct smell of alcohol mixed with perfume made Sol's nostrils flare angrily. |
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She pulled her blanket to her chin, wrinkling her nose at its distinct mildew smell, then yanking it down to her feet. |
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I have none of these means to produce scent, but it doesn't mean we are without distinct smell. |
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He became first a wavering outline which then solidified, then became more distinct. |
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I could smell her distinct perfume, my lungs feeling renewed with a part of heaven. |
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Despite snow on the ground, leafless trees and the distinct absence of birdsong one can sense a seasonal change. |
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The boy smiled toothily, smelling the distinct aroma that is victory and raised his hand again to strike. |
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His nostrils were filled abruptly with the distinct smell of smoke and burning food. |
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My immediate concern was to get everyone out of the van because there was a distinct smell of smoke. |
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Traces, not scents, but more like colors he could smell in his head, each distinct and unique. |
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She could never get used to the distinct smell of the hospital and wondered if the nurses felt the same way. |
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The burned parts of the etumbu also have a sharp and distinct smell which attracts fish to the trap. |
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He walked up to the front door and suddenly began to notice a distinct, ranking smell. |
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Others give the distinct impression that they no longer fancy being associated with failure. |
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It was a film where no room was left for the viewer to interpret their own meanings, in distinct contrast to the novel. |
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In the past couple of years, there has been the distinct sense that the genre of Americana is reaching critical mass. |
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I had the distinct sense that she was an authority we were trying to impress. |
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His clothes were wrinkled and I had the distinct impression he slept in them. |
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The tense atmosphere outside is in distinct contrast with the excitement of the audience inside. |
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However, those who oppose such separate schooling demonstrate a distinct lack of understanding of this issue. |
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I have heard nor seen no sign of such feeling, though I can sense distinct undercurrents of change in the public demeanor. |
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Influenced by scare stories about an imminent invasion, over-reaction is a distinct possibility. |
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The problem with using intent with respect to terrorism is the very distinct possibility of never determining anyone's intent. |
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I was also pleased by the distinct lack of annoyingly goofy, stupid characters. |
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Using the traditional means of extending religious influence leaves us at a distinct disadvantage. |
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It has now become a distinct possibility that all spaces in the assigned lots would be taken. |
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The process has very distinct advantages over chill casting when quantities are sufficient to warrant this production. |
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One distinct advantage that Streisand had was William Wyler as her director on the film. |
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Attitudes like that show a distinct lack of maturity when it comes to nationhood. |
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And in doing so there's a distinct possibility that deadly force will have to be used. |
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Some geminates, however, are clearly more morphologically distinct than others are. |
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It reflects faithfully the promises in the official letter of reply, as distinct from the press release. |
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The source of ruling-class opposition was a distinct sector of the class, the landed gentry, and was perfectly rational in basis. |
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There are two distinct new economic geographies in the Anglo-American literature. |
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Viewers are repeatedly given indications that there is one, distinct meaning lying behind each image, yet this is a cleverly deceitful ploy. |
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He had the distinct prickly sensation on the back of his neck that usually meant he was being watched. |
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While there are some very decided similarities, there are some very distinct differences as well. |
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The cloth is printed with a mix of ethnically distinct Papuan motifs, usually in bright colours. |
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These weekly recitals are linked by a common aim to show a range of styles belonging to a distinct and separate lineage or gharana. |
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The male hooded merganser, with his distinct gibbous moon crest, demands immediate attention. |
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One key to shoulder training is to think of your front, side and rear deltoids as distinct muscles. |
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Here we present a noninvasive method for precisely demarcating the hormonally distinct phases of the menstrual cycle. |
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Prostaglandins, especially prostacyclin, are secreted in all veins and have a distinct antiplatelet-aggregating property. |
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Archean and most Proterozoic sedimentary rocks are notable for their distinct lack of any bioturbated textures. |
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Lateral, posterior and anterior processes are provided with fairly distinct denticulation. |
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However, there is a distinct possibility that I am slightly deranged, so it could just be me that looks at life that way. |
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With a sufficient number of distinct line-cross derivates, increasingly complicated models of gene interaction can be tested. |
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There is the potential to grow rapidly, and if you do, getting bought out or going public are distinct possibilities. |
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The combined isotopic data suggest derivation of the sediments from at least three distinct crustal source regions. |
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These data indicate that submicrosecond pulses achieve temporally distinct effects on living cells compared to microsecond pulses. |
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Rather than simply punching a straight hole down the center of the tube, the machines three distinct internal bore profiles. |
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Almost every culture eventually developed distinct conventions, from the fiery curries of India to paprika-permeated goulash in Hungary. |
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However, not everyone knows there are two categories of shot, with two distinct size gradations. |
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Of course, each one of these hopeful developments has its own origins and dynamics, distinct from the Iraq war. |
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This shield is distinct in scale, materials, and technique from the other heraldic devices in this window. |
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More than 3,000 species of mosquitoes are present on our planet, each occupying a distinct ecological niche. |
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As the name implies the rust pustules appear as distinct yellow-orange stripes on the leaves. |
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The stamens are 6 in number and diadelphous or frequently distinct and numerous. |
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Geographically isolated populations often have evolved into distinct ecotypes that differ in morphological, life history, or behavioral traits. |
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Specimens showing a distinct recognizable set of diagnostic features were defined as morphotypes and documented photographically. |
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A mathematical theorem about diagonals of rectangles might mention two equal and similar triangles which are, nonetheless, distinct. |
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This baking process acts on the grape sugar and gives the Sherry its distinct flavor. |
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Granted, they do have a distinct sound, a wide array of musical sounds and edgy lyrics. |
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But Isabella was intuitively convinced of a distinct lack of life within the ancient stone edifice. |
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Subclinical hyperthyroidism may be a distinct clinical entity, related only in part to Graves' disease or multinodular goiter. |
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The old dichotomies between current and non-current, custody and non-custody, and even records and archives may be distinct relics of the past. |
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In other words, only an effete man with a distinct lack of self-esteem and character would enter into such an arrangement. |
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It egests distinct fecal pellets that are long rods and are placed, by the worm, in a pile on the sediment surface. |
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The Great Pyrenees dog conveys the distinct impression of elegance and unsurpassed beauty combined with great overall size and majesty. |
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It is clear that this genus is different and distinct from the two preceding ones. |
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There was a distinct groan as the hinges protested and a loud bang as the doors swung fully open. |
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In the spring and early summer, the additional hazard of icebergs and growlers were often a distinct possibility. |
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You use very distinct and textured musical scores that seem to emanate from the actual source. |
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For gueuze, the base lambic is blended to make a distinct, wine-like drink that is traditionally served with the meal. |
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Her feline sensitive ears could discern a distinct cry coming from each man's mouth. |
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The carrot's flavour was discernible, but quite distinct from that in a savoury dish. |
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A distinct pattern is beginning to emerge in the disconnect between the words and deeds of the Administration. |
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All of these may usually be discrete and distinct domains but one key theme of this chapter is that there are also overlaps. |
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Despite these high correlations, the analysis of discriminant validity shows that these are in fact three distinct constructs. |
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From this point forward, Europeans and Americans engaged in artistic endeavors were divided into two increasingly distinct constituencies. |
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This is distinct from dishonesty and misconduct, which should not be tolerated. |
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It is now widely accepted that plants infected with endophytic fungi are often at a distinct advantage at times. |
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Thus the three seed components, embryo, endosperm and seed coat, are genetically distinct. |
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The results show that each head in a crown pair has a distinct structural disposition. |
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With unrelenting precision and distinct overtones of mockery, Tolstoy dissects the notion that men dictate events. |
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Most metallic sulphides are amorphous and disseminated throughout the sinter, instead of forming distinct mineral phases. |
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These two dualities reduce the number of distinct theories from five to three. |
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Losing weight and learning Spanish are separate aims with distinct requirements. |
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It's not like you to belittle legitimate concerns from a distinct ethnocultural space. |
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Each taxon used is morphologically distinct, although the rank of these taxa is in flux. |
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If so, it is a completely separate and distinct issue that has nothing to do with this one. |
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Grape berries exhibit a double sigmoid pattern of development, with two distinct phases of growth separated by a lag phase. |
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But as he splits, she is separating into two quite distinct parts, slipping out of his control. |
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Instead, species that differ in timing of gamete release tend to constitute genetically distinct clades. |
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Thus the nature of plants is quite distinct from the nature of rocks and sand. |
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As sea levels rose and the northern Channel Islands separated, each fox population became genetically distinct. |
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Whilst distinct in terms of research focus, the two projects were theoretically and methodologically similar. |
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This remained physically and functionally distinct and probably remained a separate planning unit. |
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These are two separate, proudly distinct States, and yet both part of what we are happy to call the Union of India. |
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All of this caused a distinct line of separation between sky and sea to appear. |
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In philosophy, individuals are defined as entities that are distinct in space and time. |
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A large center console separates the interior into distinct right and left sections. |
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Two tables are distinct individuals because they occupy distinct portions of space, or of time, or of both. |
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The result of this is a vast landscape of communities which exist quite separately in distinct ethnic and economic worlds. |
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A similar but much less distinct unit separates the middle and upper coccolith limestones. |
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Along the cathedral's long dark side aisles, one encountered six distinct spaces. |
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Notice the full mass on each of these muscles and how each is rock solid with distinct separation. |
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It was also foolish to decide to show the games on three separate and distinct channels. |
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Both groups of companies operate separately and have totally separate and distinct auditors. |
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We use the logical framework provided by this dendrogram to group the SC and MC in functionally distinct clusters. |
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With a grid in place, you roughly break down the garden into distinct spaces. |
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The problem lies with the girls he chooses, as he shows a distinct preference for beautiful, if slightly gawky, younger women who aren't terribly self-confident. |
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Quite the contrary, assimilation and ethnic identification are two distinct poles of a dialectic process of reidentification that involves creative cultural crisscrossing. |
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Arms control and disarmament are distinct from the laws of war. |
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Its posterior margin runs at right angles to the longitudinal axis, before swinging inwards to form distinct genal angles and a genal epimeron on the left-hand side. |
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The genal spine of the very smallest specimens is about as long as the remainder of the cheek, and remains distinct until late in meraspid ontogeny. |
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As you are discovering, that's a distinct disadvantage on the mate market. |
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Here could be the makings of an authoritarian system of rule distinct from, but genetically related to, the nation's previous experience of plebiscitary power. |
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I tried turning the computer back on, only to hear the distinct sound of my hard drive clicking away feebly to itself, a final death rattle, terminal self-harm. |
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You forget that blood has this special, distinct metallic smell to it. |
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The geochronometric data obtained in this investigation elucidate distinct metamorphic and exhumation histories of two Variscan basement units separated by a mere c.50 km. |
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As long as the Lord Chancellor is punctilious in keeping his separate roles distinct, the separation of powers is not undermined and the justice system benefits immeasurably. |
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For example, in dichotic listening tests, subjects hear two distinct streams of information simultaneously through two separate channels of a pair of earphones. |
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The researchers revealed distinct DNA blueprints for each of the 85 varieties of purebreds that were analyzed as well as similarities between certain breeds. |
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In practical terms it will mean that priests will spend their time priesting as distinct from the amalgam of very different duties they now perform. |
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But that is not what makes his work distinct from that of his peers. |
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One of my more distinct recollections of math class involves the decimal representation of rational numbers and the discovery of wonderful patterns among those digits. |
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The development of purified cardiac glycosides, the active principles of digitalis, has been a distinct step forward in the treatment of diseases of the heart. |
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The witness described the object as being disc-like, or perhaps shaped like a cigar, with a distinct bulge on the top, and with several lights along the side. |
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The crucial distinction between a discography and a library or manufacturer's catalogue is the critical selection and organization of its information for a distinct purpose. |
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Hestor can make out Jody and Morgan, who remain distinct in the throng. |
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He goes along with the fooling of Malvolio in deference to his betters, but he gives us the distinct impression that it leaves a nasty taste in his mouth. |
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For instance, during the Pleistocene glaciations, the high altitude areas were probably nearer to distinct kinds of open vegetation, while forests were retracting. |
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He renders poems with pronounced literary value and a distinct aesthetic. |
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A continuous mode produces an uninterrupted beam, whereas the pulsed mode provides rapid quanta of energy delivery with a distinct pause in between. |
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Feel the three distinct heads of each deltoid contract and relax. |
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I get a distinct impression that the money is important here. |
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The concept of diffusionism, however, and the idea of a historical archetype discernible from distinct and different contemporary practices are increasingly distrusted. |
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The morphological differences are genetically determined and it is thus possible that the turlough population is a distinct ecotype adapted to this unusual habitat. |
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We arrive at the sailing club, and there's a distinct smell around. |
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I also argued that recognizing Quebec as a distinct society would give the provincialists the ammunition they need to achieve their ends of dismantling our federation. |
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What marks them out as distinct also separates them from their neighbours. |
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The reasons are manifold but the main ones are poverty and a distinct lack of commitment by governments to ensure that no child is deprived of quality education. |
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He does not interpret these genres as distinct entities, however. |
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The second is that because of that fact you have a distinct disadvantage. |
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