I've seen logo look-alikes in some stores in my mall that are hard pressed to distinguish from the real thing. |
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Many market participants fail to distinguish between the essence of liquidity and marketability. |
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I have never found it necessary to hide that I am able to think logically, that I distinguish sharply between right and wrong terms. |
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He could only plea with them to distinguish between combatants and those innocent civilians who do not bear arms. |
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From the Arian controversy he learned that it was a mistake to distinguish the persons by their attributes. |
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The sound becomes an acrid smog, a dull thudding headache, in which it is well-nigh impossible to distinguish the individual elements. |
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You can distinguish the female of the species by her exposed cleavage and teetering walk. |
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It can, admittedly, be hard to distinguish between being idealistic and being unrealistic. |
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The traditional critical admonishment to distinguish between a writer and his or her work is discarded. |
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The original plan to distinguish restrictive and descriptive adnominal modifications has been abandoned. |
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The writers suggest ways to distinguish which is which in any given congregation. |
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At times kamacite can be found so closely intermixed with taenite that it is difficult to distinguish them visually. |
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Concrete walls are sandblasted to dematerialize the surface and distinguish it from Ando's small modules. |
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As with many Leonard novels, there are no distinctly black or white hats to distinguish the bad guys from the good. |
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I also recall a left that was able to distinguish between conservatives and fascists, between social democrats and outright reactionaries. |
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The keyboard warriors should learn to distinguish between morale and sentimentality. |
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It can be difficult to distinguish akathisia from the agitation that is often present in patients with dementia. |
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It's equally difficult to distinguish wintergreen from camphor, although probably less clinically important. |
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The colour blue was chosen to distinguish the police from the British military, who then wore red and white. |
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It is obvious that the market is still in delicate health, but it is important to distinguish between old scars and new wounds. |
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Sessile colonial invertebrates have the ability to distinguish between their own tissues and those of unrelated members of the same species. |
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One would've imagined that an ability to distinguish ladyboys from genuine ladies is a minimum requirement for modern-day editorial work. |
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Citation and allusion have a long and continuing history as literary practices, yet they are difficult to distinguish from theft. |
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Note that I had to check all the instances of that by hand, to distinguish the demonstratives from the complementizers. |
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The Cambrian Explosion, for example, is the first time we are able to distinguish a chordate from an arthropod. |
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In fact, the lower Hamstead Member is difficult to distinguish from the Bembridgc Marls Member in that both are greyish laminated muds. |
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New Zealand First often finds it difficult to distinguish why and how legal language and terminology can go down that path. |
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Webster wanted to distinguish American English from British English by correcting irregular spellings and eliminating silent letters. |
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Multiple sets of sound correspondences can be used to distinguish loans from inherited words. |
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As a law professor, I help train people to argue from analogy and to distinguish among different cases. |
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We are able to distinguish anatomical margins when two structures of different density abut one another. |
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The spine on the operculum is the best way to identify an angelfish and to distinguish it from similar-looking species, such as butterfly fish. |
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In other words, a telescope must have sufficient resolving power to distinguish individual Cepheids from all the other stars in the galaxy. |
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The city's skyscrapers give the landscape a lumpy appearance, but the instrument's resolving power fails to distinguish individual buildings. |
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Francophones and anglophones had seemingly few grounds to distinguish between the two parties for most of this period. |
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As he progresses, he will also learn to distinguish various musical expressions such as time signature, rests, and tempo. |
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The suit dragged on for years during which the tribes and government did not distinguish themselves by their behavior. |
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It is difficult to distinguish authentic historical information from legends within the accounts given. |
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We use author and poet rather than authoress and poetess, but until fairly recently it was permissible to distinguish persons who act by gender. |
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Reaction with nitrous acid is used to distinguish between primary, secondary, and tertiary amines. |
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Congestion is the watchword by which megalopolitans and contrapolitans distinguish one another. |
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During the 1660s, Robert Boyle discovered that certain plant extracts, such as litmus, can be used to distinguish acids from bases. |
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Care needs to be taken to distinguish between teachers that are misguided and those that are rank heretics who have rejected the faith. |
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The spare condominium complex complements the rugged pasture land and rocky cliffs that distinguish Sea Ranch as a magnificent site. |
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What's more, as I've argued often before, U.S. law generally does not distinguish between declared wars and undeclared wars. |
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They have failed to distinguish between policies that perpetrate dependency and those that promote growth and self-reliance. |
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I could distinguish the remnants of a sesame bagel on his tash, and the sharp stench of old sweat. |
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Separatists see bullfighting as a cultural and ethnic marker to distinguish Catalonia from the rest of Spain. |
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Are sooty mangabeys able to distinguish between vocalizations of familiar individuals and strangers? |
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My mother could distinguish gunshots from a firecracker or a car backfiring. |
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The applicant must show that she has attributes or characteristics which distinguish her from all other persons. |
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Accordingly we distinguish between permanently internal and temporarily associated water molecules. |
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The difficulty is to distinguish between a threat and a warning or mere advice. |
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Some mammals can distinguish between and respond to the alarm calls of other mammal and bird species. |
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External shell sculpturing can also vary from one species to another and can be used to distinguish some taxa. |
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At embryo maturity, X-ray analysis is used to distinguish filled seeds from dead, empty seeds. |
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Histo-localization of tannins could be a marker to distinguish embryogenic from non-embryogenic calli. |
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There is nothing about the citation of a web site through a link that should distinguish between commercial and non-commercial linkers. |
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The black vernacular stylistics that distinguish Madhubuti's poetic career figure prominently. |
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Instead, he asserts that we are in fact so entrenched in ideology that it is difficult to even distinguish its parameters. |
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Some animals, including meerkats, are able to distinguish between close and more distant relatives and non-relatives. |
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The attorney general was seeking to distinguish the outcome so as to narrow the relevance and applicability of the ruling. |
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Many varieties of Chinese, including both Mandarin and Cantonese, do not distinguish voiced and voiceless stops and affricates. |
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They have recently discovered a way to distinguish between human and animal blood. |
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These findings are especially critical because it is important to distinguish fibroadenoma from malignancies. |
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Finsler points out that one needs to distinguish between satisfiable and unsatisfiable circular definitions. |
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He said the public need to distinguish between a one-off caper and persistent anti-social behaviour. |
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These differences in number of segments and function of appendages are used to distinguish between crustacean groups. |
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Even more useful is to be able to distinguish between, say, a hardy perennial rudbeckia and a half hardy annual rudbeckia. |
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Now able to securely exchange intelligence reports, the participating ships were able to distinguish one another on radar. |
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How else can children learn to think for themselves and distinguish right from wrong? |
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Adherents generally do not distinguish between licit and illicit substances, but view all drugs as having potential for doing good or ill. |
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Mothers quickly learn to distinguish a cry of hunger from one of discomfort or frustration and respond appropriately. |
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The term was coined to distinguish it from other kinds of malevolent programs, such as the aforementioned spyware, badware or malware and adware. |
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The characters used to distinguish N. w. immaculatus are negated by the variation in our specimens. |
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A careful history can usually distinguish nerve root compression, especially sciatica due to compression of the lumbosacral root. |
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But as a general rule, it will help distinguish between soda and lead glass. |
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Most live in conditions so abject that there is little to distinguish them from the most wretched chattel slaves of the past. |
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You can't even distinguish between the preterite and participle Germanic ablauts of English. |
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Some interpreters have Aristotle distinguish the sciences on the basis of their degree of abstraction from matter. |
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Bizarrely, only six items describe the unique qualities that distinguish a doctor from other healthcare workers. |
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These seventeenth-century Hirado wares are somewhat difficult to distinguish from Imari wares made at the same time. |
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Every morning I struggle to distinguish between good and junk advertisements or spam mail from normal mail when opening my mailbox. |
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Solid horns, called antlers, distinguish most species in the deer family from the other hoofed mammals. |
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These borders indicate the early acceptance of the idea of a frame as a way to set off, isolate and distinguish a drawing or painting. |
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His wit, sarcasm, and sense of irony are not always easy to distinguish from where he is sincere. |
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At maturity, poison hemlock can be difficult to distinguish from water parsnip and water hemlock. |
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In addition, a cheap sensor cannot distinguish between a water pipe, a structural beam and a power cable. |
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This applies especially to my inability to distinguish between being asleep and being awake. |
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Colours were first used in 1762 to help racegoers distinguish the horses in any given contest. |
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It's often hard to distinguish between real advances, simple improvements on existing technologies, and pure marketing jive. |
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In this regard, it is desirable to test their ability to distinguish between active disease and indolent infection. |
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Employing a live-in servant was particularly important to distinguish the white-collar group, including civil servants, from that of the working class in Belgium. |
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Behind-the-scenes technological differences do not distinguish Aereo's system from cable systems, which do perform publicly. |
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All cholesterol assays measure the total cell cholesterol, so it is not possible to distinguish between plasma membrane cholesterol and intracellular cholesterol. |
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Other notable characteristics include an exceptionally powerful head and neck and unusually long legs, which distinguish them from other terns such as Arctic terns. |
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But I could no longer read, drive, recognise faces or distinguish colours. |
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Predilection for extranodal sites and absence of the Epstein-Barr virus associated with mature NK cell malignancies further distinguish this entity. |
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This is particularly true in cases of blastic myeloid sarcoma, because myeloblasts and lymphoblasts can be difficult to distinguish in routinely stained histologic sections. |
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We distinguish them because we jealously guard the glory of Christ, but we never divide them because the inevitable fruit of a justified life is a sanctified life. |
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It is customary, both in everyday speech and in philosophical discussion, to distinguish between the essential and the accidental properties of objects. |
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And how could we distinguish the small exomoon signal from that of its host planet? |
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Its broad leaves and unpleasant odor, compared to the finely divided leaves and smaller umbels of water hemlock and water parsnip distinguish cow parsnip. |
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The alphabet was created with not only the familiar lettering of English but also with periods, underlines on letters, and apostrophes to distinguish particular sounds. |
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In what hidden universe do black people exist who can actually distinguish a fish knife from a shoe horn? |
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Because of the close proximity of the heart and the esophagus, it is difficult to distinguish chest pain that is caused by problems of the esophagus from true angina pectoris. |
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The trick is, of course, to distinguish between subjective criticism of US government policy and reflexive opposition to anything done by the US anywhere at any time. |
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O'Connell-Rodwell and her colleagues have also begun to study the nuances of elephant signals to distinguish them from the footsteps of rhinoceroses or lions. |
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There is implanted in every rational being the capacity to distinguish the true from the false, to weigh the evidence, and to confront the world without illusions. |
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Further detailed studies are required to distinguish Palaeozoic structures such as thrusts, normal faults and sutures that were reactivated in Mesozoic-Cenozoic time. |
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This merely reformulates the problem, however, since the difficulty then is to distinguish between contracts of service and contracts for services. |
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However, the differences between the crystals make it fairly easy to distinguish each species with a microscope or by careful observation with a loupe. |
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It's important to distinguish between a circumscribed period of hardship that you enter into knowingly and an ongoing environment best suited for masochists. |
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It is often extremely difficult to distinguish individuals or subjects without knowing the kanji characters. |
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The other key point that is beginning to distinguish the company's range is on-the-road ability, where the cars are now routinely trouncing all comers. |
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We might then come to distinguish between genuine contribution to debate and thrawn oppositionalism, all too often confused with an independent spirit. |
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A cluster of women, about six, in their white dresses and wide-brim leghorn hats, were on the lawn by the side of the house but too far away to distinguish individually. |
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While easily discernible in plan, the shift from stack bond to traditionally bonded ashlar is too subtle to distinguish the two forms from the street. |
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In flight, European Starlings can be confused with Purple Martins, but the narrower wings, forked tails, and typical swallow flight of martins distinguish the two. |
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A significant proportion of the EMI students chose Options C and D, indicating that many of them could not distinguish between the effects of short sight and long sight. |
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The fact that it was reweighed at the mill does not in and of itself distinguish sugar from cotton in terms of the possibilities for productivity record keeping. |
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In close-ups you could barely distinguish which body parts were on view. |
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There are no easy ways to screen fake from genuine pastoral care or to distinguish the spiritual agency from the business-oriented, televangelical station. |
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Her poems are notable for a restraint of expression combined with a powerful and passionate content which distinguish her from many of her Georgian contemporaries. |
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Osteological characters, such as the construction of the mandible and articulations of the cervical vertebrae also distinguish the two subfamilies. |
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He coined the term civil engineers to distinguish them from military engineers graduating from the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich. |
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In addition, calcium, zinc, and lead ions all produce white precipitates with carbonate, making it difficult to distinguish between them. |
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A particular army can be named or numbered to distinguish it from military land forces in general. |
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The ratio of hopanes and steranes to elemental carbon can be used to distinguish between emissions of gasoline and diesel engines. |
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Lacking modern resources, the Chinese did not distinguish law from administration even under the Maoists. |
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In general though, Chinese Taoist architecture lacks universal features that distinguish it from other structures. |
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There are also many other characteristics that serve to distinguish the members of these two groups. |
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Manufacturers distinguish their pencils by grading them, but there is no common standard. |
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However, long fiction and fictional biographies began to distinguish themselves from other forms in England during the Restoration period. |
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It is the relative ages of the rock strata that distinguish anticlines from antiforms. |
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It can often be difficult to distinguish an individual's call when a hydrophone is lowered into a chorus of sciaenids. |
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John is difficult to distinguish sometimes because he carries himself so self-effacingly. |
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And few would distinguish between state and federal public servants, tarring them with the same brush of disdain. |
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Your body cannot possibly fight or even distinguish among all it encounters, and the job of triple warmer has become daunting. |
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This allows for any sequencing strategy to simply distinguish between osmylated and unosmylated bases. |
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However, researchers eventually found that the allozyme technique couldn't distinguish between closely related species. |
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In ancient times, a fixed star was so named to distinguish it from a wandering star or planet. |
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We here distinguish clade A from other clades based on the retention of a caulescent habit and moderate floral zygomorphy. |
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The truth is, it is often hard to distinguish between the law abider and the disorderly. |
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Do MRI features distinguish Wilson's disease from other early onset extrapyramidal disorders? |
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Spurr shows how Anglo-Catholic practices and beliefs distinguish Anglo-Catholics from Anglicanism generally. |
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I try to teach how to distinguish eighth notes from triplets, from quarter notes. |
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Thus at a certain point it becomes more difficult to distinguish between Gibson Japanized by Akasegawa and Akasegawa Americanized by Duchamp. |
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It is similarly important to distinguish seminoma from yolk sac tumors because yolk sac tumors, like embryonal carcinoma, are radioresistant. |
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We have our Terrors, and specific images of them, though, as I have remarked, these do not distinguish us essentially from other apocalypticists. |
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Dry humor and shades of grey distinguish this sharp-witted novel of razor's edge suspense, crafted to keep the reader guessing to the very end. |
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Bardsley and Moffatt use data from a unique variation on the VCM to estimate a mixture model to distinguish altruists from reciprocators. |
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New POFs are easily identifiable, but those that have degenerated are difficult to distinguish from atretic follicles. |
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Early in the process of learning to read, this skill area requires the child to be able to distinguish alphabet letterforms. |
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But even if I tried, I'm not sure I could distinguish the still mildly radioactive Trinitite from regular stones. |
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We may here distinguish between two kinds of reality, phenomenal or relative, and noumenal or absolute. |
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His achloropsia meant he could not distinguish light and dark shades of green. |
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We have concluded that Paul does not distinguish between the arthrous and anarthrous use of nomos. |
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Botanists do still distinguish between auxesis or growth by expansion, and merisis or growth by cell-multiplication. |
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They have found it difficult to distinguish clearly, in the exercise of power, between a personal right, and a mere betrustment. |
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He made the basket on his second attempt, after an exchange of moves so blinding fast that Derek could barely distinguish them. |
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We have a criterion to distinguish one bud from another, or the parent bud from the numerous budlets which are its offspring. |
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The mineral chalcopyrite commonly crystallizes in disphenoids that are very difficult to distinguish from tetrahedrons. |
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Ruddick constructs mothering as a genderfree practice under the PCT to distinguish from earlier accounts of mothering. |
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It is all-important to remember that naturalists have no golden rule by which to distinguish species and varieties. |
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In fact, the Germanic tribes are hard to distinguish from the Celts on many accounts simply based on archaeological records. |
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Another frequent application of the term is to distinguish political groups in areas of mixed religious backgrounds. |
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Symbolism was a device to distinguish the main features of the Revolution and ensure public identification and support. |
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Any court may seek to distinguish its present case from that of a binding precedent, in order to reach a different conclusion. |
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This also helped to distinguish between new and old pence amounts during the changeover to the decimal system. |
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Also, if a currency is revalued, the currency code's last letter is changed to distinguish it from the old currency. |
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These oil sands resources are called unconventional oil to distinguish them from oil which can be extracted using traditional oil well methods. |
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Most systems operate several routes, and distinguish them by colors, names, numbering, or a combination thereof. |
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It is important to distinguish innovations from cases of linguistic conservatism. |
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Consistent with this focus, textbooks often distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics. |
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Further, it is quite easy in a longer conversation to distinguish differences in vocabulary and pronunciation of some Urdu phonemes. |
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Similarly, classical pagans would have found it peculiar to distinguish groups by the number of deities followers venerate. |
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This could be a reason why the '9' grade was added in to distinguish between the highest achievers. |
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More often, they worked to distinguish themselves from their European counterparts by depicting uniquely American scenes and landscapes. |
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Scholars now seek to distinguish the true Holbeins by the refinement and quality of the work. |
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Somewhat ironically, the text contains many features that distinguish insular from continental French. |
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They referred to themselves as Janeites in order to distinguish themselves from the masses who did not properly understand her works. |
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Players in these positions are referred to as outfield players, to distinguish them from the goalkeeper. |
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Today it is mainly used to distinguish Tottenham fans from other football supporters. |
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Stress had become a phonological property and could serve to distinguish forms that were otherwise homophones. |
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Such forms were often created even when not strictly needed to distinguish otherwise ambiguous forms. |
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It is used to distinguish whether the country is a developed, a developing or an underdeveloped country. |
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It is important to distinguish between arguments against free trade theory, and free trade agreements as applied. |
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Compass points are used to distinguish constituencies from each other when a more suitable label cannot be found. |
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In the context of Bengali romanization, it is important to distinguish transliteration from transcription. |
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Unlike most Indian languages, Tamil does not distinguish aspirated and unaspirated consonants. |
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The original church became known as the Wesleyan Methodist Church to distinguish it from these bodies. |
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The level of cultural sophistication has also sometimes been seen to distinguish civilizations from less complex societies. |
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Still, the texts do contain discernible variances that distinguish the speech from contemporary Welsh. |
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Achebe's critics argue that he fails to distinguish Marlow's view from Conrad's, which results in very clumsy interpretations of the novella. |
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This form of music is sometimes called contemporary folk music or folk revival music to distinguish it from earlier folk forms. |
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While Locke used this argument to distinguish primary from secondary qualities, Berkeley extends it to cover primary qualities in the same way. |
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Although anthems are used to distinguish states and territories, there are instances of shared anthems. |
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Modern culinary writers distinguish between three general regional forms of Dutch cuisine. |
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He justified this action to the Senate by saying that in the din of battle he could not distinguish Roman from ally. |
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The small diameter fibres are best tested asking the patient to distinguish between the blunt and sharp end of a neuro-pin. |
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The term was coined to distinguish the sequence from the younger New Red Sandstone which also occurs widely throughout Britain. |
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Different length leaves, but all lined up in a flat plane, is a useful way to quickly distinguish this species. |
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Regnal numbers are ordinal numbers used to distinguish among persons with the same name who held the same office. |
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The longer hind legs and fainter colouration of the agile frog are the main features that distinguish the two species. |
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Pipe Major uniform is usually different, to distinguish them from the other members of the band. |
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Later, authors like Geoffrey of Monmouth used the terms Britannia minor and Britannia major to distinguish Brittany from Britain. |
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However, classical authors seem to distinguish clearly between oryxes and unicorns. |
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It is sometimes referred to as the Forth Rail Bridge to distinguish it from the Forth Road Bridge, though this has never been its official name. |
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It is also necessary to distinguish between original jurisdiction and appellate jurisdiction. |
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He needs to identify the crucial indispensable values to his life and distinguish them from lesser values and nonvalues. |
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Its sensory organs are well developed, though it is unable to distinguish between colours. |
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Old scientific data do not distinguish between the two species, making it useless for determining structural differences between them. |
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Price wanted to distinguish between the genuine revival that he believed was going on and a sham revival he associated with Evan Roberts. |
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Folklore began to distinguish itself as an autonomous discipline during the period of romantic nationalism in Europe. |
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The leatherback has several characteristics that distinguish it from other sea turtles. |
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The cuttlebone is unique to cuttlefish, and is one of the features that distinguish them from their squid relatives. |
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Anatomically, a few characteristics distinguish the green turtle from the other members of its family. |
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Recent research on fin shape has shown that this is not a predictable way to distinguish between the sexes. |
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Dialects of killer whales not only distinguish them between pods, but also between types. |
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It is important to distinguish the processing of uranium to make fuel from the reprocessing of used fuel. |
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Biologists distinguish these two groups based on differences in their gill structures. |
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While this does not help detect targets masked by stronger surrounding clutter, it does help to distinguish strong target sources. |
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There is some question as to whether these mothers can distinguish which young are theirs. |
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This helps to distinguish them from palmate newts that have pale unspotted throats, and with which they are often confused. |
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Fungal fossils are difficult to distinguish from those of other microbes, and are most easily identified when they resemble extant fungi. |
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There are no alternative words to distinguish between things relating to the United States or to the Americas. |
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Several morphological features distinguish the American eel from other eel species. |
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Phoenician art lacks unique characteristics that might distinguish it from its contemporaries. |
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There was no independent confirmation of the reported reception, and the transmissions were difficult to distinguish from atmospheric noise. |
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It is referred to as the Eastern Yar if it is necessary to distinguish between them. |
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It is referred to as the Western Yar if it is necessary to distinguish between them. |
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Some languages have vertical vowel systems in which at least at a phonemic level, only height is used to distinguish vowels. |
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In 1830, maps began to use North and South to distinguish the two largest islands and by 1907, this was the accepted norm. |
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Many languages, for example, use stress, pitch, duration, and tone to distinguish meaning. |
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Some languages, called ergative, Gamilaraay among them, distinguish instead between Agents and Patients. |
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Around one month of age, babies appear to be able to distinguish between different speech sounds. |
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He may have been the first Mediterranean to distinguish the Germanic people from the Celts. |
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The term runes is used to distinguish these symbols from Latin and Greek letters. |
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Old Norse sources such as the sagas do not distinguish between the Goths and the Gutes. |
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It is important to distinguish between the universalist and localist conceptions of the empire, which remain controversial among historians. |
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Its various dialects contain a number of lexical and a few grammatical features which distinguish them from the standard language. |
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In order to distinguish this state from other states derived from it, it is denoted as Kievan Rus' by modern historiography. |
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Translations into other languages often do not distinguish these two groups. |
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Some countries distinguish voluntary, motivated conversion from organized proselytism, attempting to restrict the latter. |
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These they distinguish by so many several marks, and throw them at random and without order upon a white garment. |
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It can be difficult to distinguish which is the cause of a specific infection. |
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Dreyer, who notes that the Taizong Shilu does not distinguish the order of 250 ships from the treasure ships. |
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A female common ostrich can distinguish her own eggs from the others in a communal nest. |
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Linguists refer to the Maya language as Yucatec or Yucatec Maya to distinguish it from other Mayan languages. |
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Each village has its own distinctive pattern, making it possible to distinguish a person's home town. |
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Nahuatl has neither case nor gender, but Classical Nahuatl and some modern dialects distinguish between animate and inanimate nouns. |
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His unique glazes began to distinguish his wares from anything else on the market. |
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In addition, an ultrasound procedure can distinguish between pregnancy and misleading physical conditions, or between a live and dead fetus. |
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Most Koreans were hard to distinguish from Japanese, and the study was not able to clearly distinguish Koreans and Japanese. |
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They are also able to distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics. |
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Given the notion of a lexeme, it is possible to distinguish two kinds of morphological rules. |
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For example, medieval scholars may discuss the particular handwritten letterforms that distinguish one script from another. |
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However adjectives are not inflected, and most verb forms do not distinguish between singular and plural. |
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Synthetic languages typically distinguish grammatical number by inflection. |
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Many languages, such as the Maasai language, distinguish between the possessable and the unpossessable. |
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There are several ways to distinguish full and reduced vowels in transcription. |
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In such languages with variable stress, stress may be phonemic in that it can serve to distinguish otherwise identical words. |
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The distinguishing function is used to distinguish between the core arguments, the subject and the object, of a transitive clause. |
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However many languages do not distinguish the two types of relative clause in this way. |
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Babies of that era were generally given a few common names, with children using nicknames to distinguish the various people with the same name. |
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This has been criticized for sowing confusion in one of the few unambiguous ways to distinguish Bantu languages. |
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These beliefs and the social practices they engender, help distinguish the middle group from the grass roots majority of the Belizean people. |
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In 1519, Zwingli specifically rejected the veneration of saints and called for the need to distinguish between their true and fictional accounts. |
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Episcopal is also commonly used to distinguish between the various organizational structures of denominations. |
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To distinguish the two evangelical groups, others began to refer to the two groups as Evangelical Lutheran and Evangelical Reformed. |
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Several voices singing different texts in different languages made any of the text difficult to distinguish from the mixture of words and notes. |
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The first civilizations generally did not distinguish between civil law and criminal law. |
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We may, with Aristotle, distinguish singular terms such as Socrates and general terms such as Greeks. |
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Upstate and downstate are often used informally to distinguish New York City or its greater metropolitan area from the rest of New York State. |
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Economists distinguish between the supply curve of an individual firm and between the market supply curve. |
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Like with supply curves, economists distinguish between the demand curve of an individual and the market demand curve. |
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Domestication syndrome is the suite of phenotypic traits arising during domestication that distinguish crops from their wild ancestors. |
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Bar iron is a generic term sometimes used to distinguish it from cast iron. |
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So much so, that save a few distinctive images for each sect, there is nothing to distinguish a Vaishnava temple from a Saiva one. |
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Maybe they can actually distinguish white tuna from escolar. |
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Author Tim Maltin has undertaken years of research to distinguish the myths and truth in his book on the doomed Belfast-built ship. |
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Landscapes can be used to distinguish mappable areas of soils because similar causal factors are involved in landform and soil genesis. |
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To try to distinguish effects of showiness from mimicking scary eyes, Mappes and her colleagues developed tests based on computers and mealworms. |
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Or join forces with the wider public in a bid to distinguish the meretricious showboaters from the artists of real merit? |
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The results demonstrated that miRNA biomarkers reliably distinguish between affected and healthy individuals by analysing whole blood samples. |
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The course also defines military equipment, allowing the business financial manager to distinguish between capitalizable vs. |
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Carboxyhaemoglobin is bright red and most pulse oximeters cannot distinguish between it and oxyhaemogtobin, producing falsely high readings. |
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Blum's phrasing suggests both that he cannot somatically distinguish the apparition, and that this distinction is not important to him. |
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My hypothesis is that a description that aspires to consistency with regard to the phonetic facts must distinguish between weak and strong moras. |
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For the study, researchers first tested the ability of four greater mouse-eared bats to distinguish between the echolocation calls of other bats. |
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On this base we distinguish spectral classes in dependence on the divisibility of the partial denominators by prime numbers. |
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Eyes with different spectral types of cone cells can distinguish different colors. |
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Chemotaxonomy is a very powerful tool that has been used for many years to distinguish species of biological samples. |
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This is presumably to distinguish the DVD from the edited version that aired on squeaky-clean Logo. |
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From TEM observation, it was possible to distinguish epithelium, ciliated cells, and secretory cells in the mantle epidermis. |
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The cut-off of six years was used to distinguish more recent sterilizations from those that had occurred further in the past. |
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Clip art, which is used by different kinds of businesses, does not help distinguish yours at all. |
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The scale may or may not distinguish between different pollutants. |
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A flash of lightning may be made up of several strokes. If they are separated by enough time for the eye to distinguish them, the lightning will appear to flicker. |
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