And in the meantime, I'd have someone hide the medical encyclopaedia and block your access to all medical websites, if at all possible. |
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For further information about food poisoning, please see the separate encyclopaedia topic. |
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Also present in strength are storybooks and colourful encyclopaedia for children. |
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The first is a scientific encyclopaedia covering logic, natural sciences, psychology, geometry, astronomy, arithmetic and music. |
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He buttonholed me on the subject of crime, and was a spouting encyclopaedia after your own heart. |
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With around 400 recipes crammed into its pages, it errs on the side of an encyclopaedia rather than an eyeful. |
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Featuring a self-help guide and medical encyclopaedia, visitors can diagnose their ailments via an interactive medium. |
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However, the subject is extremely vast and it would require with him only an encyclopaedia. |
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The encyclopaedia came to the conclusion that mankind could never exterminate this species. |
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I found this reference with Georges Pérec in his encyclopaedia of literary madmen. |
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Henry's a walking encyclopaedia of Manchester City knowledge. |
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Day to day information can also be looked up: an encyclopaedia and a financial dictionary as well as a library of financial analyses. |
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For example, any discovery, whether it be the wheel, the printing press, or the atom bomb, cannot be neatly labeled and filed away in the pages of an encyclopaedia. |
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The encyclopaedia contains comprehensive information about chess computers, programs, programmers and manufacturers. |
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The renewal of interest in diseases of women is shown in the huge encyclopaedia of gynecology issued in 1566 by Caspar Wolf of Zürich. |
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This work is an encyclopaedia of mathematics, astronomy, optics and music. |
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The course is not intended to be purely informative or to be used as an encyclopaedia. |
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Ronald, a quiet man with blue eyes and broad shoulders, was a great storyteller with an encyclopaedia knowledge of Canadian history. |
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To this end, the Centre of Excellence will be developing a series of guides on institutional models and create an encyclopaedia that describes the institutional landscape of Canada. |
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One big difference between my mother and me is that if I needed to find the meaning of a word I would look it up in a dictionary, encyclopaedia or some other book. |
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Spanish is one of the most popular languages to learn, as is shown by the study carried out in 2006 by the Cervantes Institute, entitled The encyclopaedia of Spanish in the world. |
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In 1957 the New York-based encyclopaedia Richards Topical presented New Zealand as the best-governed nation in the world, a model for all others to follow. |
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Isidore created the first western encyclopaedia which had a huge impact during the Middle Ages. |
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But very quickly, this rough draft got out of control and Wikipedia became far more important that the original project for a definitive encyclopaedia, which had been called Nupedia. |
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At the very least, one by-product of the process is that the encyclopaedia contains a number of publicly accessible pages that are not necessarily classifiable as articles. |
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During the last quarter of the 20th century, it became an increasingly common custom for an encyclopaedia to incorporate an atlas and a gazetteer, often in the last volume. |
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Paperbacks, art books, collected works or encyclopaedia, fiction, essays, magazines, books on management or on creativity... She is surrounded by books that she shares with Mark and with her friends. |
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Sainte-Beuve was able to achieve his enormous output, which constitutes an encyclopaedia of thought, only by relentless labour and an unequaled tenacity of purpose, linked with unusually subtle intellectual power. |
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As pointed out in the Commission staff working paper of 19 July 2004, this situation might arise when the literary work, such as an encyclopaedia, is protected as a work and as a database simultaneously. |
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Within that period there were notable changes, not least the transfer of ownership of the work to the United States, but the seventh edition fixed the basic form of the encyclopaedia thenceforward. |
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You open the encyclopaedia and find the table of contents. |
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For several weeks already, the portal www.medpedia.com has been offering an Online encyclopaedia of medical information useful for doctors and laymen alike. |
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Embark on an epic quest to complete the Tome of Knowledge, a veritable encyclopaedia of the game, and unlock Warhammer lore, detailed monster information, new abilities and rewards, and major story plotlines. |
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Al-Zahrawi's most famous work is his encyclopaedia, Al-Tasrif liman 'ajaz 'an al-Taalif, which describes and illustrates more than 150 surgical instruments. |
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He also found that the encyclopaedia had wrongly stated that the European bison can only be found in the Bialowieza forest in Poland. |
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Thus, Cassiodorus's division of his encyclopaedia into two main sections divine and human is made even more interesting by his inclusion of cosmography, the liberal arts, and medicine in the first section. |
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It's a neatly designed interface to the popular online encyclopaedia. |
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Searches not only call up websites and images on the same page, but other references, such as Amazon's book search, the Internet Movie Database, and encyclopaedia and dictionary references. |
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More than an encyclopaedia of modeling standards, the Agile modeling session facilitator will become a catalyst of emerging formalisms adapted to the stakeholders' culture. |
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An evening spent with a good catalogue or gardening encyclopaedia will reveal an astonishingly wide range of both weepers and fastigiates. |
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According to the encyclopaedia, half of these Irish Americans were descended from Ulster, and half from the other three provinces of Ireland. |
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The Natural History is encyclopaedic in scope, but its format is unlike a modern encyclopaedia. |
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The encyclopaedia and updates are available in both hard copy and online with some content available for free online. |
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The second and subsequent editions of the encyclopaedia took the name of the said Earl of Halsbury. |
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In 2007, Rowling stated that she planned to write an encyclopaedia of Harry Potter's wizarding world consisting of various unpublished material and notes. |
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Halsbury's Laws of England is a uniquely comprehensive encyclopaedia of law, and provides the only complete narrative statement of law in England and Wales. |
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This gives an idea of the variety of methods of broadcasting their ideas that the Scottish literati used, from the pamphlet to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. |
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In 1888 he contributed articles on taboo and totemism to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, which laid the foundation for his work on primitive religion. |
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There was huge, leather bound series of volumes of Encyclopaedia Celtica. |
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The Encyclopaedia continued to be published in Edinburgh until 1898, when it was sold to an American publisher. |
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City council engineer and vexillologist Mr John Gale was horrified by an Encyclopaedia Britannica survey showing the nation's ignorance of St George's 800-year-old flag. |
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