Vice-captain Matt Burke said the Australians had to concentrate on their own game and not fall into the trap of watching the scoreboard. |
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It would be easy in such a story to fall into some familiar traps in writing about race relations. |
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All other bands are calculated on a pro-rata basis depending on whether they fall into a higher or lower band. |
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She flumped onto the grass, and saw her own crystal tears fall into the mist. |
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They fall into taxis or stagger happily on down to the Nitelink bus and sing all the way home. |
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I accept that a print service provider would not fall into the category of a preferential creditor. |
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If they fall into that delusion, they are doomed and no second reprieve will be vouchsafed them. |
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In time, more and more use will be made of statistical analysis of data to describe rocks that fall into a few named categories. |
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If you keep your cell phone in your back pocket, it is certain that at some point, it will fall into the toilet bowl. |
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But if inflation is negative, that strategy won't work, and the economy could fall into a downward spiral. |
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A lot of people fall into the poverty trap but are not eligible for benefits such as school meals. |
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The doctors said that the blood flow to his brain had temporarily stopped causing him to fall into a state of temporary vegetativeness. |
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Then I could so easily close my eyes to all that is happening around me and my family, roll over and fall into a deep sound sleep. |
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How many times have you sent an e-mail to a company, only to have that e-mail apparently fall into a black hole? |
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If the sacred remnants of the ancients fall into this cursed fate, all but one will parish. |
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As in orthodox economics, the practitioners of econophysics fall into either the deductive or empirical camps. |
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One Carthaginian sea captain sank his ship rather than let his charts fall into Roman hands. |
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She released the lock of dark brown hair, letting it fall into a graceful spiral curl. |
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I will never leave a fallen comrade to fall into the hands of the enemy and under no circumstances will I ever embarrass my country. |
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On fruitarian diets, it is very easy to overeat and to fall into the nasty trap of sugar addiction. |
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Walks up Munros, such as Schiehallion, Buachaille Etive Beag or Ben Lomond, fall into this category. |
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Timber roof supports burnt away, causing large slates to fall into the building and the front of one of the flats to bulge. |
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It's mildly interesting that none of the main characters in the format fall into the demographic at which the show is targeted. |
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As an aside, does a film adaptation of a cult or popular novel fall into the same area as is under discussion here? |
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Certain orchids, such as moth and slipper orchids, also fall into this category. |
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To the uninitiated it seems they fall into line at a random location, but these people know exactly what they are doing and where they are going. |
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Would attempts to track and rediscover presumed-extinct species fall into the realm of cryptozoology? |
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He dug his small hands into the rock and dirt, watching bits crumble off and fall into the void of absolute nothingness below him. |
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This month and during the January sales, at least 400 million will fall into the hands of fraudsters and thieves. |
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As the Poetry Society found to its cost recently, an unrenewed Internet domain name can quickly fall into the hands of opportunist pornographers. |
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Seventy-two of the skeletons fall into the Natufian period, which predates settled agriculture. |
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When it comes to the philosophical issue of the nature of truth, most mathematicians fall into one of two camps called formalism and Platonism. |
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Her hair she wore in a lace snood that let a few stray wisps of curly blonde hair fall into her face. |
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When the vapor condenses into rain or freezes to make snow, the precipitation is acid, which can fall into lakes. |
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But neckties fall into an interesting cultural blank spot, because, almost alone amongst clothing items, they are rarely cleaned. |
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Bridges or footbridges on the whaler are washed by the storm, so you have to be very careful not to fall into the sea. |
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There will always be leaders and followers and it has to be said that Explosions in the Sky fall into the second bracket. |
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Lamingtons fall into a category of 'nostalgia foods' that also includes the Neenish tart. |
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Group tasks are found in many animal societies and appear to fall into two broad categories. |
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Most of them are on the road long enough not to fall into that foolhardy trap. |
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The mares of the stallion's subsequent conquests and their foals will fall into line accordingly. |
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In spite of the often overwritten dialogue, the cast acquits itself well in what might easily fall into the trap of a staid costume drama. |
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Subjective insights, intuitions and hunches fall into this category of knowledge. |
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The sun rose in the late evening usually just when Eva was beginning to fall into fitful sleep with restless dreams. |
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If not, they often fall into depression, and seek consolation in excessive eating, or drug and alcohol abuse. |
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The first few steps fall into the acquisition area and include selection of hardware, software, and a system integrator. |
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It also covers taking proper precautions to ensure that confidential information does not fall into the wrong hands. |
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A world champion figure skater says she's ready to get back to work following a face-first fall into the ice during a televised competition. |
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Within a phylum, however, it may also be necessary to recognize some languages that have no close relatives and do not fall into families. |
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As we came about, I heard a grinding noise and watched the mast lean over and fall into the water. |
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When spirit incarnates and takes flesh, a Persona is also taken, an astral personality and this is another version of the fall into matter. |
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Under the cloak of anonymity, anyone is much more likely to fall into speculation, exaggeration, or outright falsehood. |
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In another story, Ursula is punished with an Icarian death, a fall into the sea. |
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Unable to get cheap credit on the high street, some of these people fall into the hands of pawnbrokers, impaired credit lenders and loan sharks. |
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In terms of their reproductive ecology, the syngnathids studied thus far fall into two broad categories. |
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There is an obvious lack of good housekeeping in that the building has been left to fall into such a state of disrepair. |
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Don't fall into the trap of blindly defending the budget simply because left-wingers are chronically idiotic about this. |
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The traders have been forced to temporarily suspend trading as they do not want any more clients to fall into this black hole. |
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But it is perfectly humane, especially if you fall into the category of those who can't stop choking their dogs with the choke-chain collar. |
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The reader will need a chapter or two to fall into the rhythm of the dialect, but the book quickly becomes a page-turner. |
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Pizza's full of carbs, so it will give you that initial sugar rush that sees you fall into a slump shortly after. |
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Many years of neglect allowed parts of the structure to fall into disrepair. |
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The mortgage, both over chattels and over real property, as well as a fixed and a floating charge granted by a corporation, fall into this group. |
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In due course, they succumb to his pressure and in his very presence fall into each other's arms. |
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At this point, I'm very tempted to fall into a rambling rant of some form, but for some reason today, I just don't feel like it. |
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It has many side effects, and an overdose can cause a dangerous slowness in breathing before victims fall into a coma. |
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Some musicologists might argue that the Inventions fall into a category of absolute music. |
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People who fall into that category ought to be simply warehoused on the random basis that 25 out of 100 of them may re-offend. |
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After finishing the heap of homework I had, I let myself fall into bed, dozing off the moment my head hit the soft feathered pillow. |
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Similarly, vacuum fluctuations cause an excited atom to fall into its ground state. |
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The galactic dust and gas fall into the black hole's accretion disk producing some very hot regions where huge quantities of energy are released. |
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Many people in the world, including me, are so weak and fragile that they easily fall into temptation and make mistakes. |
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Then one day your showboating will catch up with you and you'll eventfully fall into a sinkhole and break both your legs. |
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We have been given a number of leads, but we are still waiting for some vital pieces of the jigsaw to fall into place. |
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Plutonium and highly enriched uranium and other heavy fissionable isotopes fall into this category, but tritium does not. |
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Incentives have a role, but when it is possible for even a few individuals to avoid any obligation to the state, they fall into disrepute. |
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When the noise subsides, I fall into conversation with the young man on my left. |
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In the world of classical music, string quartets fall into a category known as chamber music. |
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Neighbours fear their houses may fall into a cesspit after a 25 ft-deep hole opened up in their gardens. |
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It saddens me to see this proud contest fall into oblivion, for it was once a very important event for American school-children. |
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He didn't even notice Peter and the others fall into line behind him, even as he outdistanced them. |
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To allow buildings to fall into such a state of disrepair that the council has to hold out its begging bowl is beyond belief. |
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But councillors have warned the building would fall into a worse state of disrepair if talks with the current developer fell through. |
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There is no tracking mechanism to ensure they do not fall into the wrong hands. |
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Avoid all kinds of secret activity as you are likely to fall into trouble this week. |
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Those that have mastered the trick fall into a special category that is neither regular or goofy foot, but switch foot. |
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Many planets of one person's chart fall into the angular houses of the other's natal chart. |
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Slugs are attracted to the yeasty smell of beer, and they fall into the pan and drown. |
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The difficulty is that when production systems are allowed to fall into disrepair they cannot quickly be brought back into use. |
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The animals either graze lazily or, in the case of the pigs, wait as the acorns fall into their mouths. |
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The old railway station has been let fall into disrepair and is in a sad condition. |
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However, by the mid-15th century, shields began to fall into disfavour among the cavalry, already well protected by body armour. |
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With the introduction of the human race into the balance, everything began to fall into discord. |
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You'll need to do some legwork to see what sort of schools fall into your savings range. |
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The most forward sections fall into line with the rest of the soldiers, who then join in the retrograde maneuver. |
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The audience see it through Elaine's eyes and gradually the story unfolds and the pieces start to fall into place. |
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It took me an hour of tossing and turning that night to fall into a light sleep. |
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After mechanically putting the food in her mouth, Jenny barely managed to stumble upstairs and fall into bed. |
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Just because you don't fall into this particular line, or know a few exceptions personally, doesn't mean it's completely discardable. |
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Basically third-party apps fall into one of two categories, useful or cool, and some things are both. |
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Ross watches Alex's long, lean face fall into an expression of grim frustration, and for a moment he feels sorry for him. |
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There are crevasses to fall into, rockfalls, avalanches, and severe weather, particularly the wind, on such a mountain. |
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But the boy had seen it trip, stumble and fall into the road, to be knocked down and killed by an oncoming tractor. |
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His characters live untidy lives and often fall into digressive daydreams, so troubled are their souls. |
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Those who fall into this sin are still human beings made in the image of God and yet fallen. |
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In the beginning I had a hard dose of culture shock and left all things that reminded me of home fall into desuetude. |
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Near the end of his reign, King Behanzin ordered his troops to burn the royal palaces rather than see them fall into French hands. |
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She let herself fall into the embrace, tucking her wet face into his shoulder while her arms hung loosely over his back. |
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Anyway, if you had to guess, do you think most Aspies would fall into any particular religious or political camp? |
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They fall into the basket, the correct notation shows, a click track plays four preparatory pulses, then the rhythm. |
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But suppose that as time goes on, all the black holes in a given galaxy eventually fall into a central black hole at the galactic center. |
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Do not abandon partners, and, above all, do not allow the location of the safe house to fall into enemy hands. |
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We fall into liking and disliking, which in turn leads to the defilements, because we don't see tathata. |
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He must not be a recent convert, or he may be puffed up with conceit and fall into the condemnation of the devil. |
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Whether through bribes or threats, all will eventually fall into line behind the hegemonic imperialist power. |
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As the backstories of the major characters are filled in, little tumblers fall into place. |
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Chronic shoulder problems usually fall into one of several categories, which include impingement syndrome, frozen shoulder and biceps tendonitis. |
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Bahraini parents like to tell their children that pearls are created when a mermaid's tears fall into an open oyster shell. |
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Motorless aluminum scooters with in-line skate wheels fall into another category, but aren't street-legal either. |
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Billfish fall into four groups, treated under marlin, sailfish, spearfish, and swordfish. |
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No doubt there is a spiritual egoism, built on barren ideas concerning oneself with no real practice behind them, that one can easily fall into. |
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These are by no means mutually exclusive categories and many analyses will fall into both categories. |
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Where we live, we do not fall into the catchment area of any secondary school! |
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Hopefully, their officers will fall into line, tackle the real issues of the GAA and stop tilting at windmills. |
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None of the Tablet PCs on the stocks fall into that category, not even the Crusoe prototype, which claims dismal endurance of four hours. |
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It is easy to see why both males and females fall into the trap of succumbing to the idea of the body beautiful. |
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A council has been blamed for a man's fall into delinquency and crime which led to a life sentence in prison. |
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Every time she tries to visit him, though, his jealous stepmother and meshuggener tutor make him fall into a deep sleep. |
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On 14 June, a meteor was seen to fall into the Turkish camp, a very good omen. |
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This is the trap that most businesses tend to fall into and is proof positive that proper planning is a vital ingredient for any business. |
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However, should the city fall into misfortune, the people will blame the rulers and call them oligarchs. |
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All the while I can't stop thinking about what will happen to me if I fall into that void. |
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As you fall into a deep sleep, the muscles in your tongue, throat and roof of your mouth relax. |
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It hit a carriage showering the passengers with debris from the roof but it did not fall into the carriage. |
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Democracy will make it's last fall into the oblivion of an Imperial corporate state bent on world destruction. |
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We want to make sure the release sites have no slug pellets, dogs, badger sets or ponds which the hedgehogs could fall into. |
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Even a bucket with only a few inches of water at the bottom can be a death trap for a toddler who could fall into it head first. |
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Some of those who fall into this category have a digital set-top box but not a widescreen television. |
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Unlike many writers who study one element of a country's past, she does not fall into the all too easy trap of making sweeping generalisations. |
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Producers can fall into the same reasoning, so standbys and understudies rarely get the job when a star needs to be replaced long-term. |
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They were all around us, and when shooting stars fell, you could have sworn that they were going to fall towards you and fall into your hair. |
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Valshar's hands went out at the shoulders and caught himself as he fell and started to turn his fall into a backwards roll. |
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Night had fallen again upon the world, letting the world below fall into a gentle slumber. |
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We have found that once a child has cracked mental arithmetic everything else begins to fall into place. |
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Things begin to fall into place, and your life becomes a glide instead of a struggle. |
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Greg remained stressed throughout most of it, but as things started to fall into place, he began to calm down. |
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There is a real sense of satisfaction as the pieces of the mystery start to fall into place and make sense. |
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A missing piece of Japan's recent economic recovery is beginning to fall into place. |
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There are several straws in the wind and the jigsaw pieces have begun to fall into place for a sustained increase in the gold price. |
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Bit by bit, in the perceptions of ordinary folk, the pieces of this jigsaw are beginning to fall into place. |
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All you need to do is stay focused and follow your sixth sense, and everything will fall into place. |
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Life is busier than ever for most couples and it's easy to fall into a routine that deadens your marriage. |
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In recent days, those missing pieces have finally begun to fall into place. |
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Chips from the polish may fall into your food, as might hair if a hairnet is not worn. |
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The plays fall into the categories of history, tragedy, comedy and tragicomedy. |
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Positions such as party workers, temporary dayworkers, waitresses and bartenders and party cooks fall into this category. |
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I think many bien pensant pro-Europeans fall into this category. |
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All three fall into the category of type I syndactyly, or zygodactyly. |
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Children with avoidant personalities or extreme anxiety will more easily fall into an unhealthy coping style. |
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Doctors now argue that too many diseases fall into the carcinoma diagnosis. |
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Suggestions about how to resolve this impasse fall into three main categories, which I shall call the extremist, the idealist and the accommodationist. |
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Two Darnell crewmembers who were trying to get aboard reached for the accommodation ladder when a surge in the choppy waters caused the two to fall into the rough seas. |
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Above a small clearing the stream cascaded down a series of massive stone steps to fall into a deep, broad pool lined with raw rock worn smooth by the water. |
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Several years ago, I watched one of those 911 real life rescue shows in which a man had chanced to see a child fall into a reservoir in the middle of a raging flood. |
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Fuel deliveries and jump-starts also fall into this category. |
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As he notes, these benefits are key to countless families who would otherwise fall into destitution. |
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Easily digestible, they fill the stomachs of those who can afford little else, and they fall into the ranks of those restorative foods called analeptics. |
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One assumes it was intended to fall into the residue of the Estate, but this is simply another drafting problem with these two clauses in the Will. |
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Negotiations dragged on for months, from fall into the following spring. |
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Another element of the Bill is that it facilitates the enhanced collection powers of the Department, making it more difficult for annuitants to fall into debt. |
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Content, my mother was at ease that her first-born would not fall into the ranks of picky eaters. |
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I tried to roar in triumph, and caused myself to fall into a coughing fit. |
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Get up onto the roof of the world, they don't get bigger than the High Himalayas, and all the rest of life just seems to fall into place around you. |
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And that in itself will persuade the allies to fall into lockstep. |
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Maybe they are the sort who will escape to goa and fall into drug addiction when their military service is over? |
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Yes, of course, there are the odd teething troubles, such as the boiler not working properly, but the joy of seeing it all fall into place more than compensates. |
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This can leave them far worse off than the laid-off, with no safety to fall into. |
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Intended for liturgical use, her verses fall into the familiar categories of antiphon, respond, sequence, and hymn, and cover the cycle of the church year. |
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But many stresses that beleaguer us do not fall into these categories. |
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Neither one of these, do I think, fall into the category that I would describe as threatening enough to be what I would describe as a casus belli. |
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At worst, if it were a bolt missed by Ms. Santos, it would fall into line with her explanation that she did not intentionally fail to use her torque wrench on any bolt. |
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We look forward to watching the way the development progresses from here as the pieces in this massive and complex jigsaw begin to fall into place. |
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Most of the newer, systemic fungicides fall into this group. |
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You now have a growing number of candidates and elected officials who can do that without having to fall into that trap. |
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The other is that people actually lose skills and many of them fall into the maw of depression. |
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Michael hobbled over in time to see her fall into the depths below. |
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Not far from this well is Tom Smith's Leap, so called from a legend of a mosstrooper who, when pursued, jumped down and was killed rather than fall into the hands of justice. |
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Frustration is mounting among local skaters as facilities at Five Dock Park fall into disrepair and council promises to upgrade them go unfulfilled. |
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If by any chance this paper should be still undestroyed and should fall into your hands, I conjure you, by all you hold sacred, to hurl it into the fire. |
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Either way, I would not want to fall into the unhealthy mindset of the programme which encouraged viewers to judge the wives on their successes and failures. |
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The life of Orpheus that artists know and love seems to fall into three distinct parts. |
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Certainly not all Republican political leaders fall into the offensive and out-of-date category with respect to social issues. |
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You small-mindedly assume that without the governance of an imaginary sky cop, a person will just naturally fall into self-serving, pleasure-seeking, negative behaviour. |
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Gentle brush strokes on a snare drum and soft, lilting vocals are all well and good, but pure pleasantness is apt to fall into the category of being dangerously languorous. |
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The Bamfords have stopped contributing directly to the Tory party, although free helicopter and plane rides fall into the bracket of payments in kind. |
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To praise the uptempo songs and deplore the more balladic numbers would be to fall into the critical trap that admirers of the band have been stuck in for 20 years. |
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He also said the Japanese economy is not about to fall into a deflationary spiral under which price falls and economic contraction take place simultaneously. |
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The two young men ignore each other until it would be ridiculous to continue, and then fall into a spitty little conversation in front of the hotel fireplace. |
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She let herself fall into the bed, buried her head beneath the covers, and continued letting tears fall down her face as her body shook and the pillow dampened. |
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Healthcare hardware and nuclear reactors fall into this category, but he expands his scope to show how non-physical aspects become integral to the entire design. |
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When Bernie falls in love, the chips in his life begin to fall into place, just as cards begin to get stacked against Shelly and his old-school values. |
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The oldest canard in the book is the one about how getting the first big win is the hardest bit, and after that they just fall into your lap like autumn leaves. |
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There was a ditch in right field before the fence started that, once in a while, a player would fall into. |
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The tyranny associated by Renaissance humanists with the age of chivalric knights and with the knight figure caused romances that heroize the bygone age to fall into disfavor. |
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A whole era of cinema will disappear with Alexandre, the studios will fall into disuse, films will be shot in the streets without stars or scripts. |
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But I didn't want to fall into the clutches of the local moneylenders. |
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But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition. |
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He added that, with 17 outdoor shops in the town and a number of recent failures of similar businesses, the new shop may not be viable and could also fall into disrepair. |
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Speech and language impairment can often fall into the same category. |
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As they cook, the banana and pear slices fall into each other's arms, melding together in a luscious soft compote, while keeping their textural identities. |
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With chiselled features, locks of untamed brown hair, soft brown eyes and permanent five o'clock shadow, he was the type that had women fall into his arms. |
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Just as in Bose-Einstein condensation, the Cooper pairs can fall into a single quantum state and thus cause a phase transition to a superconducting or superfluid phase. |
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I became in charge of running the day and I could see that if I didn't get this day to appeal to a wider cross section, then it would fall into decline. |
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Lines as corny as this can have someone in the audience break into laughter, and the thin crust of magic that keeps the film afloat will fall into splinters. |
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He didn't fall into the trap of making her a daddy's girl to compensate. |
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These motions push the posterior shoulder over the sacral promontory, allowing it to fall into the hollow of the sacrum, and rotate the symphysis over the impacted shoulder. |
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One of the leading Internet-era technologists has raised the alarm that democratized technology may fall into the wrong hands, and down the road, robots may prevail. |
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The profoundest form of atheism is not the one that involves strenuously denying the existence of God but the one that lets theistic ways of talking fall into desuetude. |
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Some of their comments are insightful and interesting, but like many filmmakers they fall into the trap of gushing effusive praise about everyone they worked with. |
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Why have we seen vaccine development fall into such disfavor? |
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Without public support, the new laws will quickly fall into disrepute. |
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But when nothing else seemed to fall into place, I thought I might try this approach. |
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So what would her advice be to the nine-to-fivers who fall into the 49 per cent who are unhappy in their work? |
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The orders are not to let the codetalker fall into enemy hands at any cost. |
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The second circle consists of features which may become internationally common or may fall into obscurity. |
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The gorals of Shanxi, sometimes separated as a taxon vidianus, fall into the range of N. griseus. |
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They fall into one of two groups, the Papuan languages and the Austronesian languages. |
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It is important to note, however, that modern Western historians, military historians, and writers, essentially fall into three camps. |
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May also sat for photographs that fall into the second major division of Cameron's works. |
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Satellite sensors now in practical use for precipitation fall into two categories. |
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The policeman was concerned that the lost handgun would fall into the wrong hands. |
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Shrubs that fall into this category include cornus, willow, ribes, spiraea, kerria, philadelphus and viburnums. |
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Fossil resins from Europe fall into two categories, the famous Baltic ambers and another that resembles the Agathis group. |
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Nature reserves fall into different IUCN categories depending on the level of protection afforded by local laws. |
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The whistles and pulsed calls that pilot whales make seem not to fall into distinct types, but rather can be arranged on a continuum. |
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The derail was placed deliberately so that the train would fall into the river. |
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As a result, Caernarfon Castle was allowed to fall into a state of disrepair. |
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Set in Leith in the early 1980s, it introduces the Trainspotting characters and follows them as they fall into heroin addiction. |
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The attempts to disguise nonarguments to make them look like arguments fall into several patterns. |
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Nations that imprison, torture, assassinate, or drive their writers into exile fall into the deadlands of their own darkness. |
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Jalapefios fall into the 3,500-5,000 range of this scale, while habaneros rate 100,000 and higher. |
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The reality is that most simply succumb to overspending and fall into the habit of living pay cheque to pay cheque. |
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In 1940, the Netherlands was invaded by Germany with Nijmegen being the first Dutch city to fall into German hands. |
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Recent studies were unable to determine who can fall into the orthorexic trap, but it seems women are a high-risk group, Fox News reported. |
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Part of the Ordzhonikidze mine caved in, causing a car and driver to fall into the pit, Reuters quoted the. |
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Towards the end of the steam era, steam motive power was allowed to fall into a dire state of repair. |
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Other aircraft that may fall into this category are the Fairchild Metro, Jetstream 31, and Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante. |
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The examples that naturally fall into this context include the unipotent orthogonal, symplectic and unitary groups. |
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Mark says most people fall into one of three body types and can be classed as a mesomorph, ectomorph or endomorph. |
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And what makes it even pricklier is how quickly I can fall into a funk when nothing is happening at my desk. |
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The sea receiveth a red and minious tincture from springs, wells, and currents that fall into it. |
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Do not fall into the trap of being swayed by political notion. |
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The 10 coronaviruses that infect mammals fall into two clusters, each of which contains one virus that causes colds in people. |
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The ultracold atoms all fall into the same quantum state, becoming a sort of superatom called a Bose-Einstein condensate. |
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Some postulate that after a nuclear war, humanity would fall into a state of barbarianism. |
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Let them decide whether they are collectivists or not, then the rest of it may fall into place. |
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He says he just wants to play rugby as well as he possibly can and let the rest fall into place. |
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Not immediately, but when the pieces of the mosaic are starting to fall into place. |
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Generally, rainfall patterns fall into bands at specific latitudes, such as the Intertropical Convergence Zone. |
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Hussein Ibish and Saliba Sarsar fall into the latter category. |
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Solar sails fall into the same category as ion engine technology in that they are very low thrust, but highly efficient. |
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Currently, MRA contrast agents fall into two major classes, large molecular weight gadolinium-chelated complexes and colloidal iron oxides. |
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Sometimes portions of a single country can fall into two distinct spheres of influence. |
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The surviving manuscripts of the whole Long Text fall into two groups, with slightly different readings. |
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Second-generation antihistamines, with the exception of fexofenadine, fall into the less sedating category, he continued. |
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If we fall into debt, the foundation would have to reevaluate our partnership and could reconsider investing any money in PBT again. |
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The term has connotations of a category that he does not fall into. |
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Will humanity literally fall into the toilet, and will Wedgie Power prevail, or will even Captain Underpants lose the flush of success? |
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Acupuncture, Bioresonance treatment, balneotherapy and cleansing of the colon with enemas fall into this group. |
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If the burning snuff happens to get out of the snuffers, you have a chance that it may fall into a dish of soup. |
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After just an hour, it was common for subjects to fall into a semipsychotic state. |
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The chief rivers on the west are the Nera, with its tributaries the Velino and Salto, and the Aniene, both of which fall into the Tiber. |
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Once inside, they tire themselves trying to escape from these false exits, until they eventually fall into the tube. |
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According to the configuration of the channels, drainage systems can fall into one of several categories known as drainage patterns. |
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To date, the stories have never been substantiated and fall into the category of urban legend. |
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Most English cathedral facades fall into two basic types, with several variations. |
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The cathedrals fall into three distinct groups, depending on their earlier organisational structure. |
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Without intervention, the country could fall into irredeemable chaos. |
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The arguments that justify intellectual property fall into three major categories. |
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Once the intellectual property rights afforded to these new works of traditional knowledge expire, they fall into the public domain. |
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In the later nineteenth century depression took hold, and just as company numbers had boomed, many began to implode and fall into insolvency. |
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Regardless of the cause, populations continued to fall into the 15th century and remained low into the 16th. |
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Clitics fall into various categories depending on their position in relation to the word to which they are connected. |
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A constructed language could easily fall into more than one of the above categories. |
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Our brains are, in other words, hardwired to suspect individuals who fall into such groups, and may urge us to act in a stigmatising manner towards them. |
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In this sense, the churinga ilkinia would fall into the former. |
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All commercial reactors in the United States fall into two categories, pressurized water reactors and boiling water reactors, collectively known as light water reactors. |
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However, because of the constantly evolving nature of social media, big data, and the Internet, many of these issues currently fall into unchartered territory. |
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Gandalf faces the Balrog, and both of them fall into the abyss. |
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All consonants in the English language fall into this category. |
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Most likely they fall into the category of people called the mesomorphs. |
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As above, use a dropper and nose drops that have been warmed to body temperature, squeeze the bulb and let two or three drops fall into the nostril. |
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Alastair Pennycook, Suresh Canagarajah, Adrian Holliday and Julian Edge broadly fall into this group and are often described as critical applied linguists. |
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Manx nouns fall into one of two genders, masculine or feminine. |
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It has long been known that people with blood type O are protected against severe malaria, while those with other types, such as A, often fall into a coma and die. |
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Yet for all the implicit references to Hitchcock, detective fiction, and comic books, Baseman does not fall into caricature but preserves an auteurist sleight of hand. |
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The bigger-established companies invariably fall into the trap of creating an on-line advert type site, usually with some degree of style, but largely content free. |
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Ribonucleotide reductases from other organisms fall into three distinct categories, based on their amino acid sequences and biochemical functions. |
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However they are all usually considered to fall into three Redactions, known as the Cyfnerth Redaction, the Blegywryd Redaction and the Iorwerth Redaction. |
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Yappy little dogs and yappy little children also fall into this category. |
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