Further, some familiar notions are communicated from a fresh viewpoint, which may be of benefit even to well-read players. |
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The numinous quality of the sunset changed a familiar landscape beyond recognition. |
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To this one meets the familiar Gallic shrug we've seen most years since the fall of Paris. |
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These inclinations are apt to be familiar to the many reporters, editors and pundits who feel that career advancement is extremely important. |
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He opened the glass door to leave, which resulted in a familiar jingle, breaking the persistent silence. |
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The participants were familiar with the digital format, as both conventional film radiographs and digital radiographs are used in Russia. |
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An ester, methyl salicylate, familiar as oil of wintergreen, is also a phenolic compound. |
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She followed the hallway, till she reached the familiar wooden door of his study. |
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On any Friday night you might well trip over any number of familiar faces on the razzle. |
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Children address their elders by using the honorific form of Nepali, while adults speak to children using more familiar language. |
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A few miles away in a near-town neighborhood of lower-middle-class A-frames, several houses are decorated in familiar placards. |
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Unfortunately, all he could see was the top of a very familiar head of raven tresses. |
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My uncle's familiar voice filled with his accustomed brisk sternness answered. |
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In those poems he captures so completely the familiar ritual cadences of Akan. |
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Besides the protesting of aforesaid groups, the movie has introduced an aspect of the story of Christ to those who may be less familiar with it. |
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The familiar smirk was gone, replaced by a serious, solemn look that she had never seen before. |
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You are more likely to pick a winner if you buy shares in a company whose business you are familiar with. |
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The lift opened up on level six, causing Taylor to wrinkle up her nose, as the familiar smell of tank fluid filled the air. |
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However, Gareth has rallied in Ireland in recent times, so he is certainly familiar with pace note asphalt rallies. |
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Everyone is familiar with thermoplastic elastomers used in toothbrushes, cellphone keypads or screwdrivers. |
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I shifted, uncomfortable, wondering why I hadn't registered the familiar ting of the door opening that must have sounded when Will entered. |
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The figure slowly walked into the room whistling a familiar tune of one of his favorite bands. |
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The forked tongue darted from his lips, and the tip of his tail began the familiar sound of a rattle. |
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For the reader who is not familiar with Soviet map symbols, there is a key in the back of the book. |
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Claire Denis was given a triumphant welcome by admirers familiar with her complete filmography. |
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I struggle with my memories as the vaguely familiar face jumps out from the front cover of the book. |
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You find yourself stranded airside in such an airport, and you know that a familiar bar will be there somewhere, and you eventually do find it. |
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The results of the Depression in America and Europe are familiar enough to Western readers. |
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The first quarto of Hamlet offers its audience an interesting new way of looking at an extremely familiar text. |
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We're all familiar with helium, the very light gas that makes balloons and airships float in the air. |
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This allows phones to send and receive much longer messages, which will remove the need for the shorthand familiar to every teenage texter. |
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Besides, familiar faces from the silver screen and even the small screen, there will be a lot of glitterati at these burger joints. |
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Most people are familiar with mice, rats, hamsters, and guinea pigs, which are commonly kept as pets. |
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I spent 28 years as a Navy judge advocate so I am well familiar with what they do. |
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It was the sun reflecting off the brushed stainless steel surface of the familiar DeLorean. |
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His voice still carried the thick, Hungarian accent, once incomprehensible, now familiar though still mysterious. |
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Of course, it does not mean he is not familiar with the issues and problems afflicting the two suburbs. |
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There is a sizable military garrison in the country and US warplanes are familiar sights at Saudi air force bases. |
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By the way, as the air bag fills the hub of the steering wheel, becoming familiar with the location of the horn buttons takes some time. |
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The familiar whirr of the tram, the particular clicking noise the indicators make when we pause at stops. |
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The familiar lament by mothers everywhere may have a kernel of scientific truth. |
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He is familiar with the challenges facing both breeders and racers, as well as the wants and needs of the racing public. |
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I jumped when I heard a horn honk behind me and spun around, as a familiar black car pulled up. |
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Hookers, johns, drunks, drug dealers and police are familiar sights in this area, which has seven schools within a two-block radius. |
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My eyes range over the familiar faces and I receive nods and smiles from every direction. |
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I was a little taken aback by her use of the familiar term but I recovered quickly. |
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After a forty-five minutes delay the lights came on and the familiar two blasts of the air horns sounded and we began to roll. |
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To Peter's astonishment a familiar figure was wading ashore, a red and white lifebelt about his waist. |
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They also interviewed people said to be familiar with the abductees and visited places where some of them had apparently stayed. |
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Most Scots are familiar with the sight of Jim and Carole demonstrating the wonders of Aberdonian soil. |
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He was sitting in a traffic queue on York's eastern outskirts when the familiar sound of sirens wafted through the air. |
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It's about a lawyer circa 70BC, familiar to Latin students more for his ablative absolutes than his crowd-pulling charisma. |
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The pow-pow-pow of gunshots was a familiar sound, as was the wail of police sirens. |
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Possokhov uses excerpts from fellow Ukrainian Yuri Krasavin's film scores and abridgments of familiar Beethoven works. |
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Let me develop that illustration in a familiar way, contrasting a Christmas tree with an apple tree. |
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All up the game was obviously timed to coincide with the movie release but in reality those familiar with the comics will feel more at home. |
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Malevich was represented by iconic Suprematist abstractions and by less familiar works that preceded and followed his brief zenith. |
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The film explores a whole bunch of kinky sexual practices, many of which our innocent readership may not be familiar with. |
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The kagu has long been classified with the gruiform birds, a grab bag of anatomically diverse families such as the familiar cranes and rails. |
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Stepping back a generation, doctors were familiar with hospital wards full of patients succumbing to sepsis in the pre-penicillin era. |
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Before I could think twice, his familiar black leather belt was welting me across my body. |
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Familiarity is a quantitative measure of the number of buyers familiar with the company. |
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Finally I saw the familiar numbers and went in, not caring wheatear he was behind me or not. |
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His familiar face appeared on the front page of the Brighton Argus, wearing an expression of glowering discomfort. |
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The most familiar cause of hypoxic hypoxia is the low oxygen content of air at high altitude. |
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This would allow for the use of a variety of familiar medicinal herbs, including poisonous plants like aconite. |
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Early on, the text of the inscription itself raised doubts among experts familiar with Aramaic scripts. |
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Are your soldiers familiar with this route, and have they conducted a route reconnaissance? |
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His performance skills are less obtrusive than those of his actorly predecessors simply because we are already familiar with the style. |
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In many limericks extra weak syllables may be squeezed in almost anywhere, but we still recognise a familiar underlying metrical pattern. |
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Yet, in that familiar paradox Freud makes his own, our drives have their own ineluctable logics and rationales. |
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His characters inhabit a society that is not quite ours, but which is familiar all the same. |
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She had not been home for months and decided that she needed to reacquaint herself with the once familiar surroundings. |
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The material kapok, the soft fibrous covering of the seeds of a tropical tree, is familiar as a lining and stuffing material. |
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Local archery ranges are crowded now as bowhunters reacquaint themselves with a favorite bow or become familiar with new gear. |
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His newscasts are announced by a familiar jingle, and the newsroom is a white antiseptic box. |
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If not familiar with puppetry, you may wonder why the characters are making jerky movements. |
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His jerky movements and sinister singing voice complement the familiar musical tunes, which are deliberately cheesy for comic effect. |
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Now athletes are using more familiar smells, such as their favourite aftershave or perfume to trigger memories of their strict training regimes. |
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The familiar rush of adrenalin filled Matt's body and he took a deep breath. |
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As the music stopped, then abruptly changed to the familiar wedding march, the entire packed sanctuary rose to its feet as one person. |
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I felt his familiar arms wrap around me and rub my back as I tried to recollect myself. |
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Back to the theme of homicide, albeit in a world rather more familiar than that of Minority Report. |
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Over the years the 19-year-old had become all too familiar with her role as caregiver for her mother and her father. |
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Mike was a familiar figure whenever ordinary people were fighting back. |
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According to industry sources familiar with Virgin's plans, the company is assembling a range of offerings the music service will offer with a view to those launch windows. |
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Either fondly or with curses, it is a time to look back at a year grown familiar to us now. |
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He was talking about places that give a neighborhood its stability and coherence, where we can see familiar faces and decompress. |
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Cousins of the perhaps more familiar khanga from Kenya and the east coast of Africa, lamba hoany are rectangular cloths manufactured in either Madagascar or India. |
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Finally, the music changed, and the familiar wedding march began. |
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Recent trends have favored the use of medications such as etomidate and ketamine, while familiar agents such as fentanyl and mid-azolam continue to be used widely. |
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Some people have an extreme fear condition called agoraphobia, and confine themselves to the home or other familiar places where they feel relatively safe. |
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It belongs rather to that tradition of artistic realism that stakes its claim to truth on calculated departures from familiar modes of seeing and knowing. |
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His work is not a new direction but a reaffirmation of a familiar one. |
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Ferraro didn't know much about catfish, crayfish, or grapes, but she was, she said, quite familiar with blueberries. |
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This readability allows readers less familiar with the arguments to rapidly acquaint themselves with the usual analysis of capitalism's post-war golden era. |
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Fans of the 2013 horror film The conjuring may be familiar with the doll, which plays a central role. |
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The technology is familiar to anyone who has ever been to a stadium gig or watched an internet webcast, and the movement is simple, stylised and theatrical. |
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For a Northeastern more-or-less-moderate Republican, this courting of the right is a familiar path. |
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In his 35-minute address, Cruz pushed familiar Republican policy prescriptions but couched them in the concerns of Mother Teresa. |
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He was eighteen, and a rakehell, and the disparity between his character and his appearance is a familiar failure of fit that has come to give beauty a bad name. |
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Lalo said he reported the kidnapping to his ICE handlers, which was confirmed by a former federal agent familiar with the case. |
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As Sides shows, the familiar narratives of black hyper-segregation, white flight, and concomitant deindustrialization don't fit the story of twentieth-century Los Angeles. |
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On the TV in the corner, there was the familiar multi-color weather map. |
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The coat, with fitted bodice, nipped-in waist, and full skirt, created a familiar silhouette for Kate. |
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These are indeed the all too familiar weasel words of appeasement. |
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In her checkered uniform and starched white hat, and with her bubbly good spirits, Betty at first appears to be a familiar caricature of white-bread America. |
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The club's long-suffering supporters became wearily familiar with the annual ritual of the new boss being paraded outside the stadium each summer. |
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We listened to his familiar tale of woe as he talked again about the failure of his marriage. |
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When choosing a garage for repairs, David advises that you select a familiar and reputable company, and wherever possible get a firm quotation or written estimate for repairs. |
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So sit back quietly in that agreeably familiar comfy chair, treat yourself to a pot of weakish tea, and let me put the case for the rise of the dull man. |
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Next to it is one of those scriptural posters familiar as wayside pulpits. |
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Renowned for flexibility, performing familiar and less well-known chamber pieces, the ensemble pairs the supreme string quintets of Mozart and Mendelsshon. |
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Anyone familiar with submarine movies like The Hunt for Red October or das Boot knows what follows when the sub sinks too deep. |
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The reason animators use familiar voices is that immediate connection the audience makes with a character whose speech strikes a recollective chord. |
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But abacus and similar deals were already sucking money out of Rhineland, according to a person familiar with the matter. |
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The familiar feelings of longing returned, and his heart ached for her. |
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The team prepared a new sample by coating a titanium plate with a layer of titanium dioxide, or titania, familiar as the whiter than white pigment in household paints. |
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It is common knowledge among those familiar with the rabbinic tradition that Haman was considered a descendant of the Amalekites. |
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This group includes familiar medicines like hydrocortisone, cortisone, prednisone, and Decadron. |
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It's all very madcap and zany, anarchic in a way familiar to any contemporary viewer of late-night TV made decades later. |
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One hilt represents one of the most familiar and influential images in all of Akan art, the so-called sankofa bird, whose head is turned toward its back. |
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Soon enough, an old watermill appeared across the horizon, and as they approached it he spotted the familiar stature of a young boy sitting on the topmost propeller. |
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Does any of this ancient history of the bellbottom era sound familiar to you, fellow millennial geeks? |
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Easily hurt by insults and just as easily swayed by compliments, she dwelled in an angsty purgatory familiar to most adolescents. |
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Of course, anybody familiar with the way that planets are formed by the gradual accretion of matter in orbit around a star will be aware that this couldn't happen. |
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In the frigid dark silence he sat, the familiar rumble of the transport flooded his ears as they traversed the wastelands, almost lulling him to sleep. |
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Its familiar spires reach into the sky, the arched walkway hovering high above. |
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The familiar notion of the press as a watchdog for government only arose much later. |
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My debate partner in Virginia was articulate, educated, likable, and familiar with a vast range of relevant scientific research. |
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This could shift global media decision-making from its familiar New York-Los Angeles axis to the Bay Area. |
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Instead, she launched into the now-very familiar GOP talking points about ballooning food stamps rolls and weak jobs reports. |
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All of this makes little sense unless you're familiar with what Barrett Brown did. |
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More than bawdy, though, The Ball adds a familiar unpretentiousness to trendy locales like Tao, Lavo, The Park, and Dream Hotel. |
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It's not just the picture on the front cover but the 130 inside that make this book easily accessible to those who are not familiar with the area. |
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And now we apparently have another major air disaster requiring the familiar saga of pursuing the black box wherever it lies. |
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The moment seems to be a familiar breed of Internet gaffe when a eager but inept social media staffer makes a blunder. |
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Another GOP member familiar with the leadership comments on this brinksmanship scenario for both sides. |
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Brick chimneys became a familiar feature, which signified the arrival of the kitchen and service quarters within the main house, into either a wing or a semi-basement. |
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One imagines that the latest pope, a Jesuit, is familiar with the centuries of calumny that have been heaped upon his forebears. |
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It takes a special person to leave familiar surroundings and travel hundreds of air miles north to work long hours in a challenging work environment. |
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Thankfully I saw a couple of familiar faces the moment I entered the function room, was welcomed into the fold and was given a rapid-fire overview of everyone present. |
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Herrera's portmanteau style and ludic impulse constitute a form of visual jabberwocky, in which the familiar is confidently manipulated and destabilized. |
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But when the dust settles after the opening exchanges and we approach the business end of tournaments, we still expect to see the familiar faces of football's elite. |
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This apparent dilemma is a familiar quandary in traditional epistemology. |
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Soup kitchens, a familiar sight in the past, have now been replaced by food banks, something our well-padded politicians tend to ignore. |
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A collection of familiar and new what-if scenarios of uneven insight by a group of historians What if Charles I had avoided civil war? |
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The alphorns are a familiar sight at many of the traditional Swiss festivals held throughout the year. |
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A metal's oxide coating is as familiar as rust on an iron surface or the thin aluminum oxide film protecting an aluminum sheet. |
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Only the familiar smile was as wide as it used to be nearly 30 years ago in her heyday with Yazoo and as a solo artist. |
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Readers familiar with Bernard Stiegler's work on anamnesis and hypomnesis will find much of interest. |
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If you're not familiar with star anise and its mild anisette flavour, this is a great dish to try. |
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Coleridge coined many familiar words and phrases, including suspension of disbelief. |
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He felt the familiar prickle of excitement as the game began. |
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Since I'm sure you're not familiar with alienism I'll tell you how it works. |
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If management is not quite as routinised as teaching, it still involves quite a lot of autospeak when what people say follows familiar pathways. |
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Many medicines taste bitter because they contain alkaloid compounds. Quinine, caffeine, and the antihistamines are familiar examples. |
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Another approach more familiar to Lorna is phobia cure, used for people with belonephobia. |
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They instead sought out a place of refuge, somewhere familiar with a blankie and a mug of hot cocoa. |
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Then she had not chidden him for the use of that familiar salutation, nor did she chide him now, though she was promised to another. |
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As a result, the Japanese found themselves having to dance to a new tune and it was one they were scarcely familiar with. |
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Caleb continued to hold his gaze until the familiar grating of the dayshields lowering diverted his attention back over to the terrace doors. |
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Socspeak and economese are familiar forms of jargon-laden language being used to convey almost nothing verbosely. |
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We seem to have become similarly obsessed, abandoning particular, familiar trees in favour of a kind of abstract notion of elmness. |
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They belonged to a nation dedicated to the figurative arts, and they wrote for a public familiar with painted form. |
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In terms of villains, familiar characters haven't been fridged but they've been rather sexualized. |
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Full frontal nudity is out, but both female and male backsides are a familiar sight. |
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The Remove dormitory echoed to the old, familiar sound of Bunter's hefty snore. |
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There were clearly gaps in Bede's knowledge, but Bede also says little on some topics that he must have been familiar with. |
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William Shakespeare was interested in the legendary history of Britain, and was familiar with some of its more obscure byways. |
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Modern writers have suggested the details of the battle were so well known that Gildas could have expected his audience to be familiar with them. |
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Horace laughs to shame all follies and insinuates virtue, rather by familiar examples than by the severity of precepts. |
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James' instructions included several requirements that kept the new translation familiar to its listeners and readers. |
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It is a familiar London landmark which has since given its name to a tube station. |
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The mute swan is a familiar sight on the river but the escaped black swan is more rare. |
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The French official initiative by Gaspard de Prony, and its problems of implementation, were familiar to him. |
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His work was a beginning to the algebra of sets, again not a concept available to Boole as a familiar model. |
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It should be mentioned here that Heaviside was familiar with the Laplace transform method but considered his own method more direct. |
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This is difficult to explain to someone not familiar with concepts of heat and thermal efficiency. |
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Further, the causes are not esoteric and uncontrollable, but can be explained in terms of familiar engineering principles. |
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Every liturgiological student is or should be familiar with the thesis, laid down by Dr. Probst as fundamental. |
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Clerks using this standard were usually familiar with French and Latin, influencing the forms they chose. |
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Professional economists are expected to be familiar with these tools, while a minority specialize in econometrics and mathematical methods. |
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The 1990s brought back the familiar idea that explicit grammar instruction and error correction was indeed useful for the SLA process. |
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Norman supposes that these terms were already in use at the Buddha's time, and were familiar to his hearers. |
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While in the West Buddhism is often seen as exotic and progressive, in the East it is regarded as familiar and traditional. |
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The familiar witch of folklore and popular superstition is a combination of numerous influences. |
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By the end of their studies at age 14, they would be quite familiar with the great Latin authors, and with Latin drama and rhetoric. |
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The usable model at hand, when Constantine wanted to memorialise his imperial piety, was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilicas. |
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In Old French sources this then became Escalibor, Excalibor and finally the familiar Excalibur. |
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There are 3 levels, Apprentice, which allows you to work under a qualified supervisor until you are familiar with the basics. |
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Chicken cooked in coconut milk, chillies and curry powder is the usual curry dish that northern Filipinos are familiar with. |
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The pages of ornamentation have motifs familiar from metalwork and jewellery that pair alongside bird and animal decoration. |
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In the English theatre, Restoration playwrights such as William Wycherly and William Congreve would have been familiar with them. |
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It is probable that Antonello da Messina became familiar with Van Eyck's work, while in Naples or Sicily. |
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A large part of rhetoric consists of the ability to present a familiar idea in a striking new manner that attracts attention. |
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Christie frequently used settings that were familiar to her for her stories. |
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Elements of this version later became familiar to British audiences, incorporated into editions of the score by editors including Ebenezer Prout. |
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The concept of mixing pathos with slapstick was learnt from Karno, who also used elements of absurdity that became familiar in Chaplin's gags. |
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Martin Amis, an important novelist in the late twentieth and twentieth centuries, carried into fiction this drive to make the familiar strange. |
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In 2000, the Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, suggested replacing the statues with figures more familiar to the general public. |
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Back in the familiar 'Red 5', he won five races in 1991, most memorably in the Spanish Grand Prix. |
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There was an easy familiar touch about the way they were getting ready, as though they had done it often before. |
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A familiar sight throughout the UK, the red telephone box and Royal Mail red post box are considered British cultural icons. |
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Stroke by stroke, the great familiar monody of that incomparable curfew rose and fell in the stillness. |
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This reduces the four Maxwell equations to two, which simplifies the equations, although we can no longer use the familiar vector formulation. |
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Steam had in its favour familiar technology, adapted well to local facilities. |
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The game also encourages the user to become familiar with the type, carrying capacity, and wheel layout of different classic locomotives. |
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The Shell logo is one of the most familiar commercial symbols in the world. |
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They are a familiar sight to most travellers of the murram roads of Uganda. |
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The polka is a central European dance and also a genre of dance music familiar throughout Europe and the Americas. |
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In sculpture, the most familiar representatives are the Italian Antonio Canova, the Englishman John Flaxman and the Dane Bertel Thorvaldsen. |
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During this time he became familiar with the Marxist view of economics, class conflict, and history. |
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Only his private secretary, Christopher Beaumont, was familiar with the administration and life in the Punjab. |
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The Portuguese built architecture familiar to them in Europe in their aim to colonise Brazil. |
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He would have been familiar with the signs of madness because his own father, Charles VI, had suffered from it. |
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Haig, although not familiar with technological advances, encouraged their use. |
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Agassiz appears to have been already familiar with Bernhardi's paper at that time. |
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The first is through dispersal, and the second is by avoiding familiar group members as mates. |
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As part of this restructure, the decision was made to retain division numbers familiar to the British public. |
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The area of a familiar country, state or city is often used as a unit of measure, especially in journalism. |
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In Iran, there are pilgrimage destinations called pirs in several provinces, although the most familiar ones are in the province of Yazd. |
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The name 'dolphin' is used casually as a synonym for bottlenose dolphin, the most common and familiar species of dolphin. |
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If this performance deviates too far from audience expectations of the familiar folk artifact, they will respond with negative feedback. |
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The original sculpture depicts Christ on the cross, surrounded by a familiar retinue of mourners. |
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Each hour La learned new words, all nouns at first, that described each familiar object that appeared oftenest to their view. |
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They are also able to distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics. |
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People familiar with folk dancing can often determine what country a dance is from even if they have not seen that particular dance before. |
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As its name implies, it stays close to coastal areas or river estuaries, and as such, is the most familiar porpoise to whale watchers. |
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The strong nuclear force, not observed at the familiar macroscopic scale, is the most powerful force over subatomic distances. |
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Other familiar bodies of water that overlie continental shelves are the North Sea and the Persian Gulf. |
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Many larger animals begin their life as zooplankton before they become large enough to take their familiar forms. |
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While harsh, the land allowed for a pastoral farming life familiar to the Norse. |
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The intertidal zone and the photic zone in the oceans are relatively familiar habitats. |
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The Dhak or Palas is a familiar wild tree and is common throughout the greater part of India except in drier parts. |
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Associated with the commander in the praetorium he became a familiar and close friend of Pomponius, who also was a man of letters. |
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During his stay in Hispania he became familiar with the agriculture and especially the gold mines of the north and west of the country. |
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This change was made owing to the whitetail being a more familiar species to the mainstream US viewers. |
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There are indications that Plato was familiar with some version of the Orphic theogony. |
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What, he asked himself, does quantum theory have to say about the familiar properties of particles such as position? |
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Second, speakers are always familiar with at least two languages and typically more. |
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The English became familiar with captivity narratives written by Barbary pirates' prisoners and ransomed captives, as so many people were taken. |
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Often these names served as a way for Europeans to divide Africans in a familiar manner, disregarding ethnicity or origin. |
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They planted familiar crops, but these were unsuited to Cape Cod's thin, glacially derived soils. |
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Day is believed to have been familiar with the key figures of the expedition and thus able to report on it. |
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Augustine, for example, grew up in North Africa and was familiar with the language. |
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This behaviour of briars would have been very familiar to medieval people who worked on the land. |
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However, an evil dwarf tricks them into drinking a love potion, and the familiar plot ensues. |
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The sleepy behaviour of the dormouse character in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland reflects this familiar trait of dormice. |
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In a public environment, dialects are less common than in a familiar environment. |
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Everything at the school, including the large printing presses, moved to the North where the boys quickly settled into their familiar routine. |
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A Florentine mosaic is a familiar instance of work in pietra dura, though the ground may be soft marble. |
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The origin of Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon is the familiar coat of the Counts of Barcelona and Kings of Aragon. |
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Tang Taizong was cited by Yongle as his model for being familiar with both China and the steppe people. |
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He noted the Great Wall familiar to us today is a Ming structure built some two centuries after Marco Polo's travels. |
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The main Moroccan dish most people are familiar with is couscous, the old national delicacy. |
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The unique stripes of zebras make them one of the animals most familiar to people. |
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Roger Collins suggests this may be because some Berbers were familiar with mountain terrain, whereas the Arabs were not. |
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These and similar ship types were familiar to Portuguese navigators and shipwrights. |
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In the 18th century, three unpublished familiar letters from Vespucci to Lorenzo de' Medici were rediscovered. |
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While heritage tourism provides economic opportunities for some, it can devalue contributions made by less familiar groups. |
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Due to its proximity with China, Japan had long been familiar with gunpowder weaponry. |
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The local people were already familiar with the English, who had intermittently visited the area for fishing and trade before Mayflower arrived. |
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Although the Tatars quickly began raids against their familiar foe, after a short period they ceased, leaving the Russians to their new town. |
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Other tools and means of navigation were the detailed charts and sailing directions, the stars, and the pilot's marks on the familiar shores. |
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They are also able to discriminate between familiar individuals, and among humans. |
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Studies show they behave less aggressively toward familiar individuals when they are forming a new group. |
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Furthermore, they are able to categorize images as familiar and unfamiliar individuals. |
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The familiar examples of paradigms are the conjugations of verbs and the declensions of nouns. |
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Not until the time of the American Civil War did the language of the slaves become familiar to a large number of educated whites. |
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Broad Australian English is recognisable and familiar to English speakers around the world. |
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The Court advises counsel to assume that the Justices are familiar with and have read the briefs filed in a case. |
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He became familiar with, and an advocate of the Latin concept of Universal Law or Natural Moral Law, based on his reading of these sources. |
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The ancient Greeks were familiar with the Hebrew scriptures and language, and often borrowed words and terms. |
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This stone arch bridge is a familiar scene walking northward at the Blackstone Canal Heritage State Park. |
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Some of the more familiar species grow as a flattened leafless thallus, but most species are leafy with a form very much like a flattened moss. |
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His figure was as familiar as Wordsworth's, and he made many friends among the locals. |
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The Westmoreland dialect in three familiar dialogues, in which an attempt is made to illustrate the provincial idiom. |
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Thousands of tourists flock to the area each year to enjoy scenery and locations familiar from the series. |
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Grillo, a minor white grape, is familiar to fans of Marsala, a sherrylike Sicilian wine that has lost favor over the years. |
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When he got among the familiar streets he went slinkingly, hurrying round corners, avoiding glances. |
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Most men familiar with the handling of leather must occasionally have come across samples showing a whitish scum, or spew, upon the surface. |
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Indeed, the infantry battle on the desolate ridgeline above Darwin would probably have seemed remarkably familiar to a World War I stormtrooper. |
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The man in the tarboosh turned finally and nodded in a strangely familiar way. |
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Similar sentiments will recur to everyone familiar with his writings all through them till the very end. |
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The fact is that many relations we are familiar with are transtemporal, that is, they obtain between entities located a different times. |
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During the singing act these wing surfaces are moved rapidly on each other, producing the familiar strident trillings of midsummer. |
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I knew my Foucault as well as anyone and was familiar with Firestone, Millett, Brownmiller, Faludi, e tutte quante. |
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I began to wonder if he was experiencing a form of absence seizure which was very familiar to me from nursing school. |
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I have also adopted a stance, familiar from consumer culture, which suggests that the goods under question can do anything under the sun. |
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Every fan of modernist design is probably familiar with a few big names. |
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Rory Delap's long throw-ins are a familiar weapon to the Potters' opponents but this does not make them any easier to defend against. |
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A welsome poesy attends the final ebbing of his really romantic life, amid the familiar scenes of his boyhood. |
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Anyone familiar with the events of four years ago can attest to that. |
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We'll be displaying the latest wakeboards and water skis from many familiar water sports equipment brands. |
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The bloated result is vaguely surreal but consistent with a vernacular familiar from the contents of wax museums and Disneyland. |
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The most familiar example of biochar is the activated charcoal used in aquarium filters. |
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Burson seems to assume that the reader is already familiar with the main, rather rigorist, views of Jansenism. |
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Even for those who are familiar with Indian classical music, the jati and its transformation to raga remain very obscure. |
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I reported the crewman's after-takeoff checks complete and stared anxiously at the radarscope until I saw the familiar outline that defined home. |
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