Whenever approaching a pumpkin pie, keep in the back of your mind that you are, in essence, making a custard pie. |
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They have shown, in essence, that they do not understand what Maori tino rangatiratanga is. |
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Understandably, US exporters get toey competing against their own cheaper goods, in essence, arguing that they face too much competition. |
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The quarks, in essence, spin like tops, as do the neutrons and protons themselves. |
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The device was, in essence, a tiny sphere with a microchip inside that produced a specific sound. |
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So in essence what you have to transplant into an animal is something that is a mature neurone, a mature nerve cell. |
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In fact, Indian food isn't that far removed in essence from Italian, for both cuisines are dependent on contrasting ingredients. |
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Such conditions can disturb sleep, reduce daytime performance, negatively affect mood and, in essence, mimic a mood disorder. |
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It may look big and it may seem clever, achingly trendily so, but, in essence, it is tantamount to abdicating responsibility. |
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The appellants had responded but in essence no information was forthcoming. |
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When I was but a young boy I saved up my pocket money to buy all my own decorations for my room, creating in essence my own personal grotto. |
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This is in essence a short and rather conventional biography which breaks no new ground but is a good summary of current knowledge. |
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The book is in essence the life story of a mild-mannered and cultured intellectual living under communism. |
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It is, in essence, similar in approach to the agreement concluded with the United States, and takes the same approach towards comity. |
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This, of course, is what in essence he had told Richardson, although in more colourful language. |
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The original codex permitted digestible chunks of text to be presented on physical pages, but the electronic text is in essence pageless. |
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I'm not that nuts about hybrids because, in essence, you need two drivetrains, not one. |
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It was in essence an animated version of the drawings in the scroll paintings. |
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It was in essence a parasite leeching on to Western decadence and lack of will. |
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Light according to Maxwell is an electromagnetic wave, no different in essence to radio waves or the microwaves that heat up our ready meals. |
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Long-term growth will be driven in essence by the increasing affordability of air travel through greater competition. |
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So in essence we have three mythological love stories, each of which came to be emblematically linked in the Renaissance to a different art. |
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Political realism in essence reduces to the political-ethical principle that might is right. |
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They say that the mind works, in essence, like an enormously complicated algorithm. |
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It doesn't matter who you are or what you are, in essence we all carry the same powerful feeling. |
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It has been convincingly argued that nostalgia is, in essence, a state of depression. |
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Both types of wedding are, in essence, variations on the traditional fairytale ending. |
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Football, in essence, is competitive and it is important for the health of the game that it remains so. |
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The rest were in essence apolitical, which made their attitude even more alarming. |
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But, in essence there is now something bigger and more important than just being here. |
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It may sound crude, but that is, in essence, the choice women are repeatedly asked to make. |
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Because in essence, power is getting other people to accept your interpretation of things. |
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To wish it were otherwise is in essence to wish that we were not physical beings at all. |
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The geniuses that we so often read about and hear about are in essence no different from us. |
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By the time he was done, the first four cups were a bit cool, but the operation was, in essence, a completely unqualified success. |
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It's in Gabriel's Wharf which is just a swanked up name for what is, in essence, just a street with some shops full of artsy fartsy froo froo. |
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I have changed my mind, for better or worse, because in essence this is a diary even though I don't want it to be. |
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The courtier had, in essence, brought his own demise the moment he drew his sword on his own brother. |
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It would have, in essence, offered a short-term palliative to a longer-term problem. |
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The law that had to be applied is the law of negligence, in essence, perhaps the laws of evidence. |
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Because actors, in essence, are individualists, they don't really work as a unit. |
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Time was the key and in essence tasks had to be prioritized in the order of importance. |
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Much has been written about gettering in the last 25 years or so, but in essence it all boils down to this. |
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Since we choose the style of clothing we wear, we in essence can direct how others perceive us based on our objectives. |
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The revisionists in his country are in essence reactionaries, and clearly he gave them something to react against. |
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I found the final rather involving, which given that rugby is in essence a game of catch taken extremely seriously is not bad going at all. |
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Tiny electrodes are microfabricated along the walls of the hair-like capillaries, in essence creating a complex grid of electrodes. |
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The result is history without tears, something palatable and likely to be highly popular, but it isn't in essence a perversion of the truth. |
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The top layer was screwed down to the bottom layer in essence creating a one piece quiet, rigid, non-creaking floor. |
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From what I'm led to believe it's all been done in a bit of a cack-handed way and in essence it seems he does not care. |
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The older women are in essence sponging off the daughter, a secretary, who is marrying mainly to escape their clutches. |
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To argue against it is to, in essence, argue against any form of birth control, because birth control is preventing conception, which is what EC is doing. |
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With the batphone to his great pal Bibi beeping and blinking nonstop, would Romney in essence have backed Mubarak? |
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The boardroom fashion guru advised women to, in essence, dress like a man in order to advance up the corporate ladder. |
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Although criticised by many at that time for being too soft, it was in essence a policy based on realism and aimed at liberating India to play a larger role in the world. |
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On the contrary, the alterations in essence expose the instability of the narrator's self-created literary paradise, and thus illuminate even the original. |
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This is staged documentary, its narrative gleaned from personal statements, in essence, a theatre of personal anecdote, performance art on an operatic scale. |
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Humans spent a long time domesticating cattle, and what they were trying to do, in essence, was de-domesticate them. |
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Amid some media tumult, the first President Bush had to come out and say in essence, hey, kidding. |
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Cameron is in essence assuming the role of in loco parentis in relation to almost every household in Britain. |
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The struggle against Trotskyism was, in essence, a re-emergence of the political opposition to the theory of Permanent Revolution within the party. |
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What we are looking at in essence is the underdrawing for an illuminated manuscript, an art form that we associate more with the Middle Ages than with the later Renaissance. |
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Grandpa would, in essence, teach me to be afraid, to understand the humiliation that awaited me if I dared shed tears or demonstrate some other unmanly behavior. |
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Her voice, in essence, sounds like a put-on version of a particularly technical rapper from the American South. |
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A team formed by Deaf Life investigated the well-known Moscow Institute, and proclaimed it a failed experiment, in essence because of its rigid oralist program. |
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It was in essence, for all Irish people, a period of high living. |
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My wife might be listening, but in essence it's a little pizza box that oscillates and it oscillates to the point of barely perceptible vibrations. |
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Yet its exhibits, gleaned from some of the world's finest collections, elegantly displayed and labelled, are in essence, works of purposeful, premeditated vandalism. |
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He argues that Kunti's sons are not to be judged by human standards since they were emanations of gods, who were all different aspects of Indra and thus one in essence. |
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It means, in essence, that less well-off communities should not suffer the double jeopardy of living in a rotten environment, just because they are less well-off. |
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You control in essence a squiggly line, one that takes different forms on different levels. |
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The key is to always remember that China is still, in essence, a Third World country with many of the instabilities that implies. |
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Both of them said in essence that the best way to control a nation is to instill fear into the people. |
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High failure rates leave many of these bomblets undetonated, in essence turning them into lethal landmines. |
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For Darwin and his contemporaries, natural selection was in essence synonymous with evolution by natural selection. |
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It is in essence a Georgian and Victorian design based on a medieval structure, with Gothic features reinvented in a modern style. |
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In such a condensate, atomic or subatomic particles share the same quantum state, amassing into what is, in essence, a single superparticle. |
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And by nativist I mean people who are in essence afraid of the world. |
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A brand is in essence a promise to its customers of they can expect from their products, as well as emotional benefits. |
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Is it in essence so extremely funny-ha-ha that it will bear this so frequent repetition? |
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They are both viewed in essence like eating Brussels sprouts. |
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His fiction, which has only recently been appearing here, can be stylistically elusive, but in essence it is chokingly direct. |
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To be even clearer, God, the final object of theological study is in essence a metempirical reality. |
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As we basically fish down global food webs in all these different ecosystems, we will in essence be restructuring communities. |
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They are now in essence a sisterhood joined together by a vile incident. |
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That, in essence, is what Wednesday's settlement of a civil law suit involving Faoa and De Zubiria was all about. |
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Likely candidates will, in essence, be those Patagonia can see itself in. |
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He rejected the offer, stating in essence, that the Union could afford to leave their men in captivity, the Confederacy could not. |
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China may call itself a nation-state, but in essence it is a civilization-state dating back at least two millennia. |
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By 1824, a court system based in essence on the English model had been established through Acts of the British Parliament. |
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Throughout the year, several points of the plan were altered, but it remained the same in essence. |
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By guarding the border, rather than conquering or colonizing Ezo, the Matsumae, in essence, made the majority of the island an Ainu reservation. |
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There's some back and forth between Simpson and his CIA counterparts and, in essence, the CIA says that you must ship all of the quantities requested. |
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It is in essence a horst underlain by the Weardale Granite which provides sufficient buoyancy to maintain this piece of the upper crust as an area of raised relief. |
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An updated version of the 1981 dictionary characterized subvocalization as movement of the lips, tongue, and larynx, in essence, linking speech to silent reading. |
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Claire nodded, remembering that Micah was, in essence, a cyberpath. He could mentally convince electronics and machines to do pretty much whatever he wanted. |
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Nevertheless, during this period, he remained, in essence, a dilettante. |
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In addition, phantosmias or, in essence, olfactory hallucinations have been described in association with seizure activity, psychiatric illness, and Alzheimer's Disease. |
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They performed in a rackety old stadium which was in essence a dog track but to me, just like their Newcastle counterparts, these were men of magic. |
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The left-hand figure remains in essence the same except that it is no longer rooted to the spot, but now it clearly accompanies the tuniest of tunes. |
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While the example provided in the study is about one fairly unique virtual community existing as diaspora, this book is not, in essence, about the Gathering of Uru. |
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