He also predicted the existence of antimatter that was later discovered in nature. |
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I know there are other threads on this subject, but they are more specific in nature. |
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Improvisatory in nature, it involved only the 24 bass strings of the instrument. |
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Having evolved into an ecumenical organisation, the chaplaincy is now multi-faith in nature. |
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This study was more qualitative in nature, determining the amount of exercise required for joint enhancement. |
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It is light classical in nature and thus often sung in the vocal genre of thumri. |
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The organization of the whole thing is very symphonic in nature, which is deliberate on my part. |
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Gold and silver was also beaten and drawn out to be used to make thread for embroidery and braid weaving, often of an ecclesiastical in nature. |
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Our notions of order and disorder stand in stark contrast to the dynamic artistry of the integral beauty of things as they are in nature. |
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These publications, general in nature at first, turned increasingly to specialized subjects that included women's topics and cookery. |
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The voice which erupted was metallic in nature and seemed much older than Chrome herself even was. |
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The young girl seeks refuge in nature, by walking through the empty woods or skinny-dipping in the local creek. |
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Systems of thought that are fundamentally metaphysical in nature are not testable and can therefore never be proven incorrect. |
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Where they are found in nature they may be worshipped as Shiva despite being unconsecrated. |
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Only a few metals such as gold, silver and copper are found pure in nature, uncombined with other elements. |
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He believed that there do exist necessary connections in nature, even though these connections are opaque to human understanding. |
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Sister John's headaches are epileptic in nature, temporal-lobe seizures, and are caused by an operable menangioma above her right ear. |
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Invariably in the process the culture of dominant groups emerge as hegemonic in nature. |
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One of the clues that a helicoid is an efficient surface and not just an accident is its ubiquity in nature. |
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Some of the material is organic in nature and is easily dealt with by microbial action. |
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Airborne particles can be organic or inorganic in nature and can range in size from 0.001 micrometers to several hundred micrometers. |
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This session will be mainly organisational in nature, with a review of the last season's activities and a look forward to the coming months. |
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One of the big challenges in integrative organismal biology is to explain-and ideally predict-the evolution of complex animal traits in nature. |
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Such research is more likely to be transdisciplinary and collaborative in nature. |
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If the logjam, however, is structural in nature, it will be much more difficult to overcome. |
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Our progress on these 3 key elements might be considered predictable because much of the work is structural in nature. |
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Some of these were structural in nature, while others involved the process of transforming hope into action. |
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The heroes and myths of the hill tribes of Cambodia are religious and familial in nature. |
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In today's world, all that's really left of the Queen's power is ceremonial and symbolic in nature. |
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Waterhemps vary greatly in vegetative characters in nature, but such characters are usually only poorly represented on herbarium specimens. |
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This new material was dramatically different in nature and concept of use from the conventional high explosives used in fission weapons. |
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Of course, there are beautiful scenes and views in nature, but that happens by chance. |
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Some may be based on birds in captivity in Europe that were unintentionally overfed, and fattened up beyond what would occur in nature. |
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His occasional obsessions were strategic in nature, procedural, methodical. |
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Apparent settlement could be minor in nature or symptomatic of a major structural problem. |
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The project clearly seems non-secular in nature and I feel a little uncomfortable having tax revenues go to that purpose. |
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Besides diamonds, other forms of carbon found in nature include charcoal, coal, and soot. |
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This city has been invaded so many times in history and been a ground for so many battles that it has become combative and untrusting in nature. |
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Geometric shapes originate from the square, circle or triangle and organic shapes are free-flowing shapes found in nature. |
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All the living and nonliving elements present in nature follow some pattern. |
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Some patterns in nature are formed by natural growth mechanisms, as with the spiral shape of the nautilus shell. |
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The buildings are utilitarian in nature, although they come with efficient, and some would say essential, air-conditioning. |
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This is sufficient bias to provide proof of an extraterrestrial origin of the single-handedness of chemistry in nature. |
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Neither do attacks appear viral or worm-like in nature, as had been suspected. |
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Although both terrorism and communism are radical in nature, the similarity stops there. |
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The question is the extent to which the object in nature as goal remains the same. |
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Equally though, it can be based on a template or a model that is more generic in nature. |
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Yes, what he did to us was very personal in nature and so it was only logical that my response would be equally personal. |
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The gradual twist of the body may be likened to certain movements in nature, such as that of a vine winding itself around a tree. |
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Molybdenum never occurs as the free element in nature, but is most commonly found in the minerals molybdenite and wulfenite. |
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These shape changes seem to be tied to onset of symptoms and may be neurodegenerative in nature. |
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Thus in Aristotle's view, there are accidental phenomena in nature, and they are not subject to scientific knowledge. |
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The old man never once turned around to look at the speaker, but his reply was undeniably acerbic in nature. |
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Because most cases of pharyngitis are viral in nature, they can be treated with acetaminophen for pain and fever relief. |
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However a sour taste usually indicates that the substance is an acid or acidic in nature. |
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The hexagon is a function between the radius and circumference of the circle, and is a naturally occurring form in nature. |
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Like him, it's a little loud and rambunctious, insatiably curious, and extroverted in nature. |
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The floods in Britain in autumn 2000 were blamed on man's arrogance and human interference in nature. |
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But any phenomenon in nature, however grand, great, shocking, dark, and terrifying, would have limits and borders. |
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In a crisis like that, a company changes its whole behavior and becomes reactive in nature. |
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The gradual twist of the body may be likened to certain movements in nature, such as that of a vine winding around a tree. |
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Undoubtedly some of the relationships found here are reciprocal in nature to a greater or lesser degree. |
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Normally, relationships progress by way of a reasonably paced flow of self-disclosure that is reciprocal in nature. |
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But there was a residual wiriness, as he sat, a strength remaining from a lifetime of vigorous activity in nature. |
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There is indeed much evidence of design in nature and God's Word frequently refers to it. |
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Polarization of light by reflection is found more in nature than in industry. |
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Many nitrates are ionic in nature, but heavy metal nitrates and anhydrous nitrates have covalently bonded nitrate groups. |
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The more they emulated regenerative processes they saw in nature, the longer time they allowed for restoration. |
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That building now houses all its activities most of which, as the respondents agree, are charitable in nature. |
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The majority of the weapons are unguided in nature, and do not impact instantaneously on their targets immediately after firing. |
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The unskilled workers' contacts were with people whose common bonds were social rather than industrial in nature. |
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Renowned yogini Shiva Rea leads retreats in which guests do yoga in nature. |
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Bird cherry blooming is one of the most distinctive phenomena in nature cycle. |
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Essentially, biomimicry is noticing and being aware of how things are made in nature when they're made by natural processes. |
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It will be particularly useful for those practicing integrated pest management or just studying pests and other biological organisms in nature. |
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In addition, the authors imply that severe reactions to radiographic contrast media are anaphylactic in nature. |
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The platinum metals tend to occur together in nature and are relatively difficult to separate from each other. |
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The West's appreciation for the rule of law can be seen in the lawyerly parsing of targets to ensure that they are valid and military in nature. |
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The fruit is about two to five centimetres long and acidic in nature with a sour taste. |
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Michael suggests that the modern mass is not Protestant in nature, but let me use one example, a quote from the introduction to the new missal. |
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Our culture has become quite shockproof, thanks to a media that brings us daily reports meant to be graphic and sensational in nature. |
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It is known that oxytocin is important for milk let-down, but its physiologic release is pulsatile in nature. |
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From statistical analysis of 11 pulsars, they concluded that the maximum speed seen in nature must be below 760 revolutions per second. |
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They are expressions of the blind will in nature, enabling life to exist and propagate itself. |
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We are still in the process of ensuring that this armament is not sectarian in nature. |
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We are called upon to regard this as the common and immutable measure of rightness in nature. |
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Oddly enough, if I know for certain that the scuttling thing isn't arachnoid in nature, it doesn't bother me in the slightest. |
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Such bigeneric cross plants do occur rarely in nature, and have at times also been artificially created in the horticultural field. |
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Their vibrato and the tone it produced, among other things, was just utterly Romantic in nature and would make any good Baroque scholar cringe. |
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This is particularly true in Japan where religions such as Shinto and Buddhism believe that all things in nature have a spirit and soul. |
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I get so excited, like those armies of people with long lenses who hang around in nature reserves. |
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Contrary to a commonly held belief, self-regulated learning is not asocial in nature and origin. |
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Being in nature with understanding friends soothes the soul, calms emotional swings and might well provide respite from night sweats. |
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A familiar example of an ionic compound is table salt, found in nature as rock salt. |
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It is a dimorphic fungus that exists saprophytically in nature and has a worldwide distribution. |
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Zinc is a white, lustrous, tarnishable metal which has a relatively low abundance in nature. |
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In fact, the vast majority of products and services sold are considered to be B2B in nature. |
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However, these statements were general in nature and were not backed by material evidence to support them. |
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Although the second part of the book is technical in nature, end users will find useful hints sprinkled throughout. |
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Under the Ottomans they lived in tekkes or lodges, which were similar in nature to monasteries, and lived off alms. |
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He is eagerly interested in anything scientific in nature, and careless about the feelings of people around him. |
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The answer to the question of whether or not miracles occur is bifold in nature, analogous to a coin with two faces on it. |
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Some of it sounds like it might be poetry, some of it sounds mantric in nature, but none of it means anything to me. |
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Hassium does not occur in nature, and it has no isotopes that last long enough to allow significant quantities to be accumulated. |
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They can be discretionary in nature with the stockbroker managing the fund and choosing stocks on behalf of the client. |
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The climate, both tropical and maritime in nature, usually has high humidity and high temperatures. |
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Just as in nature there is a great variety of skills and resources, so there is a variety in the marketability of goods. |
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The construction of male and female gender roles was masculinist in nature. |
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His golden glows and ghostly, bluish lights articulate masses more elemental than any particular subject in nature. |
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In terms of domestic organization and management, kin groups are matriarchal in nature. |
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With springtime dawning once again it's hard not to thinks of parks, gardens and being outdoors in nature. |
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Compared with precious metals, base metals are plentiful in nature and therefore much cheaper, of course. |
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In cosmopolis, Packer Capital uses complex fractal modeling, based on patterns in nature, to map data in the markets. |
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While most of the examples that come to mind are historical in nature, it would be a mistake to conclude that the impact of oil prices on the macroeconomy is now unimportant. |
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Traditional antivirus protection is very reactive in nature. |
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Animation courses in universities and art schools were traditionally bolt-on elements to illustration degrees and usually very specialised in nature. |
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The finale consisted of a lengthy dance routine that mimicked the movements of animals in nature. |
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As an organic chemist with a major pharmaceutical company, he was on a good salary, developing a new generation of drugs by synthesising molecules found in nature. |
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Mouton stated that there was a marvellous regularity in nature which made a metric system of measurement based on nature fit in with human activity. |
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Now chance in a casino is much more tractable than chance in nature. |
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Though he is kin to God in nature, all his character is unlike God. |
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The other noble metal is silver, comparatively scarce in nature but easily beaten into shapes where its gleaming silver colour reminded the ancients of the Moon. |
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According to Lee, Korean companies contribute much to the local economy as most of these companies are labor intensive and small and medium in nature. |
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Remember, though, that most applications, for some time to come, will still be 32-bit in nature, so don't upgrade with the anticipation of running scads of 64-bit programs. |
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Shango Orisha represents the fire element and is hot and dry in nature. |
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In speaking of Hume as a determinist, we must, however, bear in mind that this does not in his case carry any pledge of allegiance to a reign of necessity in nature. |
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Eric lobbies for an industry of benign usefulness, non-partisan in nature, and over which no cloud of serious controversy looms. |
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The work at Art Basel is often interesting, often dull, and disproportionately decorative in nature. |
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Many of the phenomena to be understood are microeconomic in nature. |
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Of the two the Byzantine was nearer to the classical tradition, for it broadly recognized the articulation of the limbs and their relative proportions in nature. |
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Tetraploids, inheriting a full complement of chromosomes from each parent, and thus having double the normal allowance, occur in nature or can be induced. |
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For him, understanding the individualistic environmental tolerances and characteristics of species in nature was a fundamental part of any botanical inquiry. |
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The potential scenarios are endless, but all are economic in nature. |
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I said yesterday that legislation should be remedial in nature. |
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Rocky Mountain spotted fever is a disease caused by a rickettsial organism that circulates in nature in a complex cycle between ticks and small mammals. |
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The exercise is transgressive for both genres and alchemic in nature. |
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Because of her interest in nature, including her love of plant life, she majored in plant genetics and minored in fine art at the University of California in Berkeley. |
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In the imitation of nature, as in nature itself, balance is important. |
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Besides nest robbers such as the great horned owl and the raven, and a couple of egg-sucking varmints like the raccoon, there isn't much in nature that ospreys fear. |
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Show Me Love is an emotional roller-coaster ride for viewers of both genders and all sexual orientations, because the feelings it uncovers are universal in nature. |
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The researchers used mouse-eared bats for the study and recreated four artificial microhabitats, each mimicking foraging conditions faced by bats in nature. |
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Some philosophers have, in the past, leaped from this sort of consideration to what they take to be a proof that the mind is essentially non-physical in nature. |
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Most of the arguments in favour of the internal combustion engine and against the steam engine and the electric motor are technological or economic in nature. |
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The French Gnostic Tradition is hierophantic in nature and transmission. |
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He argues that Western societies generally have regarded abortions occurring before the fetus showed signs of animation as not criminal in nature. |
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Field studies of performance in nature have shown that anoles utilize their maximal sprinting capabilities to escape predators and, to a lesser extent, to capture prey. |
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Fibre present in vegetables, fruits, legumes and fenugreek seeds is soluble in nature and more effective in controlling blood sugar and serum lipids. |
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Anhydrous sodium sulfate is found in nature as the mineral thenardite. |
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When they do quit, they experience more severe withdrawal symptoms than others do, possibly because many of the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal are neuropsychiatric in nature. |
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Apparently plants are vampiric in nature and thrive on blood. |
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The practice of Yoga is more or less physical in nature, through chanting, breathing and other exercises one tries to achieve physical mastery over the body. |
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The letter of intent will also finalize whether the sale of hedge funds, which are high-risk in nature and currently banned in Taiwan, will be allowed, Lu added. |
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Networks will grow even more multivendor and multiservice in nature. |
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Shinto shrines and rituals were at first local and agricultural in nature, but eventually they became associated with larger entities, including clans and the nation itself. |
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The number system which was used to express this numerical information was based on the decimal system and was both additive and multiplicative in nature. |
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Such investigations would lead to the study of higher plant halophytes, which in nature often encounter high salinity and alkaline pH values at the same time. |
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The complaints of alleged defamation are personal and political in nature. |
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Those who are familiar with the New Testament record of his teachings would admit that the material we possess is unsystematic and sporadic in nature. |
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That Sienese art came to be self-referential and insular in nature is evident from the constant reworking of compositions and motifs from the earlier trecento. |
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In buildings, fungi attack dead organic material, which in nature would fall to the forest floor and be broken down as part of the nitrogen cycle. |
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These include implants that are noncoated, tapered, and threaded in design, and which are immediate-load in nature to allow for delivery in a single procedure. |
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In a household where one of the parents was a newly graduated professor of linguistics and the other an artist, income was usually rather meagre and spasmodic in nature. |
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Infrequent and uniform extra beats or ectopics are of no significance, unless they are multiform in nature, are repeated in succession and occur frequently. |
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A central tenet of Shintoism is the concept of kami, spirits that abide in and are worshipped at shrines, representing human beings and things found in nature. |
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Scientists showed that diseases such as Aucuba mosaic, calico mosaic, latent virus, leaf rolling mosaic, mild mosaic, rugose mosaic, and severe mosaic are viral in nature. |
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His approach to the project was collaborative and organic in nature. |
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Often malicious in nature, it can be deposited as an e-mail attachment or as a website download and used to harvest passwords or other confidential data. |
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According to this view, serious psychological problems are typically intrapsychic and interpersonal in nature rather than socioculturally generated. |
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The principal question for determination by the learned trial judge was whether the inquiry by representatives of Revenue Canada was auditorial or investigatory in nature. |
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Since the majority of pyrogens found on medical devices are bacterial in nature, the paper focuses on those contaminates. |
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It was rare for a woman to publish such a work, let alone one secular in nature. |
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These miscellaneous advertising items, often called advertiques, were generally useful in nature and were saved as a result. |
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Walking in nature, we see, identify, name, recognize. This recognition is our apotropaion, that is, our warding off of fear. |
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Alzheimer's disease and related dementias have come to be defined as biomedical in nature. |
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The Mayor claimed that the action was reasonable, but in reality the action was arbitrary and capricious in nature. |
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The codestream obtained after compression of an image with JPEG 2000 is scalable in nature, meaning that it can be decoded in a number of ways. |
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For ecopoets language is an instrument that the poet continually refurbishes to articulate his originary experience in nature. |
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Fanish culture is very tribal in nature and overly concerned with superiority as fans are slans. |
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In sum, we ought to realise that our enthusiasm for sports heroes is fascistoid in nature. |
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Ghettotech consists largely of four-on-the-floor dance beats at a faster tempo with lyrics that are sexually explicit and derogatory in nature. |
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In the province of Ontario, the vast majority of bachelor's degrees offered by Ontario universities are academic in nature. |
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The Southern Uplands are essentially rural in nature and dominated by agriculture and forestry. |
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Dreams may be absurd in nature but the senses are not able to discern whether they are real or not. |
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Several archaeological cultures are considered Celtic in nature, based on unique sets of artefacts. |
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The argument between Henry and Becket became both increasingly personal and international in nature. |
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Darwin's work established evolutionary descent with modification as the dominant scientific explanation of diversification in nature. |
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Darwin himself insisted that social policy should not simply be guided by concepts of struggle and selection in nature. |
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He was a natural philosopher, concerned with the economy of nature and obsessed with an idea of unity, in theology and in nature. |
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Otherwise, the improvements to the engine itself were more mechanical in nature. |
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This form of the neutral theory is now largely abandoned, since it does not seem to fit the genetic variation seen in nature. |
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Speciation has been observed multiple times under both controlled laboratory conditions and in nature. |
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The Late Cornish period from 1578 to about 1800 has fewer sources of information on the language but they are more varied in nature. |
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Many forms of modern Druidry are neopagan religions, whereas others are philosophies that are not religious in nature. |
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However, the treatment of the state sector as homogeneous in nature is difficult to support. |
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Its architecture is Anglian in nature, possibly due to forced Anglian labour being used to build it. |
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Baratynsky's style was fairly classical in nature, dwelling on the models of the previous century. |
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A great deal of the literary work produced by Roman authors in the early Republic was political or satirical in nature. |
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His works argued for the possibility of scientific knowledge based only upon inductive reasoning and careful observation of events in nature. |
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Scientific concepts, on the other hand, are general in nature, and transient sensations do in another sense find correction within them. |
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Elmo's fire was electrical in nature, but it has taken a long series of experiments and theoretical changes to establish this. |
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It might predict the outcome of an experiment in a laboratory setting or the observation of a phenomenon in nature. |
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During his tenure as conductor of the Proms, Sir Malcolm Sargent established the tone of making the Last Night speeches more humorous in nature. |
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Before this time, public libraries were parochial in nature and libraries frequently chained their books to desks. |
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Much of the area is still rural in nature with many villages surrounded by agricultural land. |
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Because meetings in the Security Council Chamber are covered by the international press, proceedings are highly theatrical in nature. |
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Among the eukaryotic MIPS sequences, the fungal MIPSs are also tetrameric in nature. |
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The majority of the climbing is on good quality granite, often slabby and sometimes a bit broken in nature. |
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Even organizations and communities that may be considered criminal in nature may have ethical codes of conduct, official or unofficial. |
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Although the governor's assent is also normally granted, this is altogether different in nature to the royal assent. |
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There is an ongoing debate over the degree to which group selection occurs in nature. |
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In this country that person is likely to have been labeled Black regardless of whether or not such a race actually exists in nature. |
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Hughes's earlier poetic work is rooted in nature and, in particular, the innocent savagery of animals, an interest from an early age. |
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The Kirk, heavily influenced by Calvinism, also discouraged poetry that was not devotional in nature. |
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Often speculative in nature, it was widely criticised for its pure conjecture and lack of scholarly rigour. |
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Additionally, the emphasis that Baroque art placed on grandeur is seen as Absolutist in nature. |
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Baroque art was particularly ornate and elaborate in nature, often using rich, warm colours with dark undertones. |
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In 1997, Hopkins narrated the BBC natural documentary series, Killing for a Living, which showed predatory behaviour in nature. |
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Governmental intervention was social in nature from 1832 to 1914, when the major issues were social welfare and the educational system. |
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The institution is so Gaelic in nature that it is rarely translated by scholars. |
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Under the Scottish system, the final examination is still essentially synoptic in nature and draw from all units. |
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Most of the works published in the Welsh language for at least the next century were religious in nature. |
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The poem celebrates the rings found in nature and does not specifically mention the couple's names. |
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It also recommended that the colleges should be unsectarian in nature and that they should exclude the teaching of theology. |
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The art was primarily religious in nature and depicted deities or rulers smoking early forms of cigarettes. |
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Chhattisgarh cuisine is unique in nature and not found in the rest of India, although the staple food is rice, like in much of the country. |
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Generally speaking, in the present day 21st century, the modern cuisine of the United States is very much regional in nature. |
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A characteristic of electricity is that it is not a primary energy freely present in nature in remarkable amounts and it must be produced. |
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The dorsal fin is thick and falcate in nature, and is located about a third of the way down the length of the animal. |
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Plutonium is the element with the highest atomic number to occur in nature. |
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Over 60 further radionuclides are detectable in nature, either as daughters of these, or through natural production on Earth by cosmic radiation. |
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Many of these radionuclides exist only in trace amounts in nature, including all cosmogenic nuclides. |
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When several wave trains are present, as is always the case in nature, the waves form groups. |
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Resonance occurs widely in nature, and is exploited in many manmade devices. |
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Unlike the trench warfare which dominated World War I, these defences were more temporary in nature. |
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As such, summers are almost subtropical in nature, but winters are cold enough to ensure plant hardiness is very low. |
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Though bedding and lamination are often originally horizontal in nature, this is not always the case. |
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Interactions between the two species vary in nature, ranging from active antagonism to indifference. |
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They are solitary in nature with mature males behaving aggressively towards each other. |
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The flowers are typically pale yellow, though white or pink forms are often seen in nature. |
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The photosynthetic partner can exist in nature independently of the fungal partner, but not vice versa. |
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All the algae are probably able to exist independently in nature as well as in the lichen. |
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It also occurs in nature as snow, glaciers, ice packs and icebergs, clouds, fog, dew, aquifers, and atmospheric humidity. |
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Many centuries passed before scientists were able to demonstrate that such spontaneous generation does not occur in nature. |
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Much of these pamphlets felt repetitive in nature as many of the statements and arguments were the same, just with different names. |
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Farmed fisheries are technological in nature, and revolve around developments in aquaculture. |
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The Earth, the Sun, and Stars, what things are they in nature? are they petite things not worth our notice, or grand and worthy of consideration? |
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Turner, saw art's role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature. |
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Large groups of carnivores are usually called packs, and in nature a herd is classically subject to predation from pack hunters. |
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The development of his mind and personality remains purely speculative in nature. |
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Francis Bacon and other advocates of science tried to create unity in Europe by focusing on the unity in nature. |
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Consequently, the majority of Old High German texts are religious in nature and show strong influence of ecclesiastical Latin on the vocabulary. |
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Yoiks can be dedicated to animals and birds in nature, special people or special occasions, and they can be joyous, sad or melancholic. |
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Similarly, most Roman emperors maintained an admiration for things Greek in nature. |
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Another faction, republican in nature, believed in continuing along a course towards practical independence. |
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Variola virus infects only humans in nature, although primates and other animals have been infected in a laboratory setting. |
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Vaccinia, cowpox, and monkeypox viruses can infect both humans and other animals in nature. |
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Maya political administration, based around the royal court, was not bureaucratic in nature. |
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At Nakbe, there are at least a dozen examples of triadic complexes and the four largest structures in the city are triadic in nature. |
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Dishes here tend to be more indigenous in nature, heavily flavored with mild chili peppers. |
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Social change may include changes in nature, social institutions, social behaviours, or social relations. |
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The numerous picture plates added to the book's appeal and usefulness, particularly when pertaining to things found in nature. |
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They are usually regulatory in nature, where the result of breach could have particularly harmful results. |
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In the 17th century, Sir Francis Bacon rejected the idea of syllogism as being the best way to draw conclusions in nature. |
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However, other areas of law, such as criminal law, company law and family law, are almost completely statutory in nature. |
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Some offenses, though similar in nature, may be felonies or misdemeanors depending on the circumstances. |
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Capitalist governments have also been criticised as oligarchic in nature due to the inevitable inequality characteristic of economic progress. |
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They are also inseparable and variable in nature which means they are produced and consumed simultaneously. |
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Shopping goods are costlier than convenience goods and are durable in nature. |
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Elemental potassium does not occur in nature because it reacts violently with water. |
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Smoke contains a wide variety of chemicals, many of them aggressive in nature. |
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Indoors, the lack of air circulation allows these airborne pollutants to accumulate more than they would otherwise occur in nature. |
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A theory, which, how much soever it may relish of wit and invention, hath no foundation in nature. |
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Her parents were artistic, interested in nature, and enjoyed the countryside. |
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Shortwave troughs embedded within the flow around larger scale troughs are smaller in scale, or mesoscale in nature. |
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It only makes up for the lack of spathic content if the tentacles are, ahem, 'Centaurian' in nature. |
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The apatites, which are more soluble than the spodiosites, are formed on heating the latter to redness, hence spodiosites rarely occur in nature. |
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The rhythm should be repetitious, lacking in pulse, unaccented and unpercussive in nature. |
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A wireframe is transparent in nature, requiring some skill and expertise in interpreting the model. |
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The goal was to educate the next generation on how to conserve water and the vital role the water cycle plays in nature. |
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White sugar is acidifying in nature and devoid of all trace elements, enzymes, and vitamins, which is not easily converted by the body. |
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Studies of Tools of the Mind, while not experimental in nature, suggest effectiveness on measures of literacy ability and executive function. |
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He separated himself from previous mythological explanations, leaving out talk of an anthropomorphized Creator or agent of changes in nature. |
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In such a definition, Merton's constant revels in nature form the architectonics of a poetics that aspires to the unity in all things. |
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The consumption rate of reagent is higher as they are disposable in nature, recurrently used and purchased frequently. |
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At Larnaca, Cyprus, I learned that the new LCA Middle Eastern mission venture was decidedly ecumenical in nature. |
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The relationship between business and equity risk capital is symbiotic in nature. |
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Rap and hip-hop music in particular are condescending in nature, projecting rhythmic elements of braggadocio and ritualised insult. |
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The people roughhoused, threw food and didn't seem to remotely appreciate these wonderful creatures and their place in nature. |
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Toile de jouy is a fabric which features a repeated pattern depicting a complex scene, usual pastoral in nature. |
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Surfaces of these soils are sandy loams with strong change to medium clay subsoils that are extremely sodic in nature. |
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Biodegrading, the breaking down of organic substances by natural means, happens all the time in nature. |
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The latter forms the basis of self-healing materials and is also the foundation for material development in nature. |
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Alcohol brewed by the bootleggers turns into poison due to the formation of methyl alcohol which is toxic in nature. |
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Campylobacters are found everywhere in nature, even in house pets, who may carry the bacteria without harm to themselves. |
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A total of 31 ilmenites were probed and all of them are kimberlitic in nature. |
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That interconnectedness is beautiful when you see it in nature. |
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The square toe shoe is a contemporary fashion trend, which makes it obsolescent in nature. |
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Despite their ubiquity in nature, few studies have been conducted worldwide to determine the ecological importance of mycetophagous diptera. |
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All traditional medicine is holistic in nature, putting as much emphasis on maintaining health as on defeating illness. |
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Trans fats are unsaturated fats that are uncommon in nature, but can be created artificially. |
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