In April, Daniel is scheduled to move on to Jamaica where is looking forward to a few days off. |
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There is so much work to be done, a few loose ends need tying up before I can move on. |
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This loosey-goosey approach might make it easier for some motivated students to jump the GED hurdle swiftly and move on to college or work. |
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She works hard for the money, and she also has aspirations to move on up into management. |
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I motioned the driver to get lost and move on, but he didn't get the picture. |
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There is lots I have that I want to get off my chest in an effort to move on. |
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How I envy your ability to get over things and move on. I should be so lucky. |
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I wish the guy would take his lumps for writing a controversial book, move on, and write something else. |
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Maybe the youths see the reflective tabards the street cleaners are wearing and move on. |
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We were supposed to move on to making kimono once we had completed the tabi, but mother did not want to see your frustrated face again. |
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There one is entitled to enjoy it, luxuriate in it even, and then move on to another painting hanging next to it. |
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Students are not all the same. They come from many different backgrounds. Some are ready to move on to challenging college courses right away. |
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After I covered Bosnia and wrote a book about it, I was satisfied with what I had written and wanted to move on to other subjects. |
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We move on to the cornfield and possible ways the leaves, corn and tassels might be rendered. |
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With the radiator out of the way now it was time to move on to the back of the truck and the motherboard mounting. |
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When you meet your goals bit by bit, you will no doubt feel a sense of accomplishment which will be an incentive to move on. |
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When Wray pulls on a flimsy robe to cover her scanties to answer the door, gentleman caller Raft tries to make a move on her. |
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I have a bad tendency to move on to the new cool project and leave other projects behind. |
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When primary methods of removal fail, move on to secondary or tertiary techniques for bringing marginal oil and gas out of the ground. |
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Yes, I know I'm scrambling the metaphor, but it works for me so let's ignore it and move on. |
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Once kids have gotten a feel for what animation is about with thaumatropes, it's time to move on to flip books. |
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Sometimes I just chalk it down to one of those things and try and move on with my life. |
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If I have to move on and the money could be used to help the club relocate then it's one of those things. |
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I am not one to equivocate the past so I will move on to current reading matter. |
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At the sectional meet in November, the top four move on to the national competition. |
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Or should I just accept the fact that fate has dealt me a card from the bottom of the deck and move on? |
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If an authentic medium detects a spirit that is present, they will try and convince it to move on. |
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The inspector at Melksham police station is to move on after nearly two years in the role. |
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Coming from a lefty with tinfoil hat tendencies, I'm happy to take it as a compliment and move on. |
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It meant he could not make a move on those immediately ahead and was a sitting target for those chasing from behind. |
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How can you move on when you don't even know what you are leaving behind and why? |
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But it's the Netherlands that move on to the semi-finals with the fastest time after being pushed by a strong Belarusian crew. |
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On his way out, he came back to the guard, who was now bellowing at those before the deity to move on even as he blocked the queue. |
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I would set it up, put the black hood over my head and adjust the tilts, swings, bellows and lens, compose the image, and then move on. |
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What we need to do now is move on to discussing severance terms and the timing of the closure. |
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Rumour says he stood on the castle walls and yelled at the workmen to get a move on, but he still died before they finished. |
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Luckily my Dad laughed the matter off and told me to get a move on as Mum would be burning the breakfast bacon while waiting for us. |
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If necessary, this form can be submitted with your tax payment, but in any event, you need to get a move on. |
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Some people will miss out on tens of thousands of pounds if they don't get a move on. |
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My boyfriend says I am sick to think he would make a move on Claire, but I see the chemistry between them and it drives me mad. |
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Some young men gained qualifications which enabled them to move on to further education. |
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We must look to history and learn the lessons from the past for us to move on and grow as a community. |
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Clients can expand or move on when it is right for their business to do so. |
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If, after a period of time, there is no response, then they shake the dust off their feet and move on. |
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We're out of ammonia and have had to move on to bicarb to wash up, which requires greater skill. |
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We may laugh, scowl or mock initially, but eventually we usually recognize them as what they are and move on. |
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The venture capitalists strip the homes, trouser the money and then sell up and move on. |
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I was kind enough to accept your apology, thinking it would shut you up and you would move on to bother someone else. |
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In the fall they stop over at molt sites en route to their wintering areas, where they molt and grow new feathers before they move on. |
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Also, we will assign two guards to watch your every move on this establishment. |
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She wants to move on to the short story, but I see her father's ghost is still unappeased. |
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Later I walk past an unattended fruit stall and notice a man take a banana, peel it, eat it and move on. |
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The programme would be limited to 500,000 cattle due to move on to pasture after spending the winter under cover. |
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The slave trade was a horrible stain on our country's history, but we need to move on in order for us to achieve. |
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I move on to the projections that were released as something of a bombshell last week. |
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If you feel the infidelity is unforgivable and you cannot move on from the affair then it is time to leave. |
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I suppose I'm borrowing trouble, but has anyone thought about how to forgive and move on, one way or another? |
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The man whose Naya Theatre group revived theatre in the 60's is unperturbed by controversy and likes to move on. |
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In the next few weeks both sides will finally decide whether to patch things up or move on. |
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You start off unranked in the Junior Class, and move on to Senior, and then Varsity. |
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It's a shame we didn't have time for a natter when we'd done, but my next guest was waiting and we had to move on. |
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Learning to move on steep rock, bridging overhangs and feeling like a bird are unforgettable experiences. |
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If the problem was your doing, then ask yourself what you can learn from it and move on. |
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I want to move on to another issue, but I want to button it up with this then. |
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The top six teams in the field were given byes into the quarter-finals while the bottom four teams must play seeding matches to move on. |
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After he has a few drinks it's time to move on before he starts to tell you his problems. |
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Their performances include frequent encores, presumably lasting until the stagers tire and the birds move on to the next tune. |
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People capable of that sort of uncaring and cruelly callous behavior tend to move on to humans if they are not stopped early enough. |
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If you get stuck on one, move on to another and try to figure it out later. |
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She hopes Madame will accept that as some sort of olive branch and move on, but, oh no, of course not. |
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After each performance, they pass the hat, collect what they can, and move on to the next village. |
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Harry's first profession was as a felt hatter, but he was to move on to work for Stockport engineering firm Mirrlees. |
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When we've done that place up to our liking, we'll sell it ready to move on once more. |
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The rock and soil debris may even move on very shallow slopes, resulting in a large accumulation of head at the valley bottom. |
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You have to be prepared to hold your head high and whatever happens, happens, and you move on. |
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If these effects are not judged to be sufficiently powerful, then the player may optionally move on to Emergency Stage Two. |
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You don't need to worry, I only have a few more orders of business and then I will move on. |
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Then the skeletons, stubborn bits of flesh and muscle still clinging to the bones, move on to the bug room. |
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I went a bit mad when I decided to move on from my superduper high-powered job and work on my own from a cottage in rural Norfolk. |
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Or at least I, perhaps over-optimistically, aspired to humorous irreverence but let's move on. |
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Yes, the way I am there will probably be initial sulks every time a new situation pops up but then I can adjust and move on. |
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Plese feel free to add your own thoughts and questions, or just ignore my ramblings and move on. |
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Collecting data for this experiment is about as exciting as watching the hour hand move on a clock. |
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I mean, some people are hurting out there, and they need the money, and they should go ahead and accept it and move on. |
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A final exam score of 70 percent is required to pass the lesson and move on to the next one. |
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He peeks behind the curtains, an amateurish move on his part, but nothing too bad. |
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Soon the bosses of Sky News and co. tell their reporters to wrap up and go home or move on to the next war or disaster. |
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At the end of the month, weekly winners will then move on to the deathmatch round, facing off in a final reader poll. |
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Next, they move on to discuss whether the soul is immortal and does not perish. |
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But we have to move on from recycling to persuading people not to take home stuff that they will throw away in short order. |
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I just want to move on with one more issue before I invite my colleagues to come in. |
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Many on the far left believed it possible to move on immediately from collective ownership to full national ownership. |
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We move on to Knightley and at first you think he can't be serious, but Sutherland is always in earnest, even when joking. |
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You've got about 30 seconds to say your piece, and then people move on unless you have something interesting to say. |
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We are shown the action crisply and concisely, and then we move on to the next action. |
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I decided to move on, and I'm sure there are plenty of good, young guys capable of filling my shoes. |
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If you can hold a plank for more than two minutes with ease, you can move on to these tougher variations. |
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Thereafter they move on to specialist training grades running through to consultant level. |
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But introverts feel when they're not interested any more, it's time to move on. |
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Carp are still on the move on Doe Hey Reservoir despite the recent plunge in temperatures. |
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For now, I wish to move on to the changes this religious conversion made in my life and to me as a person. |
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If members cannot make their points of order succinctly, then we should move on with parliamentary business. |
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She would stop, peek in a door, and then either fling it wide open or close it and move on. |
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Harbor seals have short front flippers with claws which are used to move on land. |
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The war is over and, no matter whether we were for it or against it, it is now time to move on. |
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So the trader covers his position and takes his profits to move on to the next stock on his list. |
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Well, Larry, in my experience as a fed, it takes the feds forever to move on anything. |
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The president seems to think that this is an opportunity now to forgive that debt and to wipe it clean and move on. |
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An opposition party refusing to move on is forgoing any possible historical turning point. |
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Participants will be given fragments of a message as they move on the grid according to pre-generated patterns. |
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Pleased with that, I was ready to move on when I realised that my guide was looking puzzled, and pointing back in the direction of the frogfish. |
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Special prizes will also be given to ten contestants who will move on to promote tourism at the prefectural level. |
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Firms face a deadweight cost if, having increased their training investments, their staff move on to other companies. |
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I'm just a pilot trying to get on in my career, so suddenly I find myself with very little to move on to. |
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But the fact that he's so old, and so decrepit, and has a walker, and can barely move on his own, makes it funny and makes it work. |
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I've done what I could, which obviously is not much, to prod the country to move on the drug war. |
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Yesterday they projected that anxiety on to different events, and tomorrow they will move on to something else. |
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The beautiful thing is that when they decide to move on, they can keep the damage deposit. |
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It's in our blood to kickstart things, to move on when the going gets tough, not to give in. |
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If you really want to move on with your life, you must deprogram yourself. To begin, assess the situation. |
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Of course he would prefer to be paid and if a good and salaried job was offered elsewhere, he would say sad goodbyes and move on. |
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Other potters move on to vases, abstract sculptures, maybe even attempt a bust, but Ron just stays the course pumping out ashtray after ashtray. |
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This souped-up model has dual speeds, push-button control options, and a two-minute timer that beeps every 30 seconds as a reminder to move on. |
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When grief counselling became very popular, a lot of that was taking the line that what you had to do was do your grief work and move on. |
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Now let's get a move on because if we e'er want to come close to them pirates, we needs to hurry. |
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I am not getting any younger, and I need to move on if he's never going to get off the dime. |
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Suddenly a gruff voice yelled something at her and she knew that her gazing had been noticed and it was time to move on. |
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It might be that the first idea was a total disaster and if so drop it and move on. |
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If there's a good fit right away, then they experience a sense of recognition and are energized to move on. |
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There will always be a certain number of doofuses who reply anyway, and I guess you just delete those messages and move on. |
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He went to Galway and the people there asked him to move on, even though he had a permit. |
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But just as these dizzily warped abstractions threatened to become a redundant signature style, Davie discovered a way to move on. |
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In this matter of going, readily do dogs, jackals and the like, know when they move on that they are moving. |
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Drawing up our full psychic powers we somehow reached into the ethereal plane and lo and behold the stylus began to move on the board. |
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We have to move on now from the king of pop to his ex-wife, Lisa Marie Presley. |
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Oh fiddlesticks, it has been over three weeks. We might never move on to the real swords at this rate. |
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Alternatively, George may simply up sticks and move on, actually volunteering to leave the house. |
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There really is no warrant for taking it at this speed and I will not have it, so will you kindly move on. |
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At first, try the move on the first wave in a wave train because it will have the most distinct shape compared to the chop that comes later. |
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We would all like to see that final piece of the jigsaw put in place, to allow the Lamplugh family to move on. |
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Now the Jets are poised to move on with a rookie, a journeyman and an unknown. |
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We don't have to give up our values, beliefs or principles but we do have to move on. |
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Now that we have a working definition of money, we can now move on to defining what the supply of it is in a given economy. |
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Let's move on to another worrisome thing in the economy and that's oil prices. |
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Would such an exercise truly help Koreans gain a sense of empowerment and help them move on from their dark past? |
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We all realise that water finds its own level and if there is a leak it will move on to the next weakest spot. |
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But the Cats Protection League, who inherited the house decide that the cats would be rehomed and Mr Simpson has to move on. |
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Bats, owls, grass snakes and lizards should be rehomed before developers can move on to a site in Pewsey, district council officers say. |
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Ralph urges them to move on for the sake of rekindling the signal fire on the mountain. |
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Joshua, who lives at Carleton-in-Craven, has been a member of the Beavers for 18 months and will now move on to the Cubs. |
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She's trying to move on with her life, and he's a constant reminder of the past. |
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Let us not put any blame on anyone but simply deal with it and move on without resentfulness or revenge. |
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Start with golf courses, move on to schools and office parks, and watch sales zoom with water prices. |
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These young stars will move on to be part of an album, which will be put together by leading lights from the music industry. |
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She heard Will respond to Tom's remark quietly, and, though she did not hear what he said, she heard Tom growl and move on. |
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Equally, Barry may not have made any move on supporting copyright protection technology. |
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From here Charlton plans to move on to make a full-length feature film on the same issue. |
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Everything ran like clockwork for the Irish fivesome who had to quickly move on to launches in Belfast, Edinburgh, Manchester and London. |
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Dunn had smooth sailing once he cleared the line of scrimmage and had to make only one move on a linebacker to run free. |
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Soon he was to move on to London and celebrity, becoming a literary lion of the metropolis of the Nineties. |
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She gave myself and my crew a livelihood and we depended on her for our safety, but it is time to move on. |
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The council employs some young men as night patrol to harass and move on long grassers, often using physical force. |
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Once they have an idea of how things move on screen, the students will work with paper cutouts, again shooting them in sequence to make a short film before trying claymation. |
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However as we move on into our 20s the toy boy, while undeniably still holding appeal on certain occasions, just doesn't do it for us in the same way. |
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Do not move on to the next item on this list until you have thoroughly answered these questions. |
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When people leave one unit and move on to another they tend to fit together cohesively because everyone in the Army has been through the same training. |
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Meanwhile most of the world will Merrily move on, largely unencumbered by such all-encompassing prejudices and paranoia. |
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This system showed several ideas that with further development would allow Italian accounting records to move on to the formulation of the double-entry system. |
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If you do not obtain this licence, any police officer or relevant council official can force you to move on and you may even find your way onto a blacklist. |
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If it's dull, boring and lifeless, your reader will surely move on. |
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It is a less than conventional space, looking for a less than conventional owner, says Martin, who now wants to move on to a new renovation project, this time outside London. |
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He added his disappointment at the failure to move on the group. |
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Before we move on, Smith points to a small black-and-white Polaroid of an unmade mattress. |
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In Billericay, police were called to move on a crowd of more than 50 rowdy supporters after they spilled on to the High Street, but no arrests were made. |
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I have endured attacks from farmers and heavies to get us to move on. |
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I've sensed the presence of lost spirits and helped them move on. |
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If she was gone, dead and buried, he could move on with his life. |
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Now that we've seen the speeds and feeds, let's move on to performance. |
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Jill can attest to the rewards of having the courage to move on. |
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But Ms. Newman was not laughing when she stated flatly that it was not in her interest to jump into a job like this only to get them through a bad time and to move on. |
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Once tagged with this label you need to find another career or move on. |
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And then the students move on and the staff move out, which must be gutting, given the alternative accommodation is a purpose-built campus in Hendon. |
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When he got religion, it was framed as a rejection of the rest of his career, and he had to backpedal or move on, before he had a chance to speak to his wider audience again. |
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Both of them argue that they were simply burned out after four years at the helm, and it was just time to move on. |
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He has called for the council and police to work together and make travellers move on immediately from council land, as the current legal process is too slow. |
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DiPrimo could have harassed Hillman, roughed him up, told him to quit loitering and move on. |
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So, the idea is to break this connection, and let guys like this move on. |
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It will then move on to digital cameras and photography, fashion and model photography, scanning, colour correction, photo and text special effects, computer practicals. |
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I recall being one of the first to move on to another city and over the course of a few years eventually everyone, including the holdout 7th year PhDs, left. |
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The vibe is way upscale though a little on the relaxed side, so ardent scenesters will likely want to move on to Drai's or other velvet rope enclaves. |
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Some families would stay there only in the fall for the caribou harvest and then would move on to trap in other areas of the barren lands or portage back to Tue Nedhe. |
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Rush is a factor only to his ill-informed, albeit numerous listeners, and we should move on. |
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But as she tries to move on from her painful past, her future is worrisome and uncertain. |
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You start out with a half-dozen wings and move on to a large chili dog. |
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I do want to move on from the last three days navel-gazing though. |
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Thus, we start in the polar ice and tundra, move on to grasslands, thence to rain forests and marshes, then uplands, seaboards and maritime civilisations. |
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But my study is definitely in hand and once it's completed, we'll be able to move on to the box room and start sifting through the junk and the good stuff. |
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It took only a second to decide it was time to move on, but when Andrew gunned the BMW towards a small opening between the bikes, the gap closed up. |
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The barbs aimed from the English duo of Austin Healey and Matt Dawson in 2001 hurt, but Henry has been big enough to accept the grains of truth and move on. |
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As we move on into the 16th century in Italy, so oil technique, mainly based on walnut oil, supplants egg tempera and the use of linseed oil becomes progressively more common. |
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They commence flying day sorties and then move on to night sorties. |
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However, we need to move on now to create a nation in which all of us are equal South Africans and not seen as women, Afrikaners, English, Zulu, Sotho and so on, Lekota said. |
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The redoubtable Mainland has kept a beady eye on proceedings at the George Street fringe venue for eight festivals, but feels it is about time to move on. |
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Whether the vixen sensed my presence or perhaps it was simply time to move on, after a couple of minutes she moved closer to her cubs, looking around uneasily. |
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If he doesn't respond after a sweet message or chat sesh, move on. |
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Weiner tried to pass the thing off as a practical joke inspired by his last name, hoping the press would move on. |
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This isn't a war against an enemy that will surrender and move on. |
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You're probably right about us spinning our wheels, so I'll move on. |
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Better get a move on so mother doesn't throw a fit when I get back. |
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It is requiring that routine business be submitted in written form instead of allowing the chamber to use a voice vote to take care of issues and move on to real business. |
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Residents say that the case has exposed a legal loophole because tough new police powers to move on travellers do not apply if they own plots of land. |
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After they've consumed every natural resource, they move on. |
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The transfer window just passed saw comments in the press from Kelly intimating that he wanted to move on should he fail to nail a first-team slot. |
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I haven't had time to book a hotel yet but I need to get a move on. |
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You better get a move on if you want to be ready for your date. |
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Come on, let's get a move on before this storm gets really bad. |
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He visited a lapdancing club and tried to make a move on a blonde dancer. |
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He was treated like an immigrant, working for minimum wage, missing his family and having to move on from his musical career. |
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When Girls returns the main characters are trying, with varying levels of success, to move on from assorted rock bottoms. |
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At this point, it becomes hard to hear Malloy over the chattering of the attendees, who have begun to move on to other things. |
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The Republican Party will blame the culture of corruption on one bad apple named Jim Greer and move on. |
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Like she said, she wants to move on and get out there and burn the blue dress and bury the beret. |
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In fact, many Americans are behaving as if the crisis is past and that we can now afford to move on to the blame game. |
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If trying to fix the system doesn't work, parents need to have the option to pull up stakes and move on instead of subjecting their children to schools that can't educate. |
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Let's say you get interested in someone else, and you make a move on them. |
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I started thinking about this guy, a waiter at a sushi bar, that I didn't make a move on, and thinking that night that I should have asked him out. |
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Ravi would be thrown out of the dorms, perhaps even convicted of a crime, and Clementi would be able to move on with his life. |
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But in the last few weeks after a few changes, it's become hard work and my heart's not really been in it so I've decided to move on to pastures new. |
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At that point, rack the sled and move on to the next exercise. |
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If it's offensive to your sensibilities, then move on to something else. |
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It is of course possible to write Japanese entirely in hiragana or katakana, and that's what Japanese children start by learning to do in school before they move on to kanji. |
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After a little while, if they have failed to grab me, I move on. |
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In fact, most of the letters make depressing reading, so I'll move on! |
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Tracey and Steve were hoping that couples therapy would help them move on in a direction that was mutually agreeable and satisfying to both of them. |
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But as anyone knows, if you lie down and have a forty minute kip in the aisle of a supermarket, the manager will think you are a mentalist and tell you to move on. |
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Some people regard white wines as something to rinse the palate with before they move on to some reds, but these two wines are worth a few minutes' pause. |
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It's always going to be the case in Scotland that players are looking to move on, or other clubs are looking to come in and plunder your better players. |
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On two of the most divisive social issues, most Republicans seem to want to concede a quarter loaf and move on. |
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Sit here and practice basic shading with the crayons and when you actually advance above a fourth grade level you can move on to big girl pencils. |
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Thinking things through by writing about them, venting about things that anger or upset me, stewing in my own juices until I am ready to move on is what I do. |
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Maybe it really will get Republicans to move on tax expenditures and break the logjam. |
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Like birds alighting for a while on a newly seeded lawn, they will peck away at all the possibilities until they have exhausted this area and then move on to another form. |
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If the solution seems like too much hassle, and you get that niggling feeling that you'd never get around to fixing things up, accept it and move on. |
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In West Yorkshire, police set up Operation Stirrup in July 1999 after receiving intelligence that Yardies were making a move on the cities of Leeds and Bradford. |
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But MOST Eurogamers, after they played Settlers for like 10 times or so, usually move on to other games. |
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They were even gonna bring a choreographer to show us how to move on stage. |
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Shallow-fry the potatoes in 2tbsp olive oil until lightly golden brown, then move on to paper towel, season with salt and pepper. |
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With the original offer revoked, and with the premiere teams already committed to their incumbent drivers, Mansell decided to move on. |
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Identify the target for cost cutting, perform the appropriate action and move on. |
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The new series' 10 stand alone episodes will all be linked by the common theme of how to move on in life. |
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La Samp President Massimo Ferrero has stated that they will not be a stumbling block for Eto'o if the striker wants to move on to pastures new. |
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Choose a recipe like a traybake or sandwich cake which is easy to do and will give you confidence, then move on to more elaborate cakes. |
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Post-award administrators fix problems with proposals, unsnarl bureaucratic red tape and move on to the next problem. |
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He's immature and self-centred and will move on shiftlessly to any woman who'll have him. |
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Once the double reed is mastered, they can move on to the Double V, which produces a raspier tone and lets them talk turkey even more fluently. |
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The stars move on the sky only about one milliarcsecond a year, which would be like watching a golf ball on the Moon moving one foot per month. |
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Time to move on to the eveningOs special entertainment in the community centre, titled OAcoustic HeavenO and wrong on both counts. |
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The rehiring gives everyone involved a chance to take a deep breath and move on. |
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Paramecium means that from a single cell of the Macedonian folklore we move on to something much bigger. |
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When the second population dies, the fleas move on to other hosts, including people, thus creating a human epidemic. |
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Once the seal was set, the deepwater Horizon floating rig would move on. |
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The crisis within Fine Gael appears to have been defused for the minute with most members who spoke urging the party to move on. |
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They may move on to a lamb roast or a salt-cod brandade, ending with a refreshing dessert of peaches, fresh ricotta, walnuts and honey. |
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We did spot a heavy-beamed 3x3 bedded on a slope with a forky, so I made a move on that pair. |
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Despite being a nonplaying member of the squad at Watford on Saturday, it looks likely Guerra will move on in January. |
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Hamilton made the same move on Piquet at the hairpin turn three laps later to regain a deserved lead before cruising to victory. |
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After breaking up the Spiders from Mars, Bowie attempted to move on from his Ziggy persona. |
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He became an apprentice TV repairman until an electric shock persuaded him to move on to a series of other jobs. |
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We now move on to the section of this chapter in which we will discuss product installation in a nondesktop environment. |
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In the shallow crust, where brittle deformation can occur, thrust faults form, which causes deeper rock to move on top of shallower rock. |
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In some areas primary, infant and junior schools cater for ages four to eleven, after which the pupils move on to secondary schools. |
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The term rolling stock in rail transport industry originally referred to any vehicles that move on a railway. |
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We've finished our phonemic analysis and we're ready to move on to morphology. |
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Basically the body will use up stored fat cells first, then move on to muscles. |
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We move on, across another sand and rock wash, up through rimrocks, achieving the top, listening, pushing on. |
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He was an undercover agent, for goodness sakes. Once a job was done, of course he would move on. |
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Palombo, who was on the mainland at the time, told him to move on. |
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One mother handed the Prince a romper suit and said it was a hint that he and Kate should get a move on. |
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The duties of the college librarian include keeping books in order, managing accounts, and helping dead professors move on with their unlives. |
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The photon sphere is a spherical boundary of zero thickness in which photons that move on tangents to that sphere would be trapped in a circular orbit about the black hole. |
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The Davys bought the Rose and Crown out of receivership after shifting across from their first business in Cumbria and he says they have no desire to move on. |
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For now, though, and for here, I vote that instead of the current necrohippoflagellation, we, like, move on, put aside any grudges, and start talking about, like, Buffy. |
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The baby jumper I knitted but hadn't yet sewn together, which was going to be too small for my friend's first born if I didn't get a move on and finish it. |
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Our league form had dipped, but hopefully afterS performance and that response from throughout the club and supporters we can use this whole experience and move on. |
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We begin in a nightclub then move on to a Bohemia set in poor share-cropper hillbilly country with you-all accents and country and western banjo bands. |
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On 29 April Dack stated he had been offered the manager's job beyond the end of the season but he had decided he would move on after the final game. |
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I live in a flatshare at the moment and having mobile broadband means I can keep my bills separate, and if I move on I can still be connected to the internet. |
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Creatures adapted to complex landscapes might move on to specialise in a range of niches, requiring different sorts of locomotory and behavioural adaptations. |
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The room darkened slightly with the clothing, a few scenesters and granola-heads moved back and gradually out the door, or peered in off the street and decided to move on. |
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But England greatly feared the effects of any such move on its own West Indies, where Americans had already aroused alarm over a possible threat to incite slave insurrections. |
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Threshing machines would be broken, workhouses and tithe barns would be attacked and then the rioters would disperse or move on to the next village. |
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Richard Tempest, a British backpacker who was among the 70 who escaped from the inferno, said the conviction would allow survivors and victims' families to move on. |
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After many months of watching its public image take a shellacking as a result of the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal, Congress finally started to move on lobby reform. |
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Chapters cover Asking Bid, Jump Cuebids, and more advanced topics and will satisfy anyone with a grounding in the basic moves who wishes to move on. |
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Proven stayer Sea Scout was in the leading trio from the outset with the favourite confidently held up in rear before making his move on the final circuit. |
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Incorporate the Golgi apparatus so that when the student has completed construction of the protein, they move on to the Golgi for processing or folding. |
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The cybercrooks poke around but soon move on in search of easier prey. |
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