Large or small cohorts of people born in the same year can be seen to move up the life span and the population pyramid over time. |
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My wife asked me if, as a tree grows, the bottom branches move up with the growth. |
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It has a character who has had all the erogenous zones of her body enhanced in order to move up the social class system. |
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One was a liveaboard whose vessel's draft was too deep for his boat to move up into Pensacola's shallow bays. |
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But when you move up there are other things to do with eggs and cured meat. |
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Again, the top eight in each event and top four all-arounds move up to the next level. |
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Those Jerries had so much more firepower and range, and I saw that we were losing valuable men trying to move up. |
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Ten gophers on a single acre of land can move up to five tons of earth within one year. |
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If you win, will you move up to 154 pounds or continue defending your welter titles? |
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I'll clean up everything at light welter then I'll move up to welterweight and clean up there as well. |
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We would then be ready to take advantage of an opportunity to move up to the top level in the future. |
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Unlike a piston engine, where reciprocating parts move up and down, the twin rotors in the Mazda just spin around. |
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Depending on the horse's comfort level, I might want to start on the shoulder and move up to the withers. |
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But within that period, the price of a gilt may move up and down depending on what else is happening to interest rates. |
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If the auxiliaries fought well, the regulars in the second and third ranks would move up to help in the fight. |
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Becky, working as a governess, resorts to her good looks and alluring personality to move up in society. |
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At the moment we keep on winning but make no move up the table, but all we can do is keep on winning and maybe we will start climbing the table. |
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We think that the specialised high Arctic plants may, in some few places, move up the mountains. |
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Remember the tides will actually run for a while after the chart time and as you move up the river there is a time difference. |
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With pounds for places in the Premiership, each move up the table is worth half a million pounds. |
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A favourite tactic is to slowly move up and down the platform quietly expelling air. |
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When waves cause the coil to move up and down relative to the fixed magnetic shaft, voltage is induced and electricity is generated. |
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Using the terrain, we move up the banks of a small burn, hidden from view, the stream's noise masking ours. |
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At the same meeting on September 15, the bankers rejected the proposal to move up the limits for drawing cash from automatic teller machines. |
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The scrips of the shipping companies have seen their prices move up over 50 per cent in the past three months. |
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With each success, the therapist helps the patient move up to other obsessions that cause greater anxiety. |
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Men in the first line fought until they were killed or wounded and then men from the second line would move up to fill the space. |
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If you run out of oil, the piston cannot move up and down freely in the cylinder, and the engine will seize. |
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Forty years ago, academic time-servers could expect to move up through the ranks as a matter of course. |
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If someone takes the seat next to you, please move up a bit so they aren't hanging off the end. |
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He does tend to hit a lot of balls short, which allowed me to move up in the court and attack. |
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We decided to try to set up a low budget scheme for film-makers that were ready to move up from shorts to feature films. |
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A troop of 50,000 local volunteers with scientific background will go west to help western areas move up their technical ladder. |
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The tullibees will move up into this vegetation, and the pike and walleyes follow them in for a feast. |
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Similarly if the box becomes lighter then the spring will lift the box up and the pointer will move up the scale. |
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It likely will have the ninth pick but would like to move up a bit to get an athletic small forward or power forward. |
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As editors gain experience with specialized subjects, they can move up in the hierarchy. |
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He reached her bed and stood over her silently, watching her rib cage move up and down slowly as she breathed. |
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Sims had better deliver because the club paid a steep price, its third-round pick, to move up two spots to draft him. |
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This allows smallish heavyweights to gradually move up without putting their careers at risk, in particular early in their careers. |
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As a result of these pressures, stringers must usually move right to move up. |
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Ireland must develop a high tech skill base and move up the value-added chain. |
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He imagines face paint that would change colour to match your emotions, or skyscrapers that move up and down. |
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Her hair flopped around as she impelled her end of the see-saw to move up once again. |
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With the Segway, you can also move up and down rugged terrain as well as slopes and inclines with a little practice. |
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He simply turned and started to move up the stairs, Trish still cradled gently in his arms. |
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The preparatory school caters for girls and boys aged three to 11 after which pupils move up to the senior school. |
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His chance to move up the field came as those ahead started pulling into the pits for the obligatory wheel change. |
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Horizontal and vertical viewing angles are also fairly poor, with the screen looking washed out at you move up and down and going dark as you move to the side. |
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When the boss is gone, the young bucks want to move up and take over. |
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The pilot had earlier called air-traffic control reporting heavy clouds and asked to move up to 38,000 feet from 32,000 feet. |
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For more capacity, you can move up a notch or two to loader backhoes and midsize excavators when space for the big excavators, dozers, and other dedicated machines is short. |
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It's a sure-fire way to move up the table of quality tourist destinations. |
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So, barring a major surprise like another terrorist attack or some unforeseeable setback in Iraq, the President's numbers will probably move up again soon. |
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I won my first 15 games in match play to quickly move up the standings. |
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Willersey residents were hoping their campaign to stop heavy lorries rumbling through their village streets would move up a gear after a meeting last night. |
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Fault movements by which blocks of terrain move up or down relative to each other, as when horsts or grabens are formed, can also produce inliers and outliers. |
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In the interest of balanced journalism, I move up one car to experience a fresh landscape. |
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And then the people who didn't have the foresight to bagsy a place arrive late and insist in guilt-stricken tones than everyone must move up and be squashed for them. |
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And if you are in the slow lane and too fast then again that is your own fault and you should move up a lane, dependent on how crowded other lanes are. |
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As you step into the hoist, the safety cage is slammed shut, an operator turns the handle and the lift begins to move up the side of one of the main tubular steel stanchions. |
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We have to requalify tomorrow and that means the best we can start is 31st overall, which is no big deal because it's a 24-hour race and we'll have plenty of time to move up. |
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This is fine for people who want to sell up and trade down in the market, but is frustrating for home owners who want to move up the housing ladder. |
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She acknowledges that the classic transition for presidents of liberal arts colleges is to move up to the next rung on the presidential ladder by running a university. |
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Bury is one of only five councils to move up a place in successive years. |
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In order to record the sound stereophonically, the groove must be cut in such a way that it forces the needle to move up and down as well as side to side. |
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Taft senior Ashley Birdsong opened the softball season with back-to-back perfect games to move up in the national record book. |
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Clubs from the Highland and Lowland Leagues will have to shell out PS50,000 on floodlights if they want to move up to the SPFL ranks. |
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When the international players returned, Saints began to move up the table. |
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When the blip began to move up the oscilloscope screen, they followed again. |
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Now, with flatter organizations, promotions may be less available so you may have to move out to move up. |
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The capillary action refers to the tendency of water to move up a narrow tube against the force of gravity. |
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The Cape Hatteras area is infamous for being frequently struck by hurricanes that move up the East Coast of the United States. |
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Pupils would move up a form each year before entering the fifth form in the academic year in which they would have their sixteenth birthday. |
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They can always move up or down in the social ladder by picking small fights. |
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The males constantly test their standing, looking to move up in the hierarchy. |
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The World Bank will continue to support Bangladesh in areas necessary to move up within middle income country status. |
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The new scaffolding ensures guard rails are put in place before workers move up to the next level. |
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A HOME owner will spend nearly PS10,000 in stamp duty costs over their lifetime in order to move up the housing ladder, a report suggests. |
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Not only do former residents of the nival zone, the area above about 2,000 meters, move up, but former alpine plants ascend to the nival region. |
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Saltbox move up to fifth after a 4-1 home win over The Lithy with Mark Nicholson scoring two and one each from Kevin and Mark Williams. |
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In fact, if you're looking to move up at the office, you should have a mentor and schmooze with other up-and-comers. |
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Often, blips would fill up a depth layer on the monitors' screens, then move up and down over the course of the night. |
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But the latter are nonstarters The 7 to leaving Scobby Killough a chance to move up the championship standings. |
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Nor did I know or care that such toxins are surprisingly abundant at the ocean's surface, or that they bioaccumulate as they move up the food chain. |
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The swimbladder is inflated when the fish wants to move up, and, given the high pressures in the messoplegic zone, this requires significant energy. |
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Nerve fibers in the feet are often the first to go haywire, and the tingling and pricking pain can move up the body from feet to legs or hands to arms. |
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Young eels use selective tidal stream transport to move up estuaries. |
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You start with the pupu platter and move up to more exotic items. |
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Can you move up to the next seat so we can sit together, please? |
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When the local commanders failed to take advantage of the retreat, Lord Raglan sent out orders to move up and attack some Russian guns located across the valley. |
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If you can possibly afford to spend a few more pounds then you should move up into the next price bracket, where the potential of the home micro starts to be realised. |
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However, it is perhaps more likely that students can move up the corporate ladder by accepting positions supervising cashiers, waitpersons, or clerks. |
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In trying to draw that elusive fourth ball, many coaches prefer their hitters to move up to the extreme front of the box or hunch over the plate in an effort to conceal it. |
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Windy conditions and faster greens affected the entire field in Friday's second round of the British Open, but American Tiger Woods still managed to move up the leaderboard. |
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We start with the Ewoks, then we move up to the Wookies, you then come up to Padawan and then finally as you head towards later teenage years you have the Jedis. |
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The higher house price volatility in the United Kingdom makes it optimal for those young households who expect to move up the property ladder to hold housing equity. |
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This point is used because it is a stable point of the anatomy, unlike the head or neck, which move up and down in relation to the body of the horse. |
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Invading forces could move up under cover of the Black Forest. |
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There is strong speculation that demilitarisation will move up the political agenda in the post-election discussions involving all Northern Irelands political parties. |
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