Last year Lauren had to pull out because she had an accident on her bicycle shortly before the event. |
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Maria kneeled at the top, reaching her hand down to help pull her father up, who had now fainted. |
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And from my point of view, he was one of those players who needed a shock to pull his horns in. |
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Then they pull something out they call evidence, and warmed-over lies, sometimes two years old, or older. |
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And he admits he cannot wait to pull on a first team shirt after savouring the quiet life of reserve team football with the Black Cats. |
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In the second quarter the gravitational pull is less, but the moonlight is strong, creating strong leaf growth. |
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The Broncos, who need points to pull away from the threat of relegation, suffered a blow in the pre-match warm-up. |
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At some point, though, the company will have to pull the plug because the warranty will be too costly to maintain. |
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To turn the loom on, you grab the metal lever, pull it toward the machine, and jam it in a slot. |
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The sling was tied with a water knot and loaded with an end-to-end pull on the loop. |
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It turns out that she just isn't strong enough to pull the release handle that reclines the chair. |
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I open my eyes and my pulse quickens and the fear rises within me as the contents of the room pull into focus. |
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Remembering how he shot me with water pistols, I decided that I was going to pull him in. |
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Nevertheless, this quickie reference guide will help you pull off a successful barbecue in your neighbourhood. |
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She pressed the final button and everyone felt a lateral pull towards the back of the craft. |
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In an instant the smell of stale jelly babies reached his nose, he turned towards me and I was able to pull him out of the inner coven's reach. |
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Keep really tight to the pole and, without making huge jerky movements, pull yourself as far up it as possible. |
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I constantly witness individuals exchanging obscenities because neither wishes to pull over and give way. |
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With a jet propulsion motor, retracting wheels and a speedboat-like hull, the Aquada's makers say it is powerful enough to pull a water-skier. |
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Lying among bandages and tubes, she moaned weakly, rubbing her forehead with her one free hand and trying to pull the tubes away from her nose. |
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You can go into any of these great religious texts and pull out quotes randomly here and there to prove all kinds of things. |
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We are striking with extreme reluctance and keeping our fingers crossed that somebody can pull a rabbit out of the hat to solve the problem. |
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You turn around, you got the victim's family right behind you waiting on you to pull a rabbit out of the hat and make it all good. |
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We pull up in front of a weathered frame house tucked behind a real-estate office on a busy main road. |
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Once there he was handed a half full bottle of vodka and he grinned widely before taking a long pull of the burning liquid. |
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They grabbed her left wrist and tried to pull off a gold bracelet and remove her wedding ring. |
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But then you look at the pros on TV, and they always seem to pull out a pitching wedge or sand iron and chip it from just off the green. |
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His mother was obliged to pull strings in order to get him a job interview. |
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In the instance of thrush, babies may pull off the breast, refuse to latch on, or make clicking sounds. |
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On one occasion Chapman glowed with nostalgia, took a deep pull on his pipe, and jogged his narcoleptic friend's arm. |
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Rayne constantly had to pull her feet from the mud, because they sunk so far they were weighted down with mud. |
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I've managed to pull my hip out of joint somehow and have stabbing pains when I stand up. |
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As skaters pull their arms in, their radius decreases and they spin faster. |
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On the other hand, if you want to plow a field, bale hay, pull stumps or exchange implements with neighbors, you'll need a more powerful machine. |
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While there is the ability to use a joystick, the keyboard is a better choice to let you pull some hot skate moves. |
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Just before they are about to pull a major swindle, Rockwell appears wearing an absurd Stetson tipped rakishly forward over his eyes. |
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He let the slope on the driveway pull him down to the level pavement, juddering over the stony concrete. |
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She tugged her shirt down, as if to cover the welts then reached to pull the sports page from beneath her transistor radio. |
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Hounds that have successfully tracked a fox are trained to pull it or dig it out of its hole, and the fox is killed. |
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But with the electoral countdown ticking away, his government badly needs to pull itself out of a hole. |
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When you played in groups, they didn't want you to dunk, so you had to pull up for a jump shot. |
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He urged the youth of the sub-continent to pull down the walls of hatred and build a neighborhood of peace, amity and friendship. |
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They will remain in the town in a bid to prevent insurgents from reoccupying it once those Marines pull out. |
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She reached out to reattempt a pat of my hand and, because I had enough time to prepare for her movement, I didn't pull away, this time. |
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I recall seeing the aircraft shudder, then pull wing tip streamers as his prop wash shook the tree tops. |
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And if you do find yourself in traffic, pull over and let the line behind you pass ahead and you'll usually have the road to yourself again. |
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The killer is the cost of fuel. Every time we pull out of here we have to go over a hundred miles. |
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A Royal Navy submarine was forced to pull out of exercises off the coast of Scotland early yesterday morning when it went aground. |
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Child psychologists are being brought into a borough's schools in a bid to pull up performance in key tests and exams. |
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He doesn't say anything as I remount the bike and pull out, he just stands watching. |
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The key was in the ignition and Jessie was about to pull out of the parking lot, when she stopped. |
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Whoever it was yelped in alarm and tried to pull back, but Drake's grip was strong. |
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In the last flush of the setting sun, impalas and wildebeest pull tighter together and drift toward deep cover before nightfall. |
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Equally at home in water or on land, the Newfoundland was large enough to pull in a drowning man or to break the ice to retrieve him. |
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I quickly pull out a strawberry flavored lip gloss and gently apply, then reapply it to my lips. |
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Threats of a ferocious US-led assault on Afghanistan forced relief agencies to pull out. |
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To remove the tick, pull gently and relentlessly straight away from your skin. |
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Before she could be felled or winged by any stray shots, he crept forward to grab her arm and pull her to safety. |
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The materiality of the paint and the sticky pull and release of the printing process showed a rough and ready formalism at work. |
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He might suspect the young Briton could pull a political stunt by giving him a wigging. |
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After the truck was declared safe to leave alone, a tow truck arrived to pull the wreckage away. |
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Starkey goes on to point out it would be hard for the house of Windsor to pull off the same trick. |
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We pull ourselves away to pedal back to the hotel in time for wine o'clock. |
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The log upended there didn't split like it was suppose to and with an angry yank, Joe tried to pull the head free. |
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November featured both All Saints' Day and Saint Catherine's Day, during which it was a French Canadian custom to pull taffy. |
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He had that sort of windswept hair and unshaven look that only an artist could pull off. |
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He's very limber and agile and would have a few good moves to pull out on Superman. |
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They mostly try to pull it off with a straight face, and play everything for real. |
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Both of these fabrics use the natural wicking ability of wool to pull moisture away from your body to keep you dry and comfortable. |
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Today, government figures are held back not only by a fear of being rumbled, but a terror that they won't be able to pull it off. |
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Brave Jack managed to get hold of her arms and, in spite of once losing his grip, pull her to safety. |
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Without the lead actor who played Bourne it seemed the only option was to pull in a new actor to play the same role or reboot the franchise. |
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While the rest of the auto industry has aggressively moved to pull systems, the aftermarket business is still in make-to-stock mode. |
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She added sugar and whitener, then took a deep pull on it, trying to kick herself back awake. |
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Then there is the relentless pull from the white-hot Chinese economy on Taiwanese trade and investment. |
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Snow lying on a flat field is fairly dormant, but snow lying on a slope is inherently alive, thanks to the pull of gravity. |
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She called for the Asian and white communities to pull together and support her. |
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The train whistle blew twice, signaling that the two o'clock train was going to pull out of the station. |
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We pull them out, rinse them in clean water and wring out the excess water. |
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The legs are salted to pull out excess moisture, then stewed slowly in more duck fat flavoured with herbs. |
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Strength gained by doing this exercise is needed in sports such as wrestling and football to grab and hold or pull in your opponent. |
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We drove fast, in case they thought to pull out their six-guns and drill us from afar. |
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Should a child persist in opening the belt while the car is in motion, it is advisable to pull over and refasten the buckle. |
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I watched my grandma pull the fur, twist it around the spool and wind it into a ball. |
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She shivered and began to pull up the thin, tattered and worn-out blanket over her head, while the cold damp air tickled her feet. |
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Now there are shoes with anti-gravitational pull devices, shirts with air circulation systems and shorts with built-in aerodynamics. |
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We ought to pull back the police in this country because in my opinion, having worked with some of these knuckleheads, they are out of control. |
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I put one horse between the shafts and a horse on either side with whiffletrees, and so forth, so that they could all pull even on it. |
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The scooter was a propeller-driven device that could pull a diver at about five knots and had a battery life of about three hours. |
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Even if your security officers advise against it, why not pull over and mingle with the crowd? |
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I pulled her hair behind her and gently began to pull the comb through the knots in her hair. |
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Jodi began to pull at the remaining knots in the rope that tied her other hand. |
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Russia has been trying to pull the small, rebellious mountain republic back into its fold since the crumbling of the Soviet Union. |
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We submit further that each one of the defendants told you lie after lie after lie in order to attempt to pull the wool over your eyes. |
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For instance, there's the double-claw hammer used by woodworkers and carpenters to pull up nails with more ease than a single claw hammer. |
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The wheel horses pull on the doubletree against this hammerpin running through the wagon-tonque. |
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But I pull myself together, puffy red face and all, and go back to the station to fix my mistake. |
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Range anxiety is a real thing when you can't just pull into the corner gas station. |
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If the storm came and got the ship to move, the tug would take advantage of the opportunity and try and pull it free. |
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In Swindon individuals and organisations will pull out all the stops to raise record-breaking amounts of cash this year. |
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For many humans, bewitched by this remarkable place, the pull is just as strong. |
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Use a zester to pull long, thin strands of lemon rind from a lemon or two and put them in a quart of water and refrigerate. |
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Some older buildings are very difficult to pull cable through, and wireless may be able to get everyone connected. |
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Then I switch hands again, pull back ever so briefly and then launch myself forwards, pushing him back into the floor as we swap positions. |
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It took a world war to finally ramp federal spending up to the levels needed to pull the economy out of the ditch. |
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My booksack is beside my right hip and, still tired and angry, yet adrenalized, I open it and pull out my only assignment, chemistry. |
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As you pull the bar down, keep your abs contracted and shoulder blades down. |
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Then you do a final stitch way into the wadding, pull the thread taut and clip the end just above the surface. |
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Once airborne, use your hip flexors and abdominals to pull your knees as high as possible up to your chest so that they touch your hands. |
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Grasp the foot of your injured leg with your hand and slowly pull your heel up to your buttocks. |
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The biggest tillers can power log splitters, pull a wagonload of rocks or clear snow from a driveway. |
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Drivers were being questioned, then told to pull off the road, to where a line of army vehicles waited. |
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And we may get talky at times too, but it won't be for its own sake, or to pull the wool over people's eyes. |
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Russell's perfectly timed lob into the path of John Joe Maguire saw the Town striker break the offside trap and pull clear of the defence. |
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The only good thing about your garden becoming a quag is that the weeds pull up really easily. |
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Make sure you have a jack that will lift the trailer or a wheel block to pull one trailer tire onto to get the other one off the ground. |
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When dark had fallen we both looked up as we heard the tyres of fathers Benz pull into the drive. |
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The high-speed tine rams push into the turf and then pull out quickly, leaving little or no scuffing at the top of the hole. |
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A leader emboldened by four more years, with a greater mandate, is hardly likely to pull in his horns. |
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While the poor run of results is causing some to pull their hair out, the young internationalist is regularly turning in good performances against all comers. |
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Mr Price said he had spoken to a friend in the centre of Milnsbridge who had helped pull screaming children from cars submerged in waist-deep water. |
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Many babies pull themselves over on to all fours and start to crawl. |
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A chintz wing chair with salmon in the pattern will play nicely off the wall color, and drapes in a slightly darker salmon will pull the look together. |
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I still pull from this book when making terrines, sausages, and other charcuterie. |
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Quite often, I wait until Poppy has completely run out of any wearable pants before I reluctantly pull out the ironing board and get things creased down the centre line again. |
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He would wake up and fold the sleeves of his jibba to make it look like a blouse and pull out one of the saris spread on the ground in place of mats. |
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Creative leeway has always been granted to those novelists and letter writers who are able to pull off a controversial use of rhetoric with talent and grace. |
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My experience is what happens is that people just pull it down as quickly as possible, because time is money, and any possible safety problems are just completely ignored. |
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Swish it, especially around the cheeks and upper palate, and pull it through your teeth. |
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As we approached the ramp, the aircraft started to pull to the left. |
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I was constantly just pulling stuff out of drawers and before it goes on shelf, people would pull it out of my hand. |
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One of the Sacramento arm wrestlers does pull ups in the wilderness, using tree branches as a pull up bar. |
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We continuously pause to pull them out while Zalwar Khan and his companion smirk at us and chew unbothered. |
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It is a spy series at its core, but you guys never really pull from the headlines. |
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She would tell me to pull myself together and kept my spirits up. |
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The more marginal space of poetry, therefore, might rather be that of a dissensus, of which the pull toward margins would be a figurative representation. |
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I was so amazed and my eyes so confused that finally I had to pull off the freeway and creep slowly into the parking lot of a service station abutting a field. |
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The manly combo's enough to make you pull your pickup into TG's 11-space lot, put it in park and belly up to the counter for some all-American red, white or other white meat. |
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If the soil starts drying out quickly and the roots are compacted, you'll need to pull the plant from its container, prune the roots, and repot the tree. |
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You load the weapon, you aim the weapon and you pull the trigger. |
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Nonetheless, what we should do is to make a serious analytical effort to determine what overseas military commitments make sense and where we should pull in our horns. |
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When she refused, the dolce and Gabbana designers reportedly threatened to pull tens of millions in advertising. |
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Papa, a captain when he left the reserves, still knew how to pull rank. |
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We did pull on our deck shoes and polo shirts to venture back across the island on three separate occasions to rub shoulders with the yachties out for Skandia Cowes Week. |
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I get up, pull on warm clothes, and make my way slowly back to my hummock. |
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Their gravitational pull can draw in huge amounts of gas, which swirls in a thick donut-shaped pattern known as an accretion disk. |
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They know when Government is trying to pull a fast one by driving a wedge between students and staff and by crudely appealing to the student vote. |
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The skipper, to his credit, doesn't just pull rank and yell at him. |
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These guys can pull double, or can be the wheel horses in a four-up team. |
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Well, if you don't want butter, you go to pull the dasher out in time. |
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Technical service supervisors pull 10 samples from the conveyor hourly and measure them on each side for length of shoulder scribe, rib scribe, neck bone and aitchbone. |
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The New York State United Teachers, part of aft, recently voted to pull its support for Common Core. |
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It was still possible to meander down country lanes, see horses pull ploughs and smell woodsmoke from the chimneys of thatched cottages in the evenings. |
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The book is a policy wonk's dream, and there's enough here to make you pull out your hair over the amount of graft and outright cheating going on in the open. |
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Could Jagger and the Stones pull off a similar feat of reinvention and self-preservation? |
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Katkandu motors through a gap in the barrier reef between South Water Caye and Carrie Bow Caye as we pull on shortie wetsuits, weight belts, tanks, fins. |
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Without thinking twice, she remembers, Boyah would agree to work a weekend, pull an all-nighter, or travel a great distance. |
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That explains this lovely lass following you, but then again, I don't think you need to pull them out of the icy sea to sweep them off their feet. |
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Government helicopters buzzed over the scene as rescuers tied the injured to stretchers before forming a human chain and using ropes to pull them up the slope. |
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Astronomers are able to detect the presence of a planet by examining a slight wobble in the motion of the star caused by the gravitational pull of the planet. |
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We see someone pull them from a rack and stuff them into the bag, which stretches accommodatingly around its large, unwieldy and somewhat odd cargo. |
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I wormed the knife between tiny slivers of green plastic to prise free the ring pull and used pliers to grasp the toggle on that pesky foil circle. |
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Many of my favorite survivors in fiction show that it may not be the most muscled, macho or mighty people who pull through. |
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Adian clenched his eyes closed a moment, and she saw his shoulder muscles bunch, felt the pull of her arm, and the death grip they held on each other. |
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When I finally pull him off her, we begin an arm-locked waltz across the glass-scattered floor, until my feet slip in their own blood and I topple backward onto the waterbed. |
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So how did Christie pull off bariatric surgery without the media catching on? |
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But the advance guard could pull out if fighting erupts anew. |
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Sure, you want to gather a gob of data about everything your company does, pull it in around the clock, analyze it constantly and make decisions every moment. |
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The facts are a matter of record and any interested party can go to the library and pull out the newspapers of the day and they can acquaint themselves with those facts. |
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On each orbit, the planets pull the star slightly, which can be detected by the Doppler effect. |
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And what of the heaths themselves, surely the main pull for both areas? |
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Even now we occasionally pull out the tapes we made at that time and have a jolly good chuckle to remind ourselves of how far she has actually come! |
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But both are delivering a booster shot of testosterone to the GOP in a way few have managed to pull off of late. |
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I'm supremely confident that bostonians will pull together, take care of each other, and move forward as one proud city. |
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Sadly, the only time I really enjoyed the game experience was when I teamed up with my son to see how many sweet dunks and alley-oops we could pull off. |
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A child doesn't know she has hands or how to use them and in the meantime she'll whap herself in the nose or pull her own hair and wonder why it hurts. |
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The bell for lunch rings, and I slowly pull myself out of my desk and drag my feet down the hall toward the cafeteria. |
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In place of horses, underclassmen would pull the field pieces around the drill ground. |
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While attempting to pull a bin of canned food toward him, Bob is momentarily pulled underwater by a walker sneak-attack. |
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He began to pull up his shirt and the children recoiled in horror. |
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It will be like aiming a gun when the intent is not to pull the trigger. |
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It's a difficult act to pull off, but by Jove, they've done it. |
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Instead I pull out my knife to scrape away the paint of her robe, stripping the blue lapis that drapes her shoulders and arms, flaking gold trim into a plastic bag. |
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I pull my coat out of my locker put it on and throw my books in. |
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While airborne, you can attempt to pull off additional tricks and even pass the ball back to your teammates, who will jump towards the basket as well for potential alley-oops. |
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It's a small, spiky-looking plastic ball and when you pull on two of its opposite spikes this ten-inch ball expands to a two-foot latticed sphere. |
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If riders were lapped, they were required to pull out of the race. |
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You might be willing to pull a driver off the rack, waggle it a little, then lay down your credit card, but the stakes are higher in the professional game. |
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Then suddenly, as if I'd thought too soon, there was a terrific pull backwards, and we were all thrown forwards in our seats as the train juddered to a sudden halt. |
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EastEnders chiefs have been forced to reshoot scenes with Danny Dyer because he swears too much and can't pull a pint. |
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Why didn't you just pull it? My goom still has a sore where you put that needle. |
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They lacked animals to ride and draft animals that could pull wagons and plows. |
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Rescue workers managed to pull two injured people out of the rubble. |
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Balderdash! Do not seek to pull wool over my eyes, miss! Fabricate me no Banbury stories! |
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She laughed at my attempt, and I got a pull of the ears for daring to blinden myself. |
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If you pull this off every paper in England and America will be booming you. |
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To pull you out of the funk you've been in since Christmas, Man Teach orchestrated some bow-chicka-wow-wow time for you and Boy Wonder. |
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This will pull charcoal chaulk or pencil particles from the paper up to the polyester. |
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He showed me where to pull the clanger, and I pulled and pulled and the clanging joined the music of the bombardment. |
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The Presbyterians, and other fanatics that dangle after them, are well inclined to pull down the present establishment. |
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Place your thumb on top of the shank and your bent index finger under the hair and pull the tying thread tight to flair it. |
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The same is true in freeskiing, in which skiers pull tricks on some of the same terrain as snowboarders. |
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The Camry interior styling and fit and finish get eights, even from the East German judge, but the Kia's pull solid nines. |
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One showed a gapemouthed cluster of little folks watching a magician pull a white rabbit from a hat. |
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So if you fire the Phoenix inside that radius, he just can't evade it. The missile can pull more gees than any pilot can. |
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Acteon found the air hostess trying to pull on her damasse dress and realign cleavage in the gentleboys' bog. |
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Before dark we pull down the five-foot giraffe unicycle and put KariAnna up on it. |
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No way could I pull off being a Gorean kajira. I wasn't nearly submissive enough. |
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Unlike most moons of the solar system, ours has the heft, the gravitational gravitas, to pull itself into a sphere. |
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I don't mind munching on her hair pie except when I have to stop to pull her hairs off my tongue. |
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Okay, now just picture what you want to pull out of hammerspace and just reach in and grab it. |
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This was because a horse could pull a barge with a load dozens of times larger than the load that could be drawn in a cart. |
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As the share wears away, it becomes blunt and the plough will require more power to pull it through the soil. |
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He was strong enough to draw bows that others were unable to pull and had great stamina. |
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A Japanese saw is one that cuts on the pull stroke rather than on the push stroke. |
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I see him stand, jointlessly unfolding, pull from the holster on his hip the shingle knife, as easy as you'd pluck the fork beside your plate. |
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In the beheaded frog the legs twitch as fatally when we touch the skin with acid as do a jumping-jack's when we pull the string. |
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The girls had been out to the oat-stacks, each with a kiddhoge over her eyes to pull out a stalk and see when she'd be getting married. |
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The man firing the gun turned his weapon on the larger target, giving Jenna the chance to pull out of the kill zone using the Suburban as cover. |
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Kissing is a game that should always be played in private. Those who must lallygag or perish should pull down the blinds. |
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It was soon realized, however, that an extra handle was needed in front to help pull the machine along. |
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A solution to this was to pull down the top of a tower and to fill the lower part with the rubble to provide a surface for the guns to fire from. |
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For working purposes, they can pull a plow or other farm equipment designed to be pulled by animals. |
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In many parts of the world they still pull wagons for basic hauling and transportation. |
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The pack are suffering mechanicals and pull up under a lamp post marking a right turn. |
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An English girl, looking like a schoolteacher, is apt to get into a cab with you and, to your surprise, she'll probably pull a man's pants open. |
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Sangakkara and Chamara Silva added further runs, before the latter was caught by Saeed Ajmal playing a pull shot off the bowling of Umar Gul. |
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After the match, Taylor reacted angrily when van Barneveld attempted to pull him back to congratulate him after their handshake. |
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But I feel like 40 miles of bad road. I pull the sleeping bag over my head and curl my body around knobs of rock and tussocks of blueberries. |
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Somehow along the way, somebody had gotten the idea to put a bunch of Iraqi kids onto the wrecker that was to pull the statue down. |
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To pull off three colors successfully you have to have more than one multiland in your deck. |
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I got into the car and said, I just have to call these producers and pull out. |
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Much too conscientious a Musician, to omit a note of his part, he patiently waited for the pauses, to pull up his nethergarment again. |
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When a shot this big is being run, it will also be necessary to pull 6-10 degrees of timing out when the nitrous is being run. |
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The movement of water out of the leaf stomata creates a transpiration pull or tension in the water column in the xylem vessels or tracheids. |
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Living root cells passively absorb water in the absence of transpiration pull via osmosis creating root pressure. |
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It is possible for there to be no evapotranspiration and therefore no pull of water towards the shoots and leaves. |
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Canada had plenty of land and jobs and new opportunities, which created a pull factor. |
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In October 2014 Nutini was forced to pull out of shows in his hometown of Glasgow, Cardiff and London due to tonsillitis. |
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Over the next few days, frantic efforts to pull the vessel from the rocks continued. |
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The bulb lies dormant after the leaves and flower stem die back and has contractile roots that pull it down further into the soil. |
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She was forced to pull out of the Nelson Mandela 90th Birthday Tribute concert because of her illness. |
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However, Daytrader had to pull out of the tour, so Major League took their place on the bill. |
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The most recommended oils are sesame, coconut or olive oil. It is also advised to oil pull in the morning, prior to drinking or eating anything. |
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Instead, the mouth is surrounded by cilia that pull strings of mucus containing food particles towards a series of grooves around the mouth. |
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Off the Crozet Islands, mothers push their calves onto the beach, waiting to pull the youngster back if needed. |
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A rift is a region where the lithosphere extends as two parts of the Earth's crust pull apart. |
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The fishermen pull their nets hundreds of meters wide in a circle around the dolphin groups, in the expectation that they will net a tuna shoal. |
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The clam will try to escape the salt by coming up out of its hole, at which point you can gently grab the shell and pull it out of the ground. |
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The overshift works well against left-handed hitters who pull the ball farthest to the right. |
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He got as far as the first weigh station, where troopers found his truck to be overweight and threatened to pull him off the road. |
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This gave trapped Allied forces time to construct defensive works and pull back large numbers of troops to fight the Battle of Dunkirk. |
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Ice, water and mantle rocks have mass, and as they move around, they exert a gravitational pull on other masses towards them. |
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Slab pull is therefore most widely thought to be the greatest force acting on the plates. |
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In aggressive encounters, he thrusts his canines out and draws in his lower lip to pull his teeth closer together. |
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You had to pull one of your stupid disappearing tricks because you were being a pouty-pants. |
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A thick mulch of chipped bark or compost will also make it much easier to pull out recently germinated seeds in the spring. |
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The slab pull mechanism is considered to be contributing more than the ridge push. |
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The driver for seafloor spreading in plates with active margins is the weight of the cool, dense, subducting slabs that pull them along. |
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The resisisting force from the surrounding mantle opposes the slab pull forces. |
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Firsthand information about piracy is relatively rare, and scholars often pull from the same texts when compiling their data. |
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Proganochelys lacked the ability to pull its head into its shell, had a long neck, and had a long, spiked tail ending in a club. |
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However, there is nothing for it but to penelopize, pull to pieces, and stitch away again. |
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The rotor hub could also be tilted forward a few degrees, allowing the aircraft to move forward without a separate propeller to push or pull it. |
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After the frame was properly attached to the hull it was slowly jacked up on four legs straddling the wreck site to pull the ship off the seabed. |
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Grape changes are often in response to changing consumer demand but sometimes result from vine pull schemes designed to promote vineyard change. |
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Instead, it was common for motorists to pull off the road and set up camp on private property. |
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Because the line did not have to pull against a rotating spool, much lighter lures could be cast than with conventional reels. |
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Neither was strong enough to pull a plough which limited the development of agriculture in the New World. |
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Some, like the Percheron, are lighter and livelier, developed to pull carriages or to plow large fields in drier climates. |
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Heavy draft horses developed out of a need to perform demanding farm work and pull heavy wagons. |
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All I have to do is to pull the cork, send it forth among you, and you are dead men. |
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I awakened with a violent pull upon the ring which was fastened at the top of my box. |
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They'll go through their computer system and pull a report of all your order fulfillment records for the time period you specify. |
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This is the only thing that should get you to break off from your position, is to pull something off the healer. |
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Basically buff pet, have it pull lots of mobs, shield pet, chain heal pet, have your aoe casters finish off hurt mobs once pet gets good aggro. |
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After being neck-and-neck the whole race, Gibbs managed to pull ahead in the final lap. |
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Starting with a couple of inconsistencies, the detective began to pull apart his alibi. |
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Central African armed forces troops were forced to pull back from the town and were planning an operation to retake it, the source said. |
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An uncircumcised man should always take special precautions when bathing to pull back the foreskin and clean carefully around the glans. |
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What's more, I pull back the sheets to take a quick but suspicious gander at Bunny, and she's wearing a pair of my briefs. |
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Six pages is a lot to write in one night. Do you think she can pull it off? |
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We can't get a loan, so we'll just have to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps. |
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And the common people pull their forelock harder and squirm lower the higher the rent a man pays per quarter for his house. |
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By now, however, it's unlikely that even this faithful retainer can once more pull Bush's chestnuts out of the fire. |
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You will probably have to pull teeth to get a straight answer from a car salesman. |
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It's a wonder the director didn't pull the plug on that project months ago. |
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Later on you will still have to pull the reins in on yourself, from time to time. |
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In theory, high unemployment should temper inflation, as consumers pull the reins in on spending and prices come down. |
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It's anyone's guess whether Union Carbide Industrial Gases will ever pull the reins in on network projects in the face of slow business. |
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Some traders are too afraid to pull the trigger and just watch the market without ever getting involved. |
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To stand consistently by his criticisms of theories of race would have been to pull to pieces his partisan teachings, and this he would not do. |
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Take him down there with Entry Two and recce first. If he can't confirm it, we pull out. |
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The tighter the tension band is, the more pull on the yarn, because the more friction the bobbin has to overcome to turn in sync with the flyer. |
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One other subtle difference between these two toolholders is the thread used to hold the pull stud. |
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He began to pull the old buildings down, but he died before his plans could be completed, leaving his heir with nothing but rubble. |
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Huskisson tried to clamber into the carriage, but those inside failed to reach him to pull him in. |
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Rent therefore represented a kind of negative money that landlords could pull out of the production of the land, by means of its scarcity. |
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Some children were employed as coal trappers, particularly those not yet strong enough to pull or push the corf. |
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Powered cable ferries use powered cogs or drums on board the vessel to pull itself along by the cables. |
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