They have measured the second-order electron transfer rate constants for reactions of dopa and c-dopa melanins with various radicals. |
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Despite the attempts to prevent unlawful conventicles, the Baptists, Quakers, and other radicals were not to be uprooted. |
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This causes scission of an initiator molecule which produces free radicals in the presence of an aliphatic amine accelerator. |
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Not only do these right-wing radicals vote against their own economic interests, Frank argues, they're suckers, too. |
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Xanthine oxidase uses molecular oxygen as an electron acceptor, resulting in the formation of superoxide radicals. |
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This journal began by trying to steer a compromise between accommodationists and radicals. |
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Betacarotene helps to quench the chemical fires started by free radicals, and helps to protect the skin from sunburn. |
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Clearly, quenchable free radicals are the primary source of plasmid nicking in the purified solutions. |
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He says by creating drugs to replicate the effect, it will take longer for the accumulative damage caused by free radicals to occur. |
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A subsequent case failed, thanks largely to protests by French political radicals. |
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Indeed not every eighteenth-century American supported slavery, and some political radicals were extremely critical of the practice. |
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He attributed the rise of radicals more to social tensions that followed the 1998 economic and political crisis. |
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Chao was surrounded by the ideas of political radicals and heard songs of protest sung beneath a portrait of Che Guevara. |
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The political radicals who ran the French Revolution from 1793 abolished the concept of weeks altogether. |
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Throughout our nation's history, radicals and reformers have viewed their movements as profoundly patriotic. |
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Throughout American history, reformers and radicals have addressed social problems through civil disobedience and non-violent resistance. |
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The parliamentary Greens went along with the radicals because they knew if they didn't the radicals would splinter the party. |
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The party has not tried to disguise its new deregulatory approach, which is causing unease among party radicals and old-style social democrats. |
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Examples of compounds or groups that accept anions include the nitrate and hydroxide radicals. |
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Subsequent oxidation-reduction reactions can also produce superoxide anions, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals. |
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Finally, the Lexical Decision test is a measure of children's right-left spatial reversals of Chinese radicals. |
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By learning the function of radicals of Chinese characters, students can learn new characters by groups and strings. |
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In 1845 Wantzel, continuing his researches into equations, gave a new proof of the impossibility of solving all algebraic equations by radicals. |
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Because free radicals are highly reactive, they are capable of damaging the body. |
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What the radicals can do is keep the pot boiling indefinitely, and that suits them just fine. |
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In fact the radicals simply wimped out for fear of having their pants sued off. |
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After World War Two Claudia, along with thousands of other US radicals, fell foul of the anti-Communist witch-hunt. |
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The assassination of leading journalists and editors reflected the logic of attacks against all forces not directly aligned with the radicals. |
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Xanthine oxidase catalyses the oxidation of xanthine and hypoxanthine to uric acid and is a well-known producer of superoxide radicals. |
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It is not surprising therefore that, before 1919, anarchism was more popular than socialism among young radicals. |
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The Left has much in common with the radicals in the Green movement and wants to work with them. |
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Even the anticlerical radicals often saw the tradition of Our Lady of Guadalupe as a valuable part of the popular history of the nation. |
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The Liberals were, at the time, the party to which many radicals looked when it came to elections. |
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Tomatoes are rich in antioxidants, which neutralize damaging free radicals. |
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Some vitamins and other substances work as antioxidants by fighting the oxidation caused by free radicals. |
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Fruits and vegetables are full of antioxidants that disable free radicals and minimize inflammation. |
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The major function of vitamin E is to act as a natural antioxidant by scavenging free radicals and molecular oxygen. |
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Vitamin E helps immune cells multiply, and as an antioxidant it fights damaging free radicals. |
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Bickford speculates it's the antioxidants that help inhibit free radicals and so reduce the cumulative effects of life on the aging rat brain. |
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Your body never produces enough antioxidants, though, to stop all of the free radicals. |
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Some British radicals argued, too, that overseas conquest bred autocratic habits, which then threatened liberty at home. |
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They're also rich in antioxidants that help eliminate free radicals and reduce inflammation in the skin. |
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Fruits and vegetables rich in antioxidants can help scavenge free radicals generated by stress. |
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New Left radicals roundly condemned liberals in the 1960s for their reluctance to take sides. |
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Everyone sang the Marseillaise, moderates and radicals alike, in a rousing show of unity. |
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The Wilkesite radicals were typically small businessmen, craftsmen, and artisans. |
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Hydroxyl radicals oxidize amino acids such as lysine, serine, arginine, and proline. |
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They are compounds that scavenge free radicals of oxygen, unstable molecules given off by the body's many metabolic actions. |
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Melatonin also scavenges free radicals, and having low levels of this hormone has been linked to Alzheimer's disease. |
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Low levels of natural antioxidants in pancreatitis indicate their increased utilization as scavengers of free radicals. |
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The free radicals have the additional benefit of killing bacteria, viruses and spores. |
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In the rural areas of the South, petty-bourgeois radicals espousing the peasant-based theories of Maoism began to win increasing support. |
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You can talk to radicals in Europe and they'll tell you that their agenda is very popular with the masses when, in fact, it's not. |
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These varied from the trials and subsequent execution of radicals for treason, to trials for sedition and seditious libel. |
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Ultra-violet rays and the free radicals age the skin more quickly reducing its elasticity and creating wrinkles. |
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Oxidative processes during senescence involve an increase in enzyme activities generating oxygen radicals and superoxide ions. |
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Others were newly formed, perhaps on the initiative of local radicals, a charismatic leader, or a would-be messiah. |
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A plasma is an ionised gas containing ions, metastable species, radicals, neutrals and electromagnetic radiation. |
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It's an essential trace element that helps keep the immune system humming and free radicals under control. |
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Similar to peroxides, decomposition of disulfides results in the formation of sulfur-centered radicals. |
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But he discovered other groups who were far from being like the Baptists of the seventeenth century, such as the millenarian Munster radicals. |
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Artery-clogging cholesterol, alcohol and carcinogenic free radicals cause cellular mayhem in the aftermath of too many bibulous feasts. |
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There was tremendous enthusiasm among radicals everywhere for the new Paris Commune form of government. |
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It may react with molecular oxygen and form quinone and superoxide radicals. |
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At the root of sunburn are damaging molecules, free radicals that increase when the skin gets too much sun. |
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This reaction results in the production of oxygen radicals, which are cytotoxic to the tumor cells. |
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Sweet wild blueberries are bursting with antioxidants, which mop up nasty free radicals. |
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They act like radicals drunk with power, doing what ever it takes to destroy any opposing political force that dares to challenge it. |
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Chronic stress also unleashes an army of free radicals that damages body and brain cells. |
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Cigarette smoke contains a range of xenobiotics, including oxidants and free radicals that can increase lipid peroxidation. |
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Even the extreme radicals, the Maoist Naxalites, did not entirely ignore her. |
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The Utopians may be neo-Marxist radicals adhering to a proven failed ideology, but they weren't complete morons. |
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It is no accident then, that the utilitarians were often called philosophical radicals. |
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The more the political police spied on them, the more the radicals and nihilists flourished. |
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It is important to note that nitrated proteins are not the same as free radicals. |
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They can be described as visionaries, revolutionaries, radicals, liberals, nonconformists, outsiders, insurgents, prophets, pathfinders. |
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One is the Semitic root-and-pattern structure, which combines root radicals with a mainly vocalic pattern to produce a word. |
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Free radicals careen through your bloodstream and indiscriminately plunder unpaired electrons from unsuspecting molecules. |
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However, heterolysis is the main process for generating the isolated phenoxy radicals. |
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But he has unwittingly made plain what only a few radicals and Marxists have hitherto suspected. |
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Substitution reactions of organic compounds can also involve free radicals. |
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When the toxin is exposed to light, it reacts with oxygen to produce superoxide anions and singlet oxygen, which are also known as free radicals. |
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An example of this process is the formation of free radicals from chlorofluorocarbons in the upper atmosphere. |
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But because the radicals are sexually correct feminists, their incredible statements are swallowed whole. |
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And those who raised concerns about the sweeping powers of the bill were unfairly dismissed as radicals who were against copyright in general. |
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Free radicals are thought responsible for making cholesterol harmful to arteries and the heart and for impairing memory and movement with age. |
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Groups on the far Left, led by the radicals, were in full cry, demanding thorough investigation of the scandal. |
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In New York his society was composed of free elements altogether, come-outers, reformers, radicals of every description. |
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The steps include aerobic exercise, less fatty food, learning new skills and avoiding damaging free radicals. |
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It appears as a result of the photosensitized formation of free radicals, singlet oxygen, photoproducts or other intermediates. |
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They have devised an ultrasound hydrogen peroxide vapor inhalator that allows oxygen radicals to be generated and breathed in. |
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When calcium and magnesium ions in the filtrate combine with phosphate radicals, either soluble or insoluble salts will form. |
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They've also co-opted the mocking, confrontational tone of bygone campus radicals in their tactics. |
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Faculty senate presidents, if I may say so myself, tend to be a responsible lot of leadership types, not firebrands, malcontents, or radicals. |
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The radicals soon made Spencer one of Alabama's first post-bellum U.S. senators, and he became the classic carpetbagger. |
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We accept the fact that agents such as free radicals can influence cell function. |
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These free radicals are highly reactive chemically and can themselves alter molecules in the cell. |
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The free radicals and reactive species produced by these reactions are highly cytotoxic. |
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Raisins are a great source of powerful antioxidants, which can help ward off the damaging effects of free radicals produced during exercise. |
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Free radicals are thought to be responsible for helping to cause premature ageing, heart disease and cancer. |
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Alternatively, a-tocopherol can scavenge two peroxy free radicals and then be conjugated to glucuronate for excretion in the bile. |
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It functions to prevent the formation of superoxide radicals and detoxify a variety of foreign compounds. |
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Norms use the clubs of stigma and shame to punish deviants, nonconformists, and radicals. |
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A penchant for disputatiousness has led to numerous quarrels with fellow radicals, including Foreman. |
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These radicals despise the West for what they consider the immorality, depravity, and dissoluteness of its mass culture. |
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The lipid hydroperoxide thus formed will decompose into alkoxy radicals, aldehydes, alkenes, epoxides and alcohols. |
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Like most great radicals he was essentially a loner with a gift of the gab and rage in his heart. |
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It was founded by radicals who had been members of the Socialist Workers Party or other political tendencies that had left that organization. |
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Vitamin A works as an antioxidant, removing free radicals from the skin. |
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Propyl gallate, the alkoxyl radicals scavenger, also suppressed the mobility shift and strongly inhibited the formation of all protein cross-linking products. |
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For many radicals, the rhetoric of neo-liberalism was taken too literally. |
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It has been discovered that the vitamin has the ability to rid your body of the free radicals that sometimes prevent oxygen being pumped around your limbs. |
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Emboldened radicals attacking an Algerian gas plant in a days-long standoff leaving dozens dead. |
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For their part, the radicals needed to hammer the nonviolent message home. |
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A myth of Merrie Africa was fostered with assiduity, an ideal of timeless village community as appealing to radicals and socialists as to conservatives. |
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In fact, it is still unclear if the superoxide anion is formed through peroxy radicals or through a reaction between solvated electron and molecular oxygen. |
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Intracellular bacteria are subjected to several bacteriocidal mechanisms in the macrophages such as free oxygen radicals and phagosome lysosomal activity. |
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The only question now is whether Boehner has the onions to sidestep the radicals. |
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Vitamin E is a chain-breaking antioxidant, i.e. it is able to repair oxidizing radicals directly, preventing the chain propagation step during lipid autoxidation. |
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Throughout the twentieth century, radicals, revolutionaries, feminists, utopians and unionists competed for their hearts and minds to lead the people's procession. |
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There are many types of free radicals, and all have specific detoxifiers. |
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He also believes that antioxidants taken supplementally will combat the negative effects of exercise by protecting cells and tissues against destructive free radicals. |
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Groups on the far Left, led by the radicals, were in full cry, demanding thorough investigation of the scandal and exposure of all the guilty men. |
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Free radicals react destructively with many cellular components causing cell damage and leading to many diseases from cataract to cancer, heart disease to dementia. |
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All three have been shown to be active in a variety of yeast-based screens and there is some evidence that urethane and thiourea may induce free radicals in yeast cells. |
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Epigallocatechin gallate is a flavonoid antioxidant, which is an ideal scavenger of peroxyl radicals and is thus, in principle, an effective inhibitor of lipid peroxidation. |
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Because it was beyond the control of the authorities in the City of London, the region attracted radicals, religious dissidents, prisons, brothels, and bear pits. |
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It was also the introduction of distrust, a sentiment that had only before been embraced by radicals and beatniks, and the realization that all was not well. |
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Classicism was, after all, based on a historic culture, and late eighteenth-century radicals were to find sustenance in the myths of Saxon freedom and the Norman yoke. |
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Unlike normal cooking, when food is nuked numerous chemical bonds are ruptured, leaving behind a trail of free radicals, ions, and other radiolytic byproducts. |
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Those people are virtually by definition liberals and reformers and radicals. |
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The formation of conjugated dienes occurs when free radicals attack the hydrogens of methylene groups separating double bonds and leading to a rearrangement of the bonds. |
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The best that can be said for these budding radicals is that at least they sincerely hate the thing they so viciously attack. |
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But with a bipartisan alliance of radicals in Washington, the logjam of political dysfunction will finally be broken. |
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Now to compare ISIS radicals and Ferguson looters is not to say that they are the same in all respects. |
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At present the evidence for hydroxyl radicals being mutagenic is limited. |
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Free radicals like ROS, RNS and lipid peroxidation products such as Malondialdehyde have been shown to induce pressure of c-fos and c-jun oncoproteins. |
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Number one is the build up of toxins such as acetaldehyde and free radicals, as your liver struggles to cope with metabolizing large amounts of alcohol. |
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As long as we keep the radicals out of the way, we should get a new deal. |
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The raw egg is full of cysteine which helps the body break down the free radicals which build up in the liver and it's best to swallow it in a oner. |
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Black Catechu, a component of SJS, was found to have polyphenol components such as catechin which has strong scavenging effects on oxygen radicals. |
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The Bill passed its first reading easily, despite trenchant criticism from radicals who were angry about interference with the freedom of refugees. |
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Naringin, a bioflavonoid predominant in grapefruit and other citrus fruits, has been found to scavenge free radicals, therefore it may also reduce radiation-induced damage. |
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His greatest concern was that the Republicans would prove so reactionary that they would transform Democratic moderates and liberals into radicals and extremists. |
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However politically accommodating the radicals are prepared to be, any talk of defending workers interests is enough to send the union leaders into a frenzy. |
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In the atmosphere the hydroxyl radicals oxidise nitrates to form ozone. |
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So you see, by knowing the radicals and the 6 ways of forming Chinese characters, one can pretty much guess the meaning and sound of Chinese characters. |
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In high school we are taught the quadratic formula which provides the roots of any quadratic equation in terms of radicals involving the coefficients of the equation. |
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From its true emergence, algebra can be seen as a theory of equations solved by means of radicals, and of algebraic calculations on related expressions. |
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X rays induce double-strand breaks both via direct absorption and radicals produced by radiolysis, which also cause a whole spectrum of other damages. |
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Going in, I had expected the usual motley of anti-globalization radicals, but the group I was with was a fairly polished, young, professional-looking bunch. |
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The hydroperoxyderivatives of PUFA can undergo autocatalytic degradation, producing radicals and thus initiating the chain reaction of lipid peroxidation. |
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Qualitative analysis can also analyze a mixture to determine the precise percentage composition of the sample in terms of elements, radicals, and compounds. |
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Was the president planning to act on the wishes of the radicals of his party and emancipate all the slaves? |
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Oxygen free radicals in root cells would be formed in the process of root respiration in the mitochondria and the oxidation of secondary metabolites such as soluble phenols. |
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The most contentious matter on which the moderates tended to side with Bowdoin and the radicals concerned Bernard's animadversions on crowd action. |
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Lipoperoxidation occurs as a chain reaction initiated by free radicals, which propagates itself and can result in the formation of many equivalents of lipid peroxides. |
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Meanwhile, a group of leftist radicals is on a crime spree of murder and robbery, arming themselves with automatic weapons, explosives, and rockets. |
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Recently, some young intellectual radicals, calling themselves the anti-feminists, have formed a movement for the exclusion of women from science and learning. |
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Similarly, a study from Turkey determined that activity in rheumatic joints produced high levels of both free radicals and inflammatory substances. |
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There is no use trying to change those radicals who sling off at me and other Aussies who just want to enjoy our country and want to keep our freedom. |
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These antioxidants and enzymes remove or inactivate the free radicals. |
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Once free radicals are produced, a chain reaction occurs wherein lipid peroxidation becomes self-perpetuating, generating more free radicals, and causing further harm. |
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The most acute risk comes from those who outflank radicals with deeper radicalism. |
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Functions include detoxification of free radicals and peroxides, regulation of cell growth and protein function, and maintenance of immune function. |
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Indeed, thanks in good part to Paine we Americans not only started out, but remain, radicals at heart. |
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The reformers, however, were quickly labelled as radicals and as associates of the French revolutionaries. |
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The radicals were without unity of aim and method, and there was but little hope of accomplishing anything. |
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The idea of the Norman yoke became increasingly popular amongst English radicals in the seventeenth century. |
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The Adullamites were supported by Tories and the liberal Whigs were supported by radicals and reformists. |
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Unsatisfied free radicals can spur the mutation of cells they encounter and are, thus, causes of cancer. |
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A wide variety of aromatic compounds are enzymatically reduced to form free radicals that contain one more electron than their parent compounds. |
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Once formed, these anion free radicals reduce molecular oxygen to superoxide, and regenerate the unchanged parent compound. |
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Ultraviolet light will release free electrons from material, thereby creating free radicals, which break up VOCs and NOx gases. |
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Many radicals engage in renunciatory styles of dress and personal behavior. |
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The employers arbitrarily fined men for minor reasons, disallowed wages on false pretexts and victimised perceived radicals. |
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Created as a parliamentary borough in 1832, Oldham's first parliamentary representatives were the radicals William Cobbett and John Fielden. |
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Bioflavonoids are antioxidants, the compounds that squelch disease-causing free radicals in the body, Kaczor said. |
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This is followed by decomposition initiated by radicals generated by the terminal double bonds formed by the disproportionation process. |
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From their radiation-excited state, the photoinitiators photolyze or degrade directly or indirectly into free radicals. |
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The influence of the type of solvent on the capacity to scavenge free radicals was much greater than that of temperature. |
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Oxidative stress can reflect a disturbance between the systemic production of reactive oxygen species and antioxidant defenses against radicals. |
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The antioxidant property of a phytochemical permits it to come between cells and free radicals by giving up their own electrons. |
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In this case, the peroxide radicals were predominately consumed by the silane, which resulted in low terminal double bond formation. |
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Determination of selective quinones and quinoid radicals in airborne particulate matter and vehicular exhaust particles. |
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The contributors to this volume can, in the main, be considered moral conservatives but, nevertheless, they are meta-ethical radicals. |
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Superoxides are toxic free radicals, molecules with one unpaired electron, that the immune system normally uses to kill invading microorganisms. |
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Interacting with UV radiation to photoconvert air pollutant-derived dermally absorbed pre-radicals into active radicals. |
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The formation of hydroxyl radicals, which are powerful oxidizers, accelerated the degradation of contaminants to carbon dioxide and water. |
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Superoxide dismutase is an endogenous enzyme responsible for the dismutation of superoxide radicals. |
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When oil intensively oxidizes, non-radical compounds may be formed by two joined alkyl radicals. |
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Iron bound to C particles catalyzed the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide to generate hydroxyl radicals. |
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Free iron is a strong catalyzer increasing the formation of oxygen radicals with a 4000 fold higher rate. |
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Such reactions create vibrationally and rotationally excited OH radicals that thermalize within a few collisions. |
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Free radicals vary widely in their thermodynamic properties, ranging from very oxidizing to very reducing. |
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Moscow immediately claimed that the murderous schoolhouse siege was the work of Chechen radicals aligned with al-Qaeda. |
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Fortunately, vitamins C and E and other antioxidant compounds continually clear oxidizing radicals from the body. |
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Scientists knew that when mechanical force is applied to a polymer, bonds can break to generate free radicals, molecules with unpaired electrons. |
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Blueberries and black grapes contain flavinoids, which prevent damage by free radicals and ageing. |
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The porphyrins can undergo photo-oxidation and autooxidation generating free radicals. |
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Emami discovered that polyphenols in a cigarette filter efficiently remove free radicals of cytotoxic molecules of cigarette smoke. |
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Root radicals were usually nonseparated throughout the cervicoapical extension. |
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Political agitation at home from radicals such as the Chartists and the suffragettes enabled legislative reform and universal suffrage. |
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The religious and political radicals who were held responsible for the wars suffered harsh repression. |
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Limited reforms were enough to antagonise the ruling class but not enough to satisfy the radicals. |
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He led and inspired British radicals during the 1790s, paved the way for utilitarianism, and helped found Unitarianism. |
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This exchange was part of the process of the new experimental philosophers throwing off their associations with occultists and radicals. |
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The radicals formed the Methodist New Connexion, while the original body came to be known as the Wesleyan Methodist Church. |
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Historically, the term referred to the broad liberal political alliance of the nineteenth century, formed by Whigs, Peelites, and radicals. |
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While at the University at Bonn, Marx joined the Poets' Club, a group containing political radicals that were monitored by the police. |
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However, this changed following the seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979 by Islamist radicals. |
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The cause also appealed to some radicals, and his movement gained the support of the Dundee Radical Association. |
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The radicals supported such policies as the disestablishment of the Church of England and were closely allied to the Liberation Society. |
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Shortly before the election, however, Henry Richard intervened as a radical Liberal candidate, invited by the radicals of Merthyr. |
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When the peroxide is mixed with the resin, it decomposes to generate free radicals, which initiate the curing reaction. |
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Marius, although he was generally allied with the radicals, complied with the request and put down the revolt in the interest of public order. |
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I ask what I have done to deserve it, one daughter hobnobbing with radicals and the other planning to plight herself to a criminal. |
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For example, Hebrew irregular verbs are sometimes called weak verbs because one of their radicals is weak. |
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Hence, Schmid rejected the radicals and their iconoclasm, but supported Zwingli's position. |
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Conrad Grebel, the leader of the radicals and the emerging Anabaptist movement, spoke disparagingly of Zwingli in private. |
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The radicals ignored these measures and on 21 January, they met at the house of the mother of another radical leader, Felix Manz. |
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Five weeks after Priestley left, William Pitt's administration began arresting radicals for seditious libel, resulting in the famous 1794 Treason Trials. |
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It is also important in protecting the cell from a process known as oxidative stress, which arises when excess oxygen radicals and other oxidizing agents are formed. |
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More than two-thirds of Canadians believe that throwing radicals in jail for a lifetime will help Canada solve the problem of home-grown terrorism. |
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Free radical-induced hemolysis is generally attributed to oxygen-containing free radicals which peroxidize the polyunsaturated fatty acids in the erythrocyte membrane. |
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Irish nationalist reaction was mixed, Unionist opinion was hostile, and the election addresses during the 1886 election revealed English radicals to be against the bill also. |
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In red meat, the formation of strong oxidizing agents from the reactions of oxygen with aqueous electrons and hydrogen radicals is the key to the onset of brown color. |
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These free radicals could produce an electrical voltage across the retina, thus controlling the nerve impulses from the eye to the brain, he suggested. |
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High blood levels of free ferrous iron react with peroxides to produce highly reactive free radicals that can damage DNA, proteins, lipids, and other cellular components. |
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Free radicals are a part of redox molecules and can become harmful to the human body if they do not reattach to the redox molecule or an antioxidant. |
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His greatest scientific contributions were to the understanding of the pathogenesis of the pneumoconioses and the role of free radicals in lung disease. |
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One study found people who had a good intake of monounsaturates had fewer wrinkles, possibly because the fats helped the skin resist the activity of free radicals. |
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At high temperatures its high polyunsaturate content can form free radicals and trans fats linked to heart disease, wrinkles, arthritis and even cancer. |
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It is reckoned that cocoa, a key ingredient of chocolate, contains high levels of antioxidants which help mop up free radicals and prevent them from damaging cells. |
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The radicals said that Nixon and Humphrey were Tweedledum and Tweedledee. |
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Karlovy Vary healing mineral water is a natural alkalizing compound that helps the body to restore a normal pH by neutralizing acid radicals and removing them from the body. |
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I think the radicals and the compromisers just painted targets on their backs for the 2012 elections, and many of them will feel the slings and arrows right in the bull's-eye. |
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The enzyme glutaredoxin utilizes a disulfide oxidation-reduction mechanism to detoxify free radicals and is one way organisms have evolved to handle oxidative stress. |
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Tearing polymers apart also creates uncharged molecules called radicals, which have gone mostly overlooked by scientists studying static electricity, Baytekin says. |
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Black radicals, and the black community at large, always excused Farrakhan's conservatism in exchange for his unique willingness to consistently flip off white America. |
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When blood flow to areas of the brain is restricted, reactive oxygen compounds like superoxide radical anions, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals form and accumulate. |
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The lipid peroxidation is an autooxidative process started by free radicals and the cell membrane unsaturated fatty acids are very susceptible to them. |
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Then succinyl free radicals decays in one of the recombination reactions. |
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Free radicals are group of highly reactive chemical molecules with one or more unpaired electrons that can oxidatively modify bio-mole cules they encounter. |
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This path to apoptosis can be promoted by reactive oxygen-bearing molecules, such as hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals, which antioxidants ordinarily keep in check. |
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Black and green tea also naturally contain flavanoid antioxidants which can help protect your body from free radicals that can damage your body's cells. |
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Radicals believed there should only be three large wards to stop certain powerful individuals controlling particular areas. |
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Because the socialists refused to take part in government, they forced the Radicals to rule alone or in alliance with the right. |
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The snipers who resisted the army's advance therefore not only included members of the Marxist parties, but also Radicals and Peronists. |
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Reformers like William Beckford and Radicals beginning with John Wilkes called for reform of the system. |
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Donnish, monkish, and fiercely right-wing, Veryser knew and loved the Middle American Radicals like they were family. |
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He joined with other Radicals in his attacks on the government and three times during the next couple of years was charged with libel. |
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The Rochdale Radicals were a group of more extreme reformists who were also heavily involved in the cooperative movement. |
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A small number of Radicals, generally from northern constituencies, were the strongest advocates of continuing reform. |
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The leading Radicals were John Bright and Richard Cobden, who represented the manufacturing towns which had gained representation under the Reform Act. |
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The Liberal Party grew out of the Whigs, who had their origins in an aristocratic faction in the reign of Charles II, and the early 19th century Radicals. |
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The Consarvatives painted thurselves bloo, and the Radicals yaller, an' thay as danced the longest, the Roomans sent to Parlyment to rool the roost. |
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