Without a language to sustain and develop it, a culture does not advance but regresses. |
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The bursa regresses with age, and thus its presence or absence may be used to determine age. |
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Complete response: When a cancer regresses to such an extent that it is undetectable. |
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Otherwise, the result is stagnation, where the personality becomes impoverished, and regresses into self-concern. |
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He sometimes regresses, shows symptoms, clashes, criticizes the carers or refuses their tokens of affection. |
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If this pressure is missing after tooth loss, the bone reacts like a muscle that is no longer exercised: it regresses. |
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The real maritime fishing situation does not change: technologies evolve, the social aspect stagnates or regresses. |
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At one point he regresses back into his CID persona from years ago. |
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Losses on a sporting and financial level are all the greater as even training is generally prohibited: the horse then loses physical condition and regresses in its work. |
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We note instant progress in the general condition, and the tumor, when it is superficial, regresses within a few weeks and disappears by a few months, even though the treatment has stopped. |
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This type of epilepsy occurs in about 1 in every 2-4000 children and usually appears in the first 3-6 months of life at which point development usually halts or regresses. |
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The species regresses during winter, but the carpet that it forms is so thick that other plants such as Carex pendulma and Epilobium parviflorum grow on it. |
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The country regresses and the State resumes its criminal behaviour. |
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He regresses monthly New York Stock Exchange returns data from 1962 to 1994 at increasing time horizons on various monetary policy variables and financial variables. |
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The second regresses the consumer's expenditure logarithm. |
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But when you start looking at the data, several inconsistencies emerge. First, the study uses a simple econometric model that regresses private equity investment on time and taxes. |
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From this time onward the crop gland gradually regresses, so that the young, by the time they are ready to leave the nest, are fed almost entirely on environmental supplies. |
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Ora regresses to her early teens just by talking about them. |
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The importance of this program is explained and justified daily when we observe the speed and the various forms in which democracy regresses on our continent. |
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The prospects for transport policy and, more specifically, whether the latter moves towards sustainable mobility or regresses to distorted market competition will depend on the answers provided to the above key questions. |
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Without treatment EM persists for 3 to 4 weeks and then regresses. |
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