But school is still only one strand of their education and academic achievement isn't everything. |
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Her hair, tied at the back with a pencil, is flecked with the odd strand of grey and, of course, there are lines on her face. |
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Slipstitch the folds and then use the same strand of yarn to backstitch the loops. |
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She tucked a strand of mahogany brown hair that had come loose from her braid behind her ear and smiled at Royce. |
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Arrange the sand dollars and shell ornaments along one strand of pearls in a pleasing configuration. |
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Burgundy colored hair fell attractively over his forehead in one strand determinedly longer than the rest. |
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My eyes came to rest on a long strand of thick hemp rope, slightly frazzled but still in one piece. |
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A single strand of grass is easy to break, but if you weave enough of it together, you can get a nice, strong length of rope. |
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It seemed that every strand of hair was in place, curling in loose ringlets towards the ends. |
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On one side, where it threatened to fall over into the garden, it was shored up with baulks of timber, driftwood picked up on the strand. |
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A mechanism leading to tandem sequence duplication may involve DNA damage followed by DNA synthesis, strand displacement, and ligation. |
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Sun, wind, chlorine and salt break down the protein structures that make up each strand of hair, rendering it dull, dry and lifeless. |
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For some reason best known to whoever it was, a lifebuoy on Abbeyside strand was taken from its berthing and shamelessly burned. |
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Afterlife energy is an unusual strand running through the life after death debate. |
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The one strand of RNA is annealed with its complementary strand of DNA, which causes the other strand of DNA to be displaced from the helix. |
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Archival feminist film research is one central strand of feminism and film studies. |
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The third strand of poverty research relates individual and structural factors. |
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Instead I pulled at a strand of hair, yanking it until I felt a sharp pain. |
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A single strand of murdered schoolgirl Sarah Payne's hair was found on the sweatshirt of her alleged killer, a court heard yesterday. |
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Of the eight overlapping genes reported here, two are encoded on the opposite strand. |
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Tucking a loose strand of hair away from her face, she stopped kneading the dough in front of her and wiped her hands on her apron. |
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Nika stood up as her captive yanked and strained at the glittering strand that leashed her, shoulders bunching and teeth bared. |
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The dark-haired girl scoffed, shaking a strand of wispily cut hair from her eyes. |
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Channel 5 is currently acting as a window on America, with its America's Finest strand. |
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Kat raised her head momentarily and blew a pesky strand of hair out of her eyes, fluttering her lips so that a raspberry gently sounded. |
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The clouds seemed to form ranks like soldiers, each line catching a thin strand of orange or pink light on its edge. |
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Kip chose oriented strand board for the subfloors and sheathing, with floor joists made of a similar material. |
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Julia pushes a strand of blonde hair out of her daughter's face and cups it in her hands. |
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Through it all there is a strand of political activism that waxes and wanes, but never disappears. |
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An anchorage consists of a cast-iron bearing plate and special wedges to secure the strand inside the anchor housing. |
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Yet another strand that is woven into the story is the way women have been treated by their men through generations. |
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Her questionably close relationship with her son creates another strand of the drama which audiences in the late 19th century found challenging. |
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She used the wheelchair access to bring a buggy onto the strand but needed someone to physically lift the buggy onto the beach. |
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Parp is activated by DNA strand breaks induced by alkylating agents. |
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Now a particularly ugly strand of this phenomenon, Native American appropriation, is hogging the spotlight. |
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Using standard methods, the cost of printing DNA could run upwards of a billion dollars or more, depending on the strand. |
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I picked up a strand of his long brown hair, and wound it round my finger. |
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Linda's lips wrinkled down, a strand of hair pasted against her cheek. |
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But close inspection of the structure obtained from X-ray crystallography allows us to follow the strand as it twists and turns through the compact globule. |
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Some tipped their worn hats at him in greeting as they passed, while others contentedly reined their horses onward, chewing thoughtfully on a strand of wheat. |
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After dissociation, the nascent strand may anneal to a complementary single strand, reinvade a template to be extended by additional synthesis, or undergo end joining. |
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The replication of DNA occurs when the hydrogen bonds between the bases of each strand break, and the molecule divides into two, like a zipper being opened. |
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The third and final strand is that the early Welsh Arthur had a close connection with the Welsh Otherworld Annwn. |
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The twist of the yarn is opposite to that of the strand, and that in turn is opposite to that of the rope. |
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When using twin ropes, both ropes are clipped into the same piece of protection, treating the two as a single strand. |
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A single rope is the most common and it is intended to be used by itself, as a single strand. |
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In animal mitochondria, each DNA strand is transcribed continuously and produces a polycistronic RNA molecule. |
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Prevailing educational thought at the time was that testing was an effective way to discover to which strand a child was most suited. |
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The heavy strand encodes 28 genes, and the light strand encodes 9 genes for a total of 37 genes. |
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Just south of the harbour is a small strand leading to Greenore Point, where grey seals are usually to be seen. |
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Since 2004 there have been some signs of an attempt to return closer to parts of BBC Two's earlier output with the arts strand The Culture Show. |
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The short DNA fragment is the precursor of the newly synthesized DNA strand on the lagging strand. |
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Orcas and bottlenose dolphins have also been known to drive their prey onto a beach to feed on it, a behaviour known as beach or strand feeding. |
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In the spring recently weaned pups and yearlings occasionally strand on beaches after becoming separated from their group. |
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Within a gene, the sequence of bases along a DNA strand defines a messenger RNA sequence, which then defines one or more protein sequences. |
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In a DNA double helix, each type of nucleobase on one strand bonds with just one type of nucleobase on the other strand. |
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The backbone of the DNA strand is made from alternating phosphate and sugar residues. |
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A loose strand across my forearm in the morning, later one at my desk. |
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After 1856, Dante Gabriel Rossetti became an inspiration for the medievalising strand of the movement. |
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We reduced the accumulation of expanded RNA foci and corrected the sense strand of the gene. |
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The sense strand yielded 1 characteristic peak pattern, while the antisense strand yielded 2-3 characteristic peak patterns. |
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Using a round brush, take the hair from the root and run the brush down each strand, moving the blow-dryer over the brush as you go. |
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While Defoe did not slavishly follow one strand or another of Whiggism, he did subscribe to its social and cultural foundations. |
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It was darker now and there were stones and bits of wood on the strand and slippy seaweed. |
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Noting how an unidentified fiber strand burns and smells can assist in determining if it is natural or synthetic, and what the fiber content is. |
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Filament is a continuous strand consisting of anything from 1 filament to many. |
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Recombination allows alleles on the same strand of DNA to become separated. |
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The schools strand itself is now defunct, with no particular branding segment used. |
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This established a Tripartite System of education, with an academic, a technical and a functional strand. |
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The 'Red Tory' theory of Phillip Blond is a strand of the 'One Nation' school of thought. |
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Delay in social care assessments strand patients in hospital without care packages for when they leave. |
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Steven Rings discusses the motivations and ideologies underlying Riemannian and one strand of neo-Riemannian analysis. |
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The Holliday junction is a tetrahedral junction structure that can be moved along the pair of chromosomes, swapping one strand for another. |
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Each model consists of two dedicated sprockets with hardened teeth connected with a double strand roller chain. |
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Eusebius, in his later works, is the best representative of this strand of Constantinian propaganda. |
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Finally, unlike many other holiday bulbs if one bulb of the LED lights burns out the whole strand will stay lit. |
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The second strand states that it is also possible for a player to be sidelined without having received a yellow card, depending on the gravity of the offence. |
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With the commencement in 1994 of the interim Constitution, and in 1997 its replacement, the final Constitution, another strand has been added to this weave. |
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To preserve biological information, it is essential that the sequence of bases in each copy are precisely complementary to the sequence of bases in the template strand. |
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Other types of these enzymes are capable of cutting one DNA helix and then passing a second strand of DNA through this break, before rejoining the helix. |
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This enzyme makes the complementary strand by finding the correct base through complementary base pairing and bonding it onto the original strand. |
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In general, the sense strand identified genotypes more accurately. |
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In Hungary, the largest Protestant denomination is represented by Reformed Church in Hungary, which is a Calvinist strand, established in 1567, Debrecen. |
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The second strand represents a range of Protestant Reformed teachings brought to England from neighbouring countries in the same period, notably Calvinism and Lutheranism. |
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These asymmetric bonds mean a strand of DNA has a direction. |
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Excision of the U residue from DNA produces an abasic site, leading to incision of the DNA strand containing the abasic site by the conventional base-excision repair pathway. |
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The system incorporates chain driven, lineshaft and gravity roller conveyors with triple strand chain transfers being employed at the deburring stations. |
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The more radical ideas of Sidney and Locke, argues Ward, became marginalized in Britain, but emerged as a dominant strand in American republicanism. |
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