Raw silk fibres are naturally coated with a gummy substance called sericin. |
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Would my body flush this substance out of my system if I quit eating carrots now? |
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Where water from fire hoses or water main leaks had come in contact with this substance, it created small pools that resembled slush. |
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The two swans and their four cygnets became covered in oil after the dredgers dug the substance up from the canal bed. |
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In each work, the play of texture seems to transform the rigid stone into a more supple or pliable substance like plastic or clay. |
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There is a more intimate connection between substance involvement and crime than merely that the same permanent personality traits predict both. |
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The ordinary everyday notion of a continuant individual substance is in its own humble terms all right as it is. |
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I like a bit of substance and depth to my characters, plot and general intrigue. |
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In this way, the horizon of objectivity, in so far as substance belongs to it as a constitutive element, becomes a priori intuitable. |
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But in between campaigns, the Canadian Inuits have stunning rates of suicide, substance abuse and disease. |
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Aim to terminate the conversation before anything of any substance is discussed. |
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The fraud story began to fade about a week ago, fizzling for lack of substance. |
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An unstable substance, vitamin C is destroyed by cooking and exposure of food to light. |
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The acidity of a substance is determined by how readily it donates hydrogen ions or protons. |
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Use of ipecac should be considered in children who have ingested a potentially toxic substance in the preceding hour. |
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Detoxification once referred to the process of removing some specific poisonous substance from the body. |
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He further alleged that her in-laws made his sister drink milk laced with some poisonous substance. |
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The police sent the viscera of the woman for chemical examination to find out if the death was caused by some poisonous substance. |
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This irregular arrangement of atoms not only defines a substance as glass, but also determines several of its properties. |
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This is another test that measures irritancy by using pumpkin rind to simulate the effect of a test substance on human skin. |
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Irritant contact dermatitis is a skin reaction caused by the direct effect of an irritant substance on the skin. |
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Suddenly on the bridge this morning I felt the flimsiness of all my substance, but not so much because I'd missed something. |
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Is putting a foreign substance on a ball or corking a bat as bad as using performance-enhancing drugs? |
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Flowers of sulphur is the sublimed substance from purification by distillation. |
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These small, oval, soft-bodied insects are covered in a white fluffy substance and resemble small cotton balls. |
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Even though they are working in a fluid substance, they have several things in their favour in comparison to swimmers. |
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It spilled out from her fingers in the form of a fluid silver substance and flooded the man's leg down to the marrow of his bone. |
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Miro, Louis and Poons showed the strikingly different effects that could be obtained by pouring a fluid substance down a canvas. |
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Positioned next to it is another glass plate coated with a fluorescent substance. |
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However, drink plenty of fluids to flush the radioactive substance from your body. |
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Psychologists also offer on-site counseling and education services relating to such topics as depression, substance abuse and trauma. |
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Common sense would indicate that the substance possibly was baby powder from a diaper change. |
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However, parental monitoring may counterbalance the negative influence of peers on substance use. |
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Peter heard Marc's words through the fog in his brain but the substance of it was clear enough. |
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It was written with a pen in a crabbed hand, and the sum and substance of it was this. |
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The Church was not a separate entity, but one that gave legal form and substance to the society of the time. |
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Going beyond the literal meaning, the exhibition explored the nuanced implications of the formless substance that is dust. |
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Pomade is a creme based substance that gives your hair a separated, textured look. |
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The media raises a ruckus about destroyed lives and a rampant crime wave, and blames a substance for those problems. |
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Treatment referrals are made on the basis of a comprehensive assessment for substance abuse, recidivism risk, and criminogenic needs. |
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We need to deal with the substance of the issue and I think we had a very blunt and frank discussion. |
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At temperatures below the freezing point of a substance, the transition between solid and liquid phases does not generally occur. |
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He loaded it up with chopped cucumber and tomato salad, French fries and a mysterious meat substance. |
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Changing the state of a substance with asymmetric bonds requires more energy than a crystalline structure would. |
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People who have no direct experience of the American system can make the mistake of thinking that US politics is all froth and no substance. |
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It just goes to show that perhaps there may be a bit too much froth and not quite enough substance in the so-called high growth coffee market. |
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Ground substance or basement membrane is stained by aldehyde fuchsin, periodic acid-Schiff stain, and toluidine blue. |
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During that time I used to handle vials with over 5 curies of this radioactive substance on almost daily basis. |
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Essence is defined as the basic substance both constituting the human body and maintaining its functional activities. |
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I believe the phrase is all fur coat and no knickers, that company is all about style over substance. |
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He's the rich kid play-acting war, the symbol and not the substance of the soldier. |
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In 1812, William Hyde Wollaston found a substance in urine that he identified as a cystic oxide, and was later named cystine. |
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So he sits in Parliament and pouts, says nothing of substance, and does nothing for those who voted for him. |
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This substance was ground into powder, rendered to paste, and then used, for example, as body paint. |
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A year later Charles Galissard de Marignac in Geneva found a further earth in this substance, which Lecoq isolated in 1886 and called gadolinium. |
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While the substance that degrades or lowers the quality of food is an adulterant. |
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So I didn't ridicule or deride contributions, and published most emails critical of me, my style, and my substance. |
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Specialists say contaminated heroin or another powder-like substance used to dilute the drug may have spread the disease. |
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The toxin may be in the form of a powder-like substance that animals are either eating or walking through. |
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She quickly dabbed her handkerchief across her mouth, wiping away the substance from her lips. |
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The GP will first check to see if the ears are being blocked by an object or substance such as earwax. |
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In modern politics style is substance, manner is meaning, and a look is easily worth a thousand words. |
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The latter, a fiber-like substance, is a prebiotic, meaning it encourages the formation of healthy, beneficial bacteria in the intestine. |
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The condition is due to the absence of an essential enzyme that breaks down a substance called ganglioside, present mainly in the nervous system. |
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The substance known as dark matter seems to create ghost galaxies that mirror the ones we can see, astrophysicists said Wednesday. |
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We should not accuse the preformationists of stupidity for placing the right idea into the wrong substance. |
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The most common premorbid psychiatric diagnoses are depression, personality disorders, and substance misuse. |
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The test substance is usually administered orally by gavage using a stomach tube or a suitable intubation cannula. |
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Because state-standard tests are supposed to measure actual learning, prep courses teach substance over strategy. |
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Instead, transmission is accomplished by the release of a chemical neurotransmitter substance from the presynaptic fibre. |
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Similarly, the dipole moment of methanol, another extremely polar substance, is only 2.9 debyes. |
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Joren let out a primal scream which seemed to take physical substance as it met everyone's ears. |
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From the 300 projectiles which NATO has fired so far, only four have hit something of substance. |
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A glass is a substance that is non-crystalline yet almost completely undeformable. |
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No bill, no matter how great it is in substance, will be able to do that without care and great deliberation. |
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Strapping it around his waist, he took two globs of slimy substance and pasted them onto the doors. |
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These programs, called Blueprints, have been shown to reduce adolescent violent crime, aggression, delinquency, and substance abuse. |
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What substance this is can be inferred from the deliverances of the active faculty, namely the ideas in my imagination. |
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It's melodic, but even on a deep, meditative level, I feel this song is more glop than substance. |
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Along with honey, bees produce a natural antibiotic called propolis which is a sticky substance that holds their comb together. |
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Researchers plan to use the substance as a sort of glue for teeth-straightening braces. |
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The substance was finally identified as white PVA adhesive, a type of industrial glue. |
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He then proceeded to carefully dress each wound using cotton and a sticky glue-like substance. |
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The bulk of the tooth consists of the bony substance dentine, surrounding the soft inner pulp that contains blood vessels and nerves. |
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No wonder some departmental meetings seem interminable and cyclic in substance! |
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But other lawmakers pshawed that notion, saying the ministry's financial report yesterday lacked substance. |
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It is derived from a substance called permethrin, which was introduced as an alternative to a banned chemical called lindane. |
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Accompanying these changes in substance has been a new Chinese campaign to publicize and promote the country's foreign policy. |
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I looked at my hand to see a dark substance on the palm, looking like watery, sticky goo. |
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The treatment works by desensitising the immune system so its reaction to a particular substance is reduced over time. |
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Anhydrous sodium hydroxide is another common laboratory desiccant, or substance that removes water. |
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Each of the wounds were gory holes of half-clotted blood, tufts of fur, and the white substance of fat. |
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He found more substance in and need for a federal system of governance in India. |
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Subjects were 11 individuals admitted to an inpatient substance abuse treatment unit for alcohol detoxification. |
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The term extinction coefficients describes the absorbance spectra of a single pure substance at known concentrations. |
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When a solid is made up of a pure substance and forms slowly, it can become a crystal. |
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Unfortunately for him, people liked his very very purple prose more than they paid attention to his substance. |
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This is assumed positive to show that the optically active substance is dextrorotatory and negative if the substance is laevorotatory. |
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The question then arose of how the dead could influence the physical world, and one answer was that they used a substance called ectoplasm. |
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Using a white substance, he drew an outline of a baseball diamond on his street level window. |
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The importance of identity changes is well documented in literature on substance abuse recovery. |
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It seems that the green, unripe berries do contain a harmful substance, but that this disappears as the fruits ripen. |
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The only way to differentiate these substances is by determining the structural formula for each substance. |
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Steady-state diffusion of water along the two defined pathways depends on the concentration gradient and on the diffusivity of the substance. |
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In the later stages they elaborate the collagenous intercellular substance of the scar. |
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The latter include diuretics, cardiac dilators and a substance called pentoxifylline, usually proscribed for memory loss among the aged. |
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The empirical formula can be obtained from the elemental analysis of a substance. |
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The substance of his claims for protection for actors and cheap drugs was either groundless or questionable. |
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In this role, he manages and directs the Life Skills Support Center, and family advocacy, substance abuse and drug demand reduction programs. |
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Although not commonly used as an emetic today, the drug is a reliable and rapidly acting substance. |
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I'm hopeful that the electorate is a bit more serious than last time and will see the contrast between a man of real substance and an empty suit. |
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The substance was discovered by an employee who sorts through unclaimed luggage to give clothing to homeless organisations. |
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They discovered a suspicious substance when they opened the package, which was part of the postal delivery on Thursday. |
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Try as they might, scientists in hundreds of laboratories around the world failed to discover that substance by classical approaches. |
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The substance releases the minerals into the teeth, encouraging the growth of new enamel. |
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The disjuncture between our public face and our private face arises from a failure of presentation, not of a failure of substance. |
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The hairs were treated in special containers to distill amino acid, the most common substance contained in soybean sauce. |
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Without qualities, substance would not be distinguishable in terms of the world as we know it. |
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Sometimes they'll throw barbed wire and any other refuse into these ponds, and the diver can be entrapped in that substance. |
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I do not mean that the recent phenomenon of substance abuse epidemics and passive welfare has turned good health into bad. |
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Variety can also be obtained without affecting the musical substance simply by repeating a melody with different dynamics or instruments. |
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Consistent with previous studies, both recreational and ergogenic substance use was self-reported. |
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The leaves are larger and more elliptical than hemp dogbane and all plant parts exude a milky substance when broken. |
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Alcohol, or ethanol, to give it its chemical name, creates a poisonous substance called acetaldehyde. |
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I don't want to write a doorstop book, but I would like it to have a little substance. |
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These drugs all act in the brain to stimulate receptors that recognize the chemical messenger substance dopamine. |
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Some experts advise the use of wax or some other tacky substance to hold the dubbing in place. |
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The board said that the substance emits very low dosage of radiation, which falls within legal limits. |
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What was it, exactly, about the thin red dribble on top of the sloshy substance which was supposed to make it instantly more alluring? |
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She had a look that spoke for nobody to come by and her entire outfit was dripping with some sort of liquid substance. |
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The trunk exudes a reddish substance, a solution of which has been used in the treatment of diarrhea. |
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The substance was getting there, but it was missing vigor, concreteness, punch. |
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The skin could have an oily substance like tallow, egg yolk or dubbin, which is a mixture of fish oil and tallow. |
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Perhaps the most obvious issue is the resumption, continuation, or worsening of substance abuse. |
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With reports of shattered guitars, groupie mayhem, and determined substance abuse, this new offering comes as something of a surprise. |
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Crack cocaine is a much different substance than powdered cocaine. |
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Creativity is much needed to promote not fluff, but substance. |
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The debate on Tuesday was really a debate between substance and fluff. |
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Ten days later the lawyer was committed to a state mental institution for substance abuse and was eventually disbarred. |
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At that point, it leached back into the wider culture, slightly altering the rhetoric, but not necessarily the essential substance, of demotic antiscience. |
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The creatures exude a noxious substance as a byproduct of their metabolic processes, one that prevents fouling of its exterior and discourages predators. |
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Iron is the heaviest substance that a star can make in its life because heavier elements require more energy to fuse together than they release, so the star collapses. |
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Passive transport does not require the cell to expend any energy and involves a substance diffusing down its concentration gradient across a membrane. |
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From this pungently unpromising substance we have made a variety of savoury stews and fritters, and saltfish is one of the Caribbean's unexpectedly characteristic flavours. |
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I coughed, my lungs contracting to rid me of the disgusting substance. |
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A gummy substance that smelled of medicine covered her lips. |
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The characterisation of natural law and positive law is of some significance although in substance their adherents have only limited areas of disagreement. |
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As noted earlier, only an expert can positively identify a substance as biological growth and lab analysis may be required for final confirmation. |
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The interview was administered by substance abuse counselors or study personnel trained in interview techniques by the counselors and a clinical psychologist. |
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Appearance is important but how many times have you seen some fly girl or guy and then when they open their mouth their flyness is overshadowed by their lack of substance. |
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The pods, which are typically ridged and tapering, but may be almost round, contain many small seeds and a gummy substance which gives okra its special character. |
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She will dip a brush in some volatile liquid, and when the liquid touches the powder, it will form a glue-like substance which will be applied over your original nails! |
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The urge develops because past pleasurable experience and related benefits from the substance or activity are expected to reoccur on the next occasion. |
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There isn't enough substance to grind out postseason victories. |
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A neutral group of atoms bonded together covalently is called a molecule, and a substance which is made up of molecules is called a molecular substance. |
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I don't think that it is a good idea to introduce any foreign substance that could adversely affect the development of a baby without a very compelling reason. |
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In the decussation of the pyramids, the bundles of corticospinal fibers are interposed between the ventral gray matter and the central gray substance. |
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More style than substance, he spends more time discussing his new suits or launching hearty guffaws than breaking down football teams. |
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A person can form things in his thought, and, by impressing his thought upon formless substance, can cause the thing he thinks about to be created. |
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Abusers of freebase cocaine, regardless of how they obtain the drug, are far more likely to become dependent on the substance than those who sniff cocaine hydrochloride. |
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This approach effectively permitted a defendant to reap the fruits of his own unconscionable conduct, and deprived the subsection of much practical substance. |
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The witness said that she smelled a substance similar in odor to creosol. |
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Many of his ideas were repolished notions from the past, set out attractively for an audience attracted as much by their glitter as their substance. |
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With every passing phase, life becomes more complex in the sense that it allows man to either stumble upon or to consciously discover new phenomena and substance. |
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Whereas the traditional process of detoxification was limited to the removal of the toxic substance from the system, this is only a small part of the aims of the modern detox. |
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Societal beliefs, social isolation, community disintegration, stressful life events, mental illness and substance abuse must all be addressed in prevention. |
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Do homoeopathic serial dilutions, containing no molecules of the original substance from which they were prepared, show intrinsic therapeutic effect? |
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Even if they didn't reveal your identities up front, once the substance of the complaint becomes clear, he is bound to know who dropped the dime on him. |
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The substance being electrolyzed must be an electrolyte, a liquid that contains positive and negative ions and therefore is able to conduct electricity. |
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The language is not particularly inflammatory, but the substance of the decision is one that pro-lifers will like and pro-choicers will fear a great deal. |
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The restriction is principally one of procedure rather than substance. |
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And as I demonstrated when I dropped one into the bucket, a hagfish can exude from its skin a substance so slimy and so plenteous it seems supernatural. |
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Urzela, a natural substance used in dyes, was another imported crop. |
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Listed among its ingredients is gelatin, a gummy substance rendered from cattle carcasses. |
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Careful planning of site layout, erection of partitions, or underground hazardous substance storage and an overabundance of safety systems can actually save lives. |
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While it's true that some Austrian winemakers were caught adding an illicit sweetening agent in 1985, the substance in question was diethylene glycol, not ethylene glycol. |
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One has waited in vain for a comparable exhibition there, only to be disappointed by a scattering of shallow displays, rich in contrivance and sparse in substance. |
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That triumph of spin over substance has cost this administration dearly. |
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Each quantum a heavily compressed package of that essential single substance, locked forever inside the tiny ergosphere that it created for itself. |
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The oxidation number of an atom in an elemental substance is zero. |
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However, the substance abuse can trigger or worsen personality disorders, or produce a syndrome that is diagnostically compatible with personality disorders. |
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Typically he set about his task straight away and it was not long until he had produced a jelly type substance which was to become blasting gelatin. |
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Pressing the button started a reaction in the putty substance. |
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A narrow beam of laser light gradually spreads out due to wave diffraction, and if it's ionizing some substance, it will gradually lose its intensity. |
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He knew the substance would become like goo once inside the cracks. |
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A substance, such as syrup of ipecac, that induces vomiting. |
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In the past, large volumes of the radioactive substance have been discharged into the Irish Sea. |
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His exuberant style and strong narrative add to his creative substance. |
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A lack of substance in party conferences and conventions means that they merely serve to bring rhythm to the political year. |
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Tooth enamel, the hardest substance in our bodies, provides a durable coating for the softer dentin underneath. |
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About a year ago, edible mustard oil laced with a cheap chemical substance became a public health issue when it was revealed that it led to development of dropsy. |
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Instead, Maureen returned to the nearest town of any substance, several hours away by road, and in sign language described to a druggist what she had seen. |
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The spectacle emphasised how much he seeks to transform our style and substance by politicising every event for its propaganda potential in a divided Australia. |
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The uranium eventually decays to radium and, eventually to polonium-210, a substance that, when inhaled, can endanger tissue health and damage the immune system. |
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On the other hand, isolates are at greater risk for a variety of social and emotional problems, which, in turn, may be risk factors for substance use. |
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Sobrero's substance also found use as a key ingredient in two smokeless powders, ballistic and cordite, from which all modern bullets derive their construction. |
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Choose a moisturiser that contains emollients or hyaluronic acid, a natural substance which helps the body's cells retain moisture. |
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He was an empiricist who made empiricism more radical by treating pure experience as the very substance of the world. |
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In this way More sought to demonstrate that the idea of incorporeal substance, or spirit, was as intelligible as that of corporeal substance, i.e. body. |
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The resulting glass is a new substance in which the waste products are bonded into the glass matrix when it solidifies. |
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The work itself is very simplistic, featuring only the shark in a watery substance, which at first glance looks clear like glass. |
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The only thing whose existence we deny, is that which philosophers call matter or corporeal substance. |
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Quartz is the most common material identified as the mystical substance maban in Australian Aboriginal mythology. |
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Such a scale would be quite independent of the physical properties of any specific substance. |
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The text deals with how a court case should proceed based on the substance of the intended argument. |
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The horn itself and the substance it was made of was called alicorn, and it was believed that the horn holds magical and medicinal properties. |
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Very few ganglionic or nonganglionic cells were found in the adrenal substance. |
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Smoking is a practice in which a substance is burned and the resulting smoke breathed in to be tasted and absorbed into the bloodstream. |
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The second most common substance that is smoked is cannabis, made from the flowers or leaves of Cannabis sativa or Cannabis indica. |
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Inhaling smoke into the lungs, no matter the substance, has adverse effects on one's health. |
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He, Dr. Breslin and several collaborators confirmed that the pungent substance in olive oil is a phenolic chemical, which they named oleocanthal. |
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Rock or stone is a natural substance, a solid aggregate of one or more minerals or mineraloids. |
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Winehouse's battles with substance abuse were the subject of much media attention. |
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A sample of the substance is synthesized with a high concentration of unstable atoms. |
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The presence of the substance in one or another part of the system is determined by detecting the locations of decay events. |
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Agar, a gelatinous substance derived from red algae, has a number of commercial uses. |
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Molecular cuisine is also a user of the substance for its gelling properties, by which it becomes a delivery vehicle for flavours. |
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Liquids and gases are transported in pipelines and any chemically stable substance can be sent through a pipeline. |
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These methods depend on the use of a binding agent, a substance used to recognize and bind the target analyte. |
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One of the chemicals in tears is a type of endorphin, a painkilling substance that the body produces. |
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Other top subjects Americans lie to their parents about include alcohol and illegal substance use, physical health and cigarette use. |
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The hormone used is parathormone, and the substance regulated is calcium ion concentration in the blood. |
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Specifically, he wants to construct a formal language using the notions of primary substance, secondary substance, attribute, and mode. |
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Current psychiatric diagnoses in the nonadult ADHD patients included major depression, conduct disorder, substance abuse and panic disorder. |
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The substance restrictions apply every time an article is supplied, and enforcement action can be taken at any point in the supply chain. |
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Those with bipolar disorder that came after the onset of substance abuse, with 50 patients. |
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The major challenge to CNS drug delivery is the blood-brain barrier, which limits the access of drugs to the brain substance. |
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Oxycodone is a Schedule II controlled substance, which has been used as both analgesic and antitussive. |
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He conceived it just that accidentals... should sink with the substance of the accusation. |
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Several Colorado papers have reproduced the substance of our articles on silver, and we thank them for their backscratches. |
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And every living substance that I have made will I blot out from off the face of the earth. |
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Out of greediness to get both, he chops at the shadow, and loses the substance. |
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Nevertheless, there was some substance to the notion that acclaim and merit were coefficient. |
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I have no skill in ceremonious letters, which have no other substance, but a faire contexture of complemental phrases and curteous words. |
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What appeals to one as most remarkable about the copihue flower is its substance. |
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The greatness of the Great Reform Bill lay less in substance than in symbolism. |
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She writes romantic fantasy and science fiction, and makes liberal use of the substance known as handwavium. |
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A strong acid is also a substance whose conjugate base is quite happy with the excess electrons it got from that bond. |
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In Book VIII, he distinguishes the matter of the substance as the substratum, or the stuff of which it is composed. |
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Some implicate either his taster Halotus, his doctor Xenophon, or the infamous poisoner Locusta as the administrator of the fatal substance. |
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Sense and perception must necessarily proceed from some incorporeal substance within us. |
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The treaty gave substance to the political reality of 13th century Wales and England, and the relationship of the former with the Angevin Empire. |
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This declaration was given legal substance under the 1931 Statute of Westminster. |
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Antibiotics inhibit the growth or the metabolic activities of bacteria and other microorganisms by a chemical substance of microbial origin. |
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This specimen was also the first substance found to be repelled by the poles of a magnet. |
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He also contended that discussing the soul is impossible because it is made of a divine substance, and humanity cannot perceive the divine. |
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The garlands added nothing to the substance of the legend but ensured that it continued after the decline of the single broadside ballad. |
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In outward form and general appearance manjack is not unlike fine coal and is essentially a bituminous substance. |
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However, by itself materialism says nothing about how material substance should be characterized. |
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In the first battle, he wounds Satan terribly with a powerful sword that God designed to even cut through the substance of angels. |
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Wilson investigated the contention that Iraq had sought uranium for nuclear weapons in Niger and reported that the contention had no substance. |
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I hope that in the coming years we can focus on the substance, not endlessly fret about the form. |
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For purposes of ultimate emergencies it may be found to have no substance at all. |
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Along with substance abuse, criminal involvement, suicide and murder were also on the rise. |
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Torricelli constructed a sealed tube filled with mercury, set vertically into a basin of the same substance. |
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Fleming concluded that the mould released a substance that repressed the growth and caused lysing of the bacteria. |
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Despite the lack of interest of his fellow scientists, he did conduct several experiments on the antibiotic substance he discovered. |
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The coated glass bulbs have a white powdery substance on the inside called kaolin. |
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In 2007, 143 workers at the Texas City refinery claimed that they were injured when a toxic substance was released at the plant. |
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These commandments are but two of a large corpus of commandments and laws that constitute this covenant, which is the substance of Judaism. |
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Stoppard's plays have been sometimes dismissed as pieces of clever showmanship, lacking in substance, social commitment, or emotional weight. |
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Broadway audiences welcomed musicals that varied from the golden age style and substance. |
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We have agreed that heat is energy to begin with. Light is also a form of energy for when absorbed by any opaque substance it turns completely into heat. |
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The glass inside a cylinder is usually a black glossy substance. |
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Nowadays a parliamentary democracy that is a constitutional monarchy is considered to differ from one that is a republic only in detail rather than in substance. |
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However, the Conservatives themselves had undergone a dramatic change in the change of leader from Thatcher to Major, at least in terms of style if not substance. |
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Students were also asked if they had used a fictitious substance, and the students that responded positively to this item were excluded from the study. |
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After the statement has been delivered, the leaders of the opposition parties and other MSPs question the First Minister on issues related to the substance of the statement. |
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The chemical properties of the radioactive element will determine how mobile the substance is and how likely it is to spread into the environment and contaminate humans. |
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For instance, as the strongest vasodilator substance, CGRP also is endogenous algogenic substance, which is widely distributed in trigeminal nerve. |
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The magnetic monopole part of this substance is proposed to respond to fields present in R-space having negative energies, negative real mass, and is superluminal. |
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Mitochondria use a chemical formed from the digestion of sugar and fats, called pyruvate, to make another substance called ATP, which stores energy until needed. |
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Another substance that has been implicated in the development of rhinitis medicamentosa is benzalkonium chloride, an antimicrobial preservative often found in nasal sprays. |
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Luciferase creates light in combination with oxygen, a molecule called luciferin and adenosine triphosphate, a substance found in all living cells. |
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The energy and the type of the ionizing radiation emitted by a radioactive substance are also important factors in determining its threat to humans. |
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The formation of this substance, which we propose to designate allylamine, is perfectly analagous to the production of the ethylamine by means of cynate of ethyl. |
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Very soon Davy entrusted Faraday with the preparation of nitrogen trichloride samples, and they both were injured in an explosion of this very sensitive substance. |
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In short, there prevailed a sense of collective interest and purpose that gave substance to individual aspirations as well as to those of the group. |
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This covenant is administered in different ways throughout the Old and New Testaments, but retains the substance of being free of a requirement of perfect obedience. |
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The most popular type of substance that is smoked is tobacco. |
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Luther called it a thing in name only, even a name without a substance, an empty name, since the freedom of the servurn arbitrium is merely a freedom bestowed by grace. |
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Finally, even Becket expressed his willingness to agree to the substance of the Constitutions of Clarendon, but he still refused to formally sign the documents. |
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One of the boasts of Riversley was, that while the rest of the world ate and drank poison, the Grange lived on its own solid substance, defying malefactory Radical tricksters. |
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Cancer fluviatilis, River crabfish, The ashes of these fishes are of wonderfull vertue, by the propertie of their substance, against the biting of a mad dogge. |
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Magendie performed experiments on emetics and the nature of vomiting, and showed that the emetic properties of ipecacuanha were due to a substance he named emetine. |
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Melatonin is a naturally occurring substance produced chiefly by the pineal gland but also in much smaller amounts by the gastrointestinal tract, retina, platelets and skin. |
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The peculiar substance resembling fibrin which we have described in the glomerular spaces of animals poisoned during life was also found in the extravital experiments. |
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Thus Berkeley denied the existence of matter as a metaphysical substance, but did not deny the existence of physical objects such as apples or mountains. |
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Disagreement in substance or essence... may be called Disproportion, as there is a disproportion between finities and infinities, i.e. there is no proportion between them. |
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For example, active neurons seem to signal their health by producing a substance called fraktaline, which might warn the microglia to leave its synapses alone. |
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Incidentally, when the solid cedar lining is removed from its package, a white fuzz or frostlike substance may be visible on the surface of the wood. |
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Mr Lyttle is yet another glype who ignores everything of substance. Is it any wonder the AO is in such a mess when it relies on the likes of ye to be its apologists? |
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The Crown Prosecution Service considered charging her, but cleared her when it could not establish that the substance in the video was a controlled drug. |
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In 1998, Clapton, a recovering alcoholic and drug addict, founded the Crossroads Centre on Antigua, a medical facility for recovering substance abusers. |
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According to Christopher Columbus, those who had something of gold were in possession of something of great value on Earth and a substance to even help souls to paradise. |
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It has been suggested that the beakers were designed for the consumption of alcohol, and that the introduction of the substance to Europe may have fuelled the beakers' spread. |
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Black Sabbath plagued with infighting and substance abuse, while facing fierce competition with their opening band, the Los Angeles band Van Halen. |
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Many evangelical Protestants reject creeds as definitive statements of faith, even while agreeing with some or all of the substance of the creeds. |
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A true addict, by definition, is a person whose body and brain are incapable of functioning like normalwise without a particular outside substance. |
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On 13 September 2010, Hatton was admitted to a rehabilitation facility, The Priory, in Roehampton, London, UK, for substance abuse to tackle a drink and depression problem. |
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