A heterotroph is any organism that requires organic subtrates inorder to survive. Basically, a heterotroph is a consumer which must take food. |
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Only animals with strong constitutions are able to survive the island's harsh winters. |
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In the movie, he plays a demented man trying to survive on the streets of Los Angeles. |
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Older companies will need to modernize quickly if they are to survive in today's economy. |
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She was the only child of King Henry VIII by his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, to survive infancy. |
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I don't see how any creature can survive under those conditions. |
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Many businesses are struggling to survive in today's economy. |
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We armed ourselves with the tools we would need to survive in the forest. |
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To survive, the LSO played in hundreds of concerts of popular classics under undistinguished conductors. |
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Research from wildlife hospitals, however, indicates that it is not uncommon for foxes with minor shot wounds to survive. |
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His racing was consistent, but a collision with Andrea de Cesaris resulted in a huge cartwheeling crash which he was lucky to survive. |
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The remaining Romance languages survive mostly as spoken languages for informal contact. |
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The library as solely a physical space will not survive in the digital milieu. |
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Britain required more than a million tons of imported material per week in order to be able to survive and fight. |
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Apart from a few preserved buildings such as the museum and church at Grytviken, only their decaying remains survive. |
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They hustle and scheme without moral compass, trying to survive by making accommodations that are at best temporary, more often delusional. |
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It is expected that none of these peculiar effects would survive in a proper quantum treatment of rotating and charged black holes. |
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The main dialect had characteristics which survive today only in the Irish of Connacht. |
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In such cases, should the person survive the emergency, it is likely that the person will be properly baptized by a priest at some later date. |
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As for his arrival there, only he and three animals, the captain's dog and two cats, survive the shipwreck. |
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The loss of a royal court also meant there was no force to counter the kirk's dislike of theatre, which struggled to survive in Scotland. |
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To survive, Jack seeks out the legendary Trident of Poseidon, a powerful artifact whose owner can control the seas and break curses. |
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Wales was still suffering the effects of the depression and club rugby was struggling to survive. |
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The descendant dialects of this tongue survive amongst the Mandaeans of southern Iraq and Assyrians of northern Iraq to this day. |
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Wild animals eat the forage from the marginal lands and humans survive from milk, blood, and often meat of the herds. |
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Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive. |
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No emperor could hope to survive, much less to reign, without the allegiance and loyalty of the Praetorian Guard and of the legions. |
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Performers supported each other by forming guilds, and several memorials for members of the theatre community survive. |
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Vitruvius's book De Architectura, the only complete work on architecture to survive from antiquity, also belongs to this period. |
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Although his funeral was attended by the nobles of Scotland, no major politician or diplomat mentioned his death in their letters that survive. |
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She was said to have been born prematurely and was the only legitimate child of James to survive him. |
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William Murdoch was born in Lugar near Cumnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland, the third of seven children and the first son to survive beyond infancy. |
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Red squirrels that survive their first winter have a life expectancy of 3 years. |
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In the 1970s they again occurred in Denmark and Sweden, where captive animals escaped and now survive in the wild. |
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They are characteristically limited in size and prefer moist habitats although they can survive in drier environments. |
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The province of Ulaidh would survive restricted to the east of modern Ulster until the Norman invasion in the late 12th century. |
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The Holy Rude congregation still meet and some 19th century parish records survive. |
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The earliest praise poetry to survive is by the poets Taliesin and Aneirin. |
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Apart from the lodges on Euston Road and statues now on the forecourt, few relics of the old station survive. |
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Some of the West Germanic languages also did not survive past the Migration Period, including Lombardic. |
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It may be possible that the villa system did not survive the disastrous Pictish incursions of 367 and following years. |
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Likewise, the chapels of St Catherine and St Barbara were lost, the church of St Peter's being the main religious establishment to survive. |
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While the curtain wall and its towers survive largely intact, all that remains of the buildings contained within the castle are the foundations. |
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The impressive curtain wall with nine towers and two gatehouses survive largely intact. |
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Bolingbroke's father, John of Gaunt, was Edward's fourth son and the third to survive to adulthood. |
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The only two of Henry's six children who produced children to survive to adulthood were Henry V and Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester. |
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An ironworks existed in the parish in the Elizabethan period, but it did not survive beyond the early 1640s at the latest. |
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Many more clubs, built around colliery and pub teams, appeared and disbanded but many of the clubs survive to this day. |
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However, a range of tough shore species were seen to survive exposure to bulk oil and lingering residues. |
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Though skeletons rarely survive in Wales' acidic soil, this skeleton was probably preserved by the addition of lime from the collapsed building. |
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The old town castle walls still survive, as does the Victorian revival architecture in a pastel colour scheme. |
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A few of these historic farmhouses survive at Cwm Bowydd, Gelli, Pen y Bryn and Cefn Bychan. |
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In this species, the smaller the kestrels are, the less food is needed and thus, they can survive in environments that are harsher. |
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Plans are therefore being considered to introduce the plant to sites in Scotland, where it may survive in the longer term. |
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In 1931 Hoover urged bankers to set up the National Credit Corporation so that big banks could help failing banks survive. |
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If the teams don't cap player salaries, the league won't survive. |
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This antiripening agent that keeps apples hard long enough to survive long-distance travel was denounced for its alleged carcinogenic effects. |
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We all managed to survive that disaster! If that's not good news, I don't know what is. |
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Without culture, without a garden, how could this human dustling survive in the wildness of even a very good created world? |
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The favela is now the model for most of the world's cities, as vast numbers of people continue to migrate to them in order to survive. |
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I found out to my cost that the tree fern I brought back from New Zealand was frost-tender, and it didn't survive the winter. |
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The rescue workers preserved a gleam of optimism that they might still survive. |
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How did whales survive in a fresh-water ocean for a year? Goddidit. How did any totally impossible thing happen? |
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Despite the fact that we still don't know if I'll survive because of the gutshot, I still feel the trip was worth it. |
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A number of illuminated manuscripts from Wales survive, of which the 8th century Hereford Gospels and Lichfield Gospels are the most notable. |
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Many of the historic choirs survive in modern Wales, singing a mixture of traditional and popular songs. |
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The great majority of literary works in Old English that survive to today are written in the Roman alphabet. |
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Under the leadership of Alfred the Great and his descendants, Wessex would at first survive, then coexist with, and eventually conquer the Danes. |
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The Historia Ecclesiastica was copied often in the Middle Ages, and about 160 manuscripts containing it survive. |
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This total does not include manuscripts with only a part of the work, of which another 100 or so survive. |
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Nine manuscripts survive in whole or in part, though not all are of equal historical value and none of them is the original version. |
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Many of Theophrastus' names survive into modern times, such as carpos for fruit, and pericarpion for seed vessel. |
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Many of the most famous Greek bronze sculptures are known through Roman copies in marble, which were more likely to survive. |
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He officially instituted the change during his censorship but they did not survive his reign. |
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During their occupation of Britain the Romans founded a number of important settlements, many of which still survive. |
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The fragments which did survive show that it was not a law code in the modern sense. |
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Roman temples were among the most important and richest buildings in Roman culture, though only a few survive in any sort of complete state. |
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Indeed, many of the provincial aqueducts survive in working order to the present day, although modernized and updated. |
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Still, they had to handle an increasing tax rate and so they often abandoned their lands to survive in a city. |
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Numerous copies, known as exemplifications, were made of the various charters, and many of them still survive. |
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Only two other 1297 exemplifications survive, one of which is held in the UK's National Archives. |
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In the case of the Sandwich and Oriel College exemplifications, the copies of the Charter of the Forest originally issued with them also survive. |
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I packed my belongings carefully so that they would survive the move intact. |
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She was the only child of Henry VIII by his first wife Catherine of Aragon to survive to adulthood. |
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She was the second child of Henry VIII of England born in wedlock to survive infancy. |
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For blood vessel-borne metastasis, disseminated tumor cells intravasate into blood vessels and survive in the circulation. |
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This strength of design ensures that a Shakespeare play can survive translation, cutting and wide interpretation without loss to its core drama. |
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They had ten children, but Oliver, the fifth child, was the only boy to survive infancy. |
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A letter to Oliver St John in September 1648 urged him to read Isaiah 8, in which the kingdom falls and only the godly survive. |
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Canal companies were unable to compete against the speed of the new railways, and in order to survive, they had to slash their prices. |
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Consequently, relatively few buildings survive from its earlier history and those that do are protected. |
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A number of Georgian buildings survive, including St Philip's Cathedral, Soho House, Perrott's Folly, the Town Hall and much of St Paul's Square. |
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Thereafter his condition deteriorated, and it was thought that he might not survive the weekend. |
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This proved that parliament could survive without a monarchy and a House of Lords if it wanted to. |
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The Jewel Tower, the Undercroft Chapel and the Cloisters and Chapter House of St Stephen's were the only other parts of the Palace to survive. |
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Major also had to survive a leadership challenge in 1995 by the Secretary of State for Wales, the aforementioned John Redwood. |
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The fugitive slaves, called maroons, could easily hide in the backcountry of the bayous and survive in small settlements. |
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By the start of 1856, Darwin was investigating whether eggs and seeds could survive travel across seawater to spread species across oceans. |
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Some parts of the prototype survive in the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford. |
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Representative examples of these carriages survive in service today on various Heritage railways up and down the country. |
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In each generation, many offspring fail to survive to an age of reproduction because of limited resources. |
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More offspring are produced than can possibly survive, and these conditions produce competition between organisms for survival and reproduction. |
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Natural selection most generally makes nature the measure against which individuals and individual traits, are more or less likely to survive. |
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House mice tend to not survive away from human settlements in areas where other small mammals, such as wood mice, are present. |
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The town centre is mostly Victorian and early 20th century, however a few much older buildings survive, along with some more modern developments. |
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Many of these tile patterns survive, though a significant number of these are now replicas. |
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Seven Standard cars survive in preservation, including two in the United States. |
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In the 21st century a very few industrial and common carrier lines survive. |
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But for those who survive early hazards, a life expectancy of 60 or 70 would not be uncommon. |
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He erected many buildings that survive to this day, such as Trajan's Forum, Trajan's Market and Trajan's Column. |
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Later, under the reforms of the dictator Sulla, Quaestors were made automatic members of the Senate, though most of his reforms did not survive. |
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The books of those that wrote before us survive, and therefore we are taught about what was written then. |
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At a small press, it is possible to survive by relying entirely on commissioned material. |
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Mining of tin and copper was also an industry, but today the derelict mine workings survive only as a World Heritage Site. |
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Other church buildings were erected by the missionaries in London, York, and possibly Lincoln, although none of them survive. |
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And I hardly know how the rest of my prayers would survive if those for the dead were forbidden. |
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It appears that the Vita Sancti Wilfrithi was not well known in the Middle Ages, as only two manuscripts of the work survive. |
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Some parts of England retain forms of the Tripartite System, and a few grammar schools survive in otherwise comprehensive areas. |
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A number of Roman public baths survive, either as ruins or in varying degrees of conservation. |
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No sources survive to confirm what the wall was called in antiquity, and no historical literary source gives it a name. |
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In almost every case the buildings that survive are either ruined, or have been altered over the centuries. |
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Besides the encastellation of the countryside, the Normans erected several religious buildings which still survive. |
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Any ballad may be older than the oldest copy that happens to survive, or descended from a lost older ballad. |
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Two hundred and fifteen medieval manuscripts of the Historia survive, dozens of them copied before the end of the twelfth century. |
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Bolingbroke's father, John of Gaunt, was Edward's fourth son, the third to survive to adulthood. |
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Because it is so hard and dry, if properly stored and transported, navies' hardtack will survive rough handling and high temperature. |
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The royal accounts for the period survive, but are not always easy to interpret. |
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Many of Holbein's designs for glass painting, metalwork, jewellery, and weapons also survive. |
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The memorial was one of the few to survive the Great Fire of London in 1666 and is now in St Paul's Cathedral. |
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He toyed with the idea of composing a patriotic epic in blank verse called Brutus, but only the opening lines survive. |
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During her lifetime Austen wrote approximately 3,000 letters but only about 160 survive. |
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The 1754 performance at the hospital is the first for which full details of the orchestral and vocal forces survive. |
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Though many of the acts associated with the invasion did not survive its end, many others would become icons of rock music. |
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His fan base was strong enough to survive the incident, and it was soon forgotten, but Chaplin was deeply affected by it. |
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Chaplin's silent films typically follow the Tramp's efforts to survive in a hostile world. |
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The French colony of La Louisiane struggled for decades to survive. |
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During the battle, many Americans accepted the view promoted by Joseph Kennedy, the American ambassador in London, who believed that the United Kingdom could not survive. |
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Maerdy in the Rhondda Fach has been identified as a maerdref, mainly on the strength of the name, though the village did not survive past the Middle Ages. |
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Only isolated examples survive of native artwork from the late Middle Ages and of works created or strongly influenced by artists of Flemish origin. |
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We've been crashing these cars together to see how they survive accidents. |
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Although the new decoupled payments were aimed at environmental measures, many farmers have found that without these payments their businesses would not be able to survive. |
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Sometimes artificial light becomes an evolutionary trap as the age-old biological imperatives of a species, which helped it survive for eons, turn into liabilities. |
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As in England, the monarchy may have had model portraits used for copies and reproductions, but the versions that survive are generally crude by continental standards. |
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Despite Caernarfon Castle's external appearance of being mostly complete, the interior buildings no longer survive and many of the building plans were never finished. |
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Seven fine related studies of More family members also survive. |
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He always made preparatory portraits of his sitters, though many drawings survive for which no painted version is known, suggesting that some were drawn for their own sake. |
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The hazel dormouse requires a variety of arboreal foods to survive. |
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The Early Modern English of the early 17th century forms the base of the grammatical and orthographical conventions that survive in Modern English. |
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Fitness is measured by an organism's ability to survive and reproduce, which determines the size of its genetic contribution to the next generation. |
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This was a tragicomedy by James Howard, in which the two lovers survive. |
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These courts essentially overrule all previous cases in each new case, and older cases survive only to the extent they do not conflict with newer cases. |
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Though only the foundations survive, in its heyday the Great Hall would have been an impressive building, featuring fine architecture, and used to host royal entertainment. |
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The inns on the road, many of which still survive, were staging posts on the coach routes, providing accommodation, stabling for the horses and replacement mounts. |
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Of the Dominican friary founded by Alexander III in 1233, only one pillar and a worn knight's effigy survive in a secluded graveyard near the town centre. |
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There is little biographical information about Jane Austen's life except the few letters that survive and the biographical notes her family members wrote. |
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Some of these films survive in the archives of the British Film Institute. |
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The soldiers who built the wall commemorated the construction and their struggles with the Caledonians in decorative slabs, twenty of which still survive. |
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Campaign supporters feared the residential development would end the spot's lucrative sideline as a film and photo location, on which it relies to survive. |
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A very small number of miniatures from Late Antique illustrated books also survive, and a rather larger number of copies of them from the Early Medieval period. |
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Many wax impressions from impressive seals survive on charters and documents, although Romanesque coins are generally not of great aesthetic interest. |
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For the Irish Gaels, the old clan system did not survive the incorporation of the Gaelic realms into the Kingdom of Ireland and the subsequent Flight of the Earls. |
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The orchestra played for other managements, and managed to survive, although the hitherto remunerative work for regional choral societies dwindled to almost nothing. |
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Its massive Roman walls still survive, and excavations have revealed a forum, a temple, baths, amphitheatre, shops, and many comfortable houses with mosaic floors, etc. |
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The pope selected monks to accompany Augustine and sought support from the Frankish royalty and clergy in a series of letters, of which some copies survive in Rome. |
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Many Old Norse words still survive in the dialects of Northern England. |
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The barons were trying to force John to keep to the charter, but clause 61 was so heavily weighted against the King that this version of the charter could not survive. |
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Until fairly recent times the original Celtic languages continued to be spoken in Scotland, Wales, Cornwall, and Ireland, and still survive, especially in parts of Wales. |
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While there was little doubt that Taylor had solidly won the first three quarters of the fight, the question at hand was whether he would survive the final quarter. |
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There does not survive a vast corpus of native law from Scotland particularly, certainly nothing like that which comes from early medieval Ireland. |
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Little is known of it, though several texts and liturgies survive. |
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Following the English victory over the Scots at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, a city wall was built around Edinburgh known as the Flodden Wall, some parts of which survive. |
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The copper penny was the only one of these coins to survive long. |
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More's grandson commissioned a copy, of which two versions survive. |
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Typically, one or two young survive to fledge in about three months. |
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Where several versions of a play survive, each differs from the other. |
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In other areas, grammar schools survive mainly as very highly selective schools in an otherwise comprehensive county, for example in several of the outer boroughs of London. |
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Vineyard owners, many of them in midharvest when the fire struck, have begun adding up the effects of heat and smoke, which can damage grape quality even if vines survive. |
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None of them survive today and little is known about their appearance. |
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In peasant associations daily life is a struggle to survive. |
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It is not well understood how the early Ottomans came to dominate their neighbours, due to the scarcity of the sources which survive from this period. |
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Many took the form of the pele tower, a smaller, more modest version of the castle keep, and many of these still survive, often incorporated in later buildings. |
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The Council Chamber murals survive in a few poorly preserved fragments. |
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