Woods tendency to warp and twist can cause any gate design to become misaligned. |
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If you have other telltale symptoms, such as brittle hair and nails, dry skin and a tendency to feel cold, definitely get checked out. |
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Unfortunately, there is a universal tendency to move towards a risk-free society. |
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He would also have been appalled that homegrown players had so quickly adopted the cheating tendency. |
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For a long time, Womack has had a tendency to hit fly balls to left field for easy outs. |
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There has been a tendency in recent years to move to more uniformity among the various lectionaries. |
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I don't know why I don't just do a load when I accumulate enough but I'd guess it has something to do with my natural tendency to procrastinate. |
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The movie has a tendency to be talky, but that's because it's based on a play that Nelson wrote. |
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The tendency to demand purely qualitative descriptions of counterfactual situations has many sources. |
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There's a tendency to obscurity when what the free market demands is quality control and open competition. |
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One small bit of laziness that annoyed me at times was a tendency in the faster movements to clip quarter notes of their full value. |
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South America in pre-Hispanic times was dominated by the Inca culture, with a tendency to expand into the Inca Empire. |
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The upward tendency in arms exports has generated a new wave of company mergers, especially in the aerospace industry. |
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It will be a remarkable achievement for the whole of the State, which has a persisting tendency to delay projects. |
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The more tightly you grip the yoke, the greater the tendency to make unintended inputs. |
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In the 1970s, the company produced steel-belted radials that it knew had a tendency to separate. |
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But joking apart, there is a growing tendency to get as far away as we can from their origin in the serving of meat dishes. |
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Reporting tendency has been shown to influence hospital admissions for cardiovascular disease. |
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There is a tendency towards slouching rather than an upright composure and overall there may be a sense of lethargy or a lack of vitality. |
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Each type of material will move down the column at a different rate, depending on the its solubility and its tendency to be adsorbed. |
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This produces enough tension to keep the ramrod from wiggling around and cancels the tendency to come loose from the barrel groove under recoil. |
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There is an emerging tendency toward unethical practices that adversely affect scholars from developing countries. |
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We have an innate tendency to avoid pain, and therefore we are apt to conjure up rationalizations that justify our behavior. |
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There may, therefore, be a link between poor visual motion sensitivity and the tendency to misidentify, transpose, and reverse letters. |
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They are assembled in a kaleidoscopic fashion that jolts us out of our tendency to take the ordinary for granted. |
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There is an all too-human tendency to rationalise our own behaviour, especially when we act irresponsibly or cruelly. |
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He condemned the tendency to identify black Africans with undemocratic practices as racist. |
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I think this tendency is a reaction against previous generations' parenting styles. |
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Actin and keratin both share with byssal threads a tendency to recover initial modulus and stress upon relaxation. |
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The above point reflects a deep tendency in Western societies to deny the reality of life as a biological reality. |
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Frequently observed in connection with cabin groups is a tendency to spread the effects of their presence over a needlessly large area. |
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Since I don't write very quickly, this tendency makes most any review I write take agonized hours. |
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Guillen admits that his tendency to run off at the mouth can get him into trouble. |
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The base pin, which seems to be more closely fitted than on earlier examples, showed no tendency to walk forward under recoil. |
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Such a swing of opinion reflects the people's tendency to change tack depending on which way the wind is blowing. |
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Many air bed pumps are not that well made and have a tendency to fail at the worst times. |
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However, the transmission has a tendency to kick down into first gear all too easily, which can make progress around town a little jerky. |
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These types grow a bit later on in spring and have a lesser tendency toward sod-formation than English ryegrass and wire grass. |
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The second human characteristic is a widespread tendency to accept conventional wisdoms, be they religious, economic or scientific. |
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His tendency to represent himself combined with a penchant for a badly timed wisecrack at the judge have sealed his fate time after time. |
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He had a tendency to fracture the King's English like he did a rival's race car. |
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Here, too, there was a tendency to remodel ruined buildings and convert them into more modest structures, often using perishable materials. |
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When a star dies early, their career still in the ascendant, the tendency is to eulogise them for their unfulfilled potential. |
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It was furthermore shown that there is at atmospheric pressure very strong tendency for mercury to amalgamate iron. |
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Were it not for her kleptomania and tendency to faint, one would assume she was a very happy woman. |
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The built-in flash on the previous model had a tendency to produce red-eye, so this time round you get a pop-up flash. |
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Most kids show a moderate tendency toward knock knees between the ages of 4 and 6, as the body goes through a natural alignment shift. |
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Note the superficial scale and tendency for the individual lesions to merge into a retiform pattern. |
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He has written several books decrying the tendency of scientists to be overly reductionistic in their analyses. |
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She said that he was a coherent, intelligent and articulate man but one with a tendency to ramble on. |
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It was the force of global industry that cemented the worldwide tendency for driving on the right. |
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Rick had a tendency to be a bit of a worrywart, but frankly Chris couldn't blame him considering everything that had gone wrong for him. |
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The preference of auditory learning indicates your basic reflectiveness coupled with a tendency to process information sequentially. |
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He said there was an increasing tendency among some people to cast aspersions on the board when they didn't get the decision they wanted. |
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There has also been a tendency to form national alliances of local and regional organizations. |
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The tendency of rational progress to become irrational regress arises much earlier. |
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For increased efficiency, you may have a tendency to fasten your laces very tight. |
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It has nothing to do with my state of mind at the time or any tendency to lachrymosity. |
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Hay fever, asthma and eczema are all related allergic conditions and the tendency to develop them runs in families. |
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When properly alloyed and hardened by heat-treating, this tendency is greatly reduced. |
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With the Nicene resolution against the Arian subordination of the Son, the tendency to subordinate the Spirit was intensified. |
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The Brahmins were known for their tendency to absorb, assimilate and upgrade deities, not for exhibiting animus towards them. |
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Based on his responses, the test said David had a tendency to want to work to personal timetables and particular standards of performance. |
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We see indications of this tendency in the perennial impulse to bureaucratize and routinize business practices. |
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There's certainly a tendency in history to romanticize the heroics of the past. |
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Apart from a tendency of the clarinet to go a tad sharp at times this was a most enjoyable performance. |
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One drawback of organic-based products is the tendency of chemicals to leach from the matrix material, leaving parts of the surface unprotected. |
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In literary criticism there is a tendency to look for geographic or temporal groups of influence. |
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With the increase of liver protein synthesis, the liver has a tendency to enlarge causing ascites. |
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The anarchic comedy of these performers effectively tempers Baxter's tendency towards deferential sentimentalism. |
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The trouble with an ultra low-fat diet, healthy or not, is a tendency to intestinal overload with little regular release. |
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The notorious Libran tendency to be in love with love is spiced with a lively sexuality and an altogether more worldly outlook on life. |
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The analytic tendency investigates works from the past in order to find possibilities that often exceed those their authors had anticipated. |
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This is in reference to Gogan's tendency to use traditional verse forms and a plethora of archaic words in his poetry. |
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Leaving Rome and heading south or east, you find a tendency of shortening non-stressed vowels and reducing them to schwas. |
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In reality I knew the odds were long, and that my tendency towards scepticism would hold strong. |
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But I think there's a tendency to choose the latter for moral reasons and, ugh, a morality of pop music persona is like a metaphysics of pudding. |
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The tendency to engage in rumination exposes a huge gender difference in the handling of emotional experience. |
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Grandiosity, rigidity, and intolerance of ambiguity, and a tendency to obsess about things are among the traits associated with the dry drunk. |
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I'd like to try to correct or balance this tendency by writing a sort of requiem for these Great Men or Dead White Males. |
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In common with English's book, there is a tendency to personalise the process of internal change within the republican movement. |
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Many Puerto Ricans have a unique tendency among Latin Americans to drop the's' sound in casual conversation. |
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Traits of last-borns include charm, tendency to be manipulative, persistence, and love of attention. |
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This tendency can result in the writing being left until the last minute and consequently rushed. |
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Or there may be a tendency to place too much faith in Fate, which leads to an abdication of personal responsibility. |
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There is a tendency, at present, for some to simply walk away to avoid becoming involved. |
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In this sense, the Holy Spirit brings God's judgment upon the tendency to absolutize any human institution, even the most sacred. |
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While reflation does resuscitate the economy to an extent and lift consumer spending, consumers have a relentless tendency to take on even more debt in different forms. |
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The producer can sometimes be so loosey-goosey as to be annoying, but he reins in that tendency here and provides a solid anchor for both leading actors to key from. |
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There's a tendency, especially by Australians, to romanticise a villain. |
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If the volume is kept down, this latter tendency can provide one with a more rounded and engaging picture of Weblog writers who one might not otherwise know well. |
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We don't adhere closely to it, rather in the name of goodwill we have a tendency to overlook most of the criteria and refund within much wider limits. |
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It seems that when magnesium is brought to temperatures like that encountered in engines and transmissions, there is a tendency for deformation under load to occur. |
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Christie will need to assure the party about his own integrity, and his tendency to conflate government with his own self. |
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For their part, landlords resented the tendency of British governments and rational commentators to fail to recognize the difficulties they encountered. |
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There is the tendency, to be found in all politicians in their anecdotage, to make copious reference to her own previous speeches of five, 10 and 20 years ago. |
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Simply asking tenants to be considerate of the staff has helped increase their tendency to recycle. |
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However, the addition of solid phosphate was not used in subsequent experiments in view of the tendency of flavonoids to adsorb onto solid surfaces. |
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The principle stress-bearing elements of the lung, which account for its tendency to recoil, are elastin and collagen fiber networks and surface tension. |
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The early Xerox machines had a nasty tendency to catch fire. |
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They have a tendency to decide randomly not to show up for work. |
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Politics has a tendency to devolve into juvenile playground taunts and smears. |
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Most of what you hear, however, will be pretty mundane, given the law of averages and the general human tendency to lose track of our thoughts halfway to completing them. |
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Some accidents might be caused by the truck's tendency to flip over at high speeds. |
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Whether in science, philosophy, or religion, the use of recondite terminology has a tendency to impede the dissemination of useful concepts and theories. |
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Sagittarius For any Sagittarian, there is a tendency to define yourself by how others see you. |
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I'll discuss our tendency to reify categories after we create them and our tendency to exaggerate the differences between the categories that we create. |
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There is a tendency to conceive of the Allied landings on D-day as a single event, but in fact it was just the first step. |
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These men share a tendency toward balladeering that rubs me the wrong way. |
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I also conveyed our deep regret over the tendency of some Australian officials to continue to defy the policies by assailing the policies of other countries. |
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Beard does admonish the tendency of both academics and popular authors to present speculation as historical truth. |
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Remember, the mop of hair I was sporting was essentially a very, very long men's haircut, so it did have a tendency to look a little ratty on occasion. |
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This vast sweep of subject-matter has a grand effect of countering any tendency to polemic or sectarianism. |
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Since we have a tendency to make long faces over issues that should otherwise make the countenance of our nation a smiling one, we take everything with a pinch of salt. |
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They either have a tendency to hyperbolize and make life much more glamorous and titillating than it is, or the other way. |
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It struck me that Charles has, albeit unwittingly, accelerated the tendency for the bad to drive out the good. |
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But I do think if you look at history and you do believe that history has a tendency to do what? |
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It makes one wonder how much of the speech is true and how much is false, based on Stalin's tendency toward revisionism of his revolutionary biography. |
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In New York, district attorneys have a tendency to grow moss-bound in their roles. |
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Our bodies have a tendency to assimilate to the cognitive enhancements of tea, which can eventually lead to addiction. |
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That class of people has the natural tendency to regenerate according to bellow. |
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The exigencies of the political calendar have a tendency to wreck even the best-laid plans. |
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Despite his tendency to speak frankly on political issues, he insists that neither he nor his group are politically active. |
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Such frankness contrasts with a widespread tendency in the past in the U.S. press and among establishment-oriented writers to whitewash Western client regimes. |
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I want many changes though, starting with further reforms to agricultural policy, an end to secrecy, and a curb on the centralising tendency of the institutions in Brussels. |
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There was a tendency to cede too much of our democracy to these leaders, elected or not, and trust them to do the right thing. |
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There has been a tendency of using insecticide treated mosquito nets for fishing purposes that has resulted in contamination of water and loss of aqua life. |
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Regrettable too is the tendency by the students to allow themselves to be used either by politicians or their union representatives with hidden agendas. |
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The radical nature of Baran's reformulation of Marxist doctrine is obscured by an understandable tendency to confuse Baran's theory with Lenin's earlier theory of imperialism. |
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If you thought qualifications for being a hermit were a tendency toward solitude and dislike of civilization, think again. |
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Modern campaigns rarely elevate any subject and have a terrible tendency to demean all who participate. |
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They have the tendency to wear loud shirts and smile at you like loons. |
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This tendency towards fallacy is not accidental, but intrinsic. |
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But the tendency is then to think that we've cured the problem. |
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The three known species of Loxochlamys share similar shape and micro-ornament, including a tendency to become commarginally lamellose late in ontogeny. |
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Fight the tendency by keeping your elbows loose and upper body relaxed. |
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The trend indicates the general tendency or direction over the long-term. |
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The main problem with the exchange of information is that there's a tendency for people to become knowledgable without ever having experienced anything. |
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Not for her the tendency to put on airs and throwing star tantrums. |
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I was at first cautioned against Una boats, for I was told that they had an unpleasant tendency to turn upside down. |
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His tendency to overact made his performance less realistic. |
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As early as in The German Ideology, M. Stirner's bourgeois-philistine tendency to axiologize economic categories and relations was refuted. |
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Dr Ashok's eyes had a tendency to pop whenever he wanted to rape your attention. |
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The sprouting tendency of potatoes varies between cultivars, years and places of growing. |
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There was thus a strong tendency to assume that obedience to God's commandments could conduce to prosperity and safety. |
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The only other problem is that there's a nagging tendency for the highlight to overrun when cursoring through file lists. |
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I should point out that the tendency for stops to debuccalize to glottal stop and fricatives to glottal fricative does not always hold. |
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The extreme tendency of civilization is to dissipate all intellectual energy. |
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This histological subtype occurs in both osseous and extraosseous tissues and has a tendency for late local and disseminated recurrence. |
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The Socialist Party was saved, though not from the fissive tendency that saw its rival factions split away. |
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There is always a tendency, in the mainstream as much as the fringes, to blame real or imagined social problems on a folk devil. |
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If your puppy guards his food bowl, you can help to discourage this unfortunate tendency by playing the following training game. |
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Rather, it appears that we have a tendency to foul our own nest and destroy what we value the most. |
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There's a tendency to think professional athletes get graded only on game day. In reality, they're graded every day in practice. |
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She counters the tendency to focus on critical strategies of resisting the male gaze, raising the issue of the female spectator. |
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The tendency to follow trends and explore one's sense of self goes hand in hand with being a teenager. |
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This results in induction of a controlled hypocoagulative state to counteract the tendency towards clot formation. |
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Olaf Haraldsson stood down, unable to put up any fight, as his nobles were against him for his tendency to flay their wives for sorcery. |
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Several of Russell's assumptions have been challenged, and the tendency since has been to adjust the assessment upwards. |
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The Royalists had a tendency to chase down individual targets after the initial charge leaving their forces scattered and tired. |
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In fact all the competing theories have developed their own specialized jargons and have a tendency to be difficult to penetrate. |
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In this view, the tendency of the philosophes in particular to apply rationality to every problem is considered the essential change. |
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In Parliament, the youthful Pitt cast aside his tendency to be withdrawn in public, emerging as a noted debater right from his maiden speech. |
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Also, there was a tendency for oscillation whenever there was a speed change. |
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He was also intelligent and well read, and when agitated he had a tendency to stammer. |
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The low fat content of turkey bacon means it does not shrink while being cooked and has a tendency to stick to the pan. |
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Hop levels will vary within each sub group, though there is a tendency for the hops in the session bitter group to be more noticeable. |
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The insular tendency for the decoration to lunge into the text, and take over more and more of it, was a radical innovation. |
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Classicism is a recurrent tendency in the Late Antique period, and had a major revival in Carolingian and Ottonian art. |
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He had a tendency to forget where he was supposed to be going and miss the train that was supposed to take him there. |
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Pepper's and Days both represent a growing tendency towards song cycles and suites made up of multiple movements. |
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Symphonic metal is an extension of the tendency towards orchestral passages in early progressive rock. |
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Equally important is Hitchcock's tendency to shoot alternate takes of scenes. |
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In the 1830s, at the height of the Chartist movement, there was a general tendency towards reformism in the United Kingdom. |
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The thumb of a Mercurian has a tendency to be stiff, as they love money and may have difficulty sharing it. |
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Weight categories were not used, which meant heavyweights had a tendency to dominate. |
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Recent systematic studies appear to confirm a high tendency of Quercus species to hybridize because of a combination of factors. |
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In cinemas this brought a tendency for audiences to rush out while the end credits played to avoid this formality. |
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A particular bone of contention was the tendency of foreign ships to pose as English to avoid attack. |
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Historically, there has been a tendency for Independentista voters to elect Popular candidates and policies. |
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While many criticize block voting's tendency to create landslide victories, some cite it as a strength. |
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In the Eocene, slender chocropotamids belong to this group, which display a tendency to elongate the skull and molarize the premolars. |
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The Trotskyist Militant tendency, using entryist tactics in the Labour Party, had gradually increased their profile. |
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Their social tendency to confront the law on specific issues, including illegal drugs, overwhelmed the understaffed judicial system. |
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Changes in motion must be imposed against the tendency of an object to retain its state of motion. |
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This tendency toward a homogeneity also stems from the vertically integrated nature of the authoritarian Polish People's Republic. |
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He is usually associated with theological voluntarism, the tendency to emphasize God's will and human freedom in all philosophical issues. |
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Bulldogs are recognized as excellent family pets because of their tendency to form strong bonds with children. |
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This tendency towards fiat money led eventually to the debasement of Roman coinage, with consequences in the later Empire. |
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A tendency away from the narrative, which was characteristic for the traditional arts, toward abstraction is characteristic of much modern art. |
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While many accipitrids are not known for their strong voices, golden eagles have a particular tendency for silence, even while breeding. |
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There is also a tendency for existing journals to divide into specialized sections as the field itself becomes more specialized. |
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Fertilizers vary in their tendency to burn roughly in accordance with their salt index. |
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The Herald described Boyle's story as a modern parable and a rebuke to people's tendency to judge others based on their physical appearance. |
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Studies have shown that such insular habitats have a tendency toward decreasing species richness. |
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The slices have a tendency to fall apart, due to the layered structure of the leek. |
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A submerged submarine is in an unstable equilibrium, having a tendency to either sink or float to the surface. |
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As for the species, there is a tendency for natterjack toads to breed here. |
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Of the two, technetium more closely resembles rhenium, particularly in its chemical inertness and tendency to form covalent bonds. |
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When the ice sheet disappeared, the shield rose again, a tendency that continues to this day at a rate of about one metre per century. |
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An equally serious problem is the tendency to stabilize lake or river levels with dams. |
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In both autumn and winter, there has been a tendency for sprat to avoid eating Acartia spp. |
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Nureyev was always inclined to overchoreograph, cramming steps onto every beat, a tendency only increased when he restaged ballets. |
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The first is a caveat against the tendency to overconstruct a link between patterns of urban dwelling and cultural practices in South Africa. |
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Other problems with barrels were their expense, their tendency to leak, and the fact that they were generally used only once. |
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The other a conservative, sensory child with a tendency to overdeliberation. |
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At the same time, there was also a tendency to play up alternative heritages in the British Isles at certain times. |
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Due to their tendency to spread unchecked, some mints are considered invasive. |
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Many consider it a weed due its tendency to grow in neglected areas and its sharp, tough thorns which can be hazardous to children and pets. |
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In these same areas, a tendency exists to insert an R between a word ending in a vowel and a next word beginning with a vowel. |
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A tendency to drop grammatical number in collective nouns, stronger in British English than in North American English, exists. |
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The capillary action refers to the tendency of water to move up a narrow tube against the force of gravity. |
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It is reflected in the tendency to identify local deities with the gods of the Sanskrit texts. |
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Canada is recognized as a middle power for its role in international affairs with a tendency to pursue multilateral solutions. |
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This tendency has the effect of keeping spinning bodies stably aligned in space. |
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The Palmer Drought Severity Index for Minnesota, our peatiest state, shows a tendency for wetter, not drier conditions. |
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He reflects the Victorian period of his maturity in his feeling for order and his tendency towards moralising. |
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There was also a tendency for the nose of the aircraft to try to submerge as engine power increased while taxiing on water. |
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Some spellings, such as magd, reflect an early tendency to write the underlying phonemic value. |
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Many specialists are requesting that this vitamin be included in all contraceptive pills, as women on the pill have a tendency to be depressed. |
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Domitian's tendency towards micromanagement was nowhere more evident than in his financial policy. |
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The general tendency of this period was an increase in religious activity among believers of all faiths. |
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The tendency to secrecy and falsification of dates casts doubts about the authenticity of many primary sources. |
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Most of these attempts failed, though, due to the zebra's more unpredictable nature and tendency to panic under stress. |
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Of course, there's a tendency to dismiss Buck and the Boys, pornobilly as a cheap novelty. |
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This tendency is clearly a second way to avoid the arbitrariness and posthockery of eclecticism. |
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The decline in the facility services has implications for the declining tendency also on the number of passenger and goods. |
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Prills are free-flowing pellets developed for fertilizer as a coarse product with little setting tendency that can be spread easily and smoothly. |
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During flocking, sheep have a strong tendency to follow and a leader may simply be the first individual to move. |
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Tubers form in response to decreasing day length, although this tendency has been minimized in commercial varieties. |
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This tendency can then grammaticalize to a privileged position in the sentence, the subject. |
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One unfortunate aspect of this is the tendency of social workers to engage in pseudo-analytical therapy. |
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Other changes include a general tendency towards terminal devoicing in German and Dutch, and to a far more limited extent in English. |
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Indians' tendency to pronounce English phonetically as well can cause divergence from Western English. |
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There is a tendency, though, for such vowels to become reduced over time, especially in common words. |
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In these languages there is a strong tendency to place some or all of the verb forms in final position. |
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Activism describes the tendency toward active expression and sharing of the gospel in diverse ways that include preaching and social action. |
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This has a tendency to lead to severe complications, such as incomplete abortion, sepsis, hemorrhage, and damage to internal organs. |
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The general tendency has been toward centralization and incorporation, with the federal government playing a much larger role than it once did. |
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According to Marx, capital has the tendency for concentration and centralization in the hands of the wealthy. |
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Typical of the Neolithic was a tendency to worship anthropomorphic deities. |
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Soviet Marxists then developed this tendency to the state doctrine of Dialectical Materialism. |
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Stents improved the procedure by combating the tendency of many vessels to reclose quickly after angioplasty. |
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He found that the current model being installed in London houses had a tendency to freeze in cold weather. |
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The tendency has been to divest of timber lands to raise cash and to avoid property taxes. |
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Human nature has an innate tendency towards goodness, but moral rightness cannot be instructed down to the last detail. |
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The tendency toward Legalism is apparent in intellectual circles toward the end of the Han dynasty, and would be reinforced by Cao Wei. |
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Buddhist texts reflect this tendency, providing a clearer picture of what Gautama may have taught than of the dates of the events in his life. |
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Martineau relied on Malthus to form her view of the tendency of human population to exceed its means of subsistence. |
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She expounded the doctrine of philosophical atheism, which she thought the tendency of human belief. |
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The same writer expresses his doubt as to monkeys showing any tendency to righthandedness. |
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Then either the world or others or the self becomes the target for the human tendency to scapegoat. |
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If he had a fault as a conversationalist, it was a certain tendency to monotony, a certain lack of sparkle and variety in his small-talk. |
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This prevalent tendency toward softmindedness is found in man's unbelievable gullibility. |
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Variety of objects has a tendency to steal away the mind from its steady pursuit of any subject. |
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In this way he promotes landscape into a supermetaphor, in order to expose a general tendency towards equalization. |
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In stark contrast to the Europeanist tendency within the party and the Suez Group, this group had a short history. |
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Experience is the surest standard by which to test the real tendency of the existing constitution. |
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As a young man, his was a severe and unhopeful mind, and the tendency to despond was increased by circumstances. |
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This could lead to risk adverseness and a tendency to overcontrol and centralize decisionmaking when we may need to do just the opposite. |
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Anecdotal evidence from sports skills also indicates a tendency to undershoot targets. |
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I thought this was true, but the cardinal believed he had detected a divisive and anticlerical tendency. |
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Given Nietzsche's love for Cosima to the very end, what explains his later tendency to emphasize his antifeminist side? |
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Throughout the rest of the book there is a general tendency to archaize when it comes to these names. |
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The arithmetic mean is a measure of central tendency produced by dividing the sum of the prices of all items by the total number of items. |
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Recency is the tendency to assign more importance to events and conditions that happened recently, as opposed to some time ago. |
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There is also the tendency to romanticise the tramp, feeling that his brain is aswirl with poems and profound thoughts. |
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If the change agents did not refreeze the new behaviour, there is a tendency that their behaviour will change again. |
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He said the incident happened when she was momentarily distracted and Kye had a tendency to jump up at people with bags. |
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Furniture stores, especially those with design staff who do the purchasing, have a tendency to not reorder the same lamps. |
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The original early Memorial Sloan-Kettering experience in major liver resections found a prothrombotic tendency. |
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A Lean program has a tendency to backslide over time if the focus and support are not constantly at the forefront. |
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Despite showing a tendency to hang, he surged up the hill at headquarters to beat Laverock by a comfortable two and a half lengths. |
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Rhus do have a tendency to suckering, so you need to remove rooted suckers in autumn and cut the stems to 1ft above the ground in February. |
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In phonology, lenition is the tendency of a language to soften consonant sounds. |
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For example, to gain a quick perspective on an applicant's tendency toward risk, the insurer might ask if the person sky dives or BASE jumps. |
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Base Rate Fallacy is the tendency to ignore preexisting probabilities in calculating present or future probabilities. |
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The most important property of feldspar is its tendency to form crystalline mineral leucite when melted. |
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The modern left's tendency to romanticize radicalism is one of LaBruce's targets as well. |
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It's somewhat of a tradition to look at American life through rose-colored glasses, and parents have long been on the forefront of this tendency. |
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To those of a saddle soap tendency the idea of eating a horse is as offensive as taking a Crufts judge on a tour of Gyeondong market. |
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Saliva tests for cancer, diabetes, infections, and the tendency to develop cavities are currently in the works. |
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Washington has a serious tendency to exalt semantics over common sense. |
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Oh, sure, Joe has a tendency to floss with his own shoelaces. |
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Under boss Dave Jones we are all too aware of Cardiff's tendency to fade as the season creeps towards its climax. |
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I'm thinking specifically of its tendency to map all mass storage devices to itself. |
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The most common of these descriptive statistics are the measures of central tendency. |
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Chapter eight explains and demonstrates measures of central tendency and measures of dispersion. |
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They quickly lose the sense of proportion, become hypercritical, and the smaller the field, the greater the tendency to megalocephaly. |
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The accusatory words hint of family disturbance, dysfunction and that ugly British tendency to sexualise prematurely our little girls. |
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It is also subject to more fog and frosts in winter than other areas because of the tendency of cold air to drain into the vale from surrounding higher ground. |
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This may be seen as a mismatch between water chemistry and water biology with a tendency for the biological component to be more oligotrophic than the chemistry would suggest. |
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Greater temperatures tend to destroy polymerized bonds within the magma, promoting more fluid behaviour and also a greater tendency to form phenocrysts. |
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Favoring exactness, it combats the tendency to promise too much. |
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Shang Yang's systematic application of penalties increase the tendency to see it as penal, but arguably does not change meaning from that of the Mohists. |
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However, very few contemporary accounts of the craft survive, and Evans's tendency to exaggerate its success in his own annals make verification of its performance difficult. |
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The oxidation potential is a measure of the tendency of the reducing agent to be oxidized, but does not represent the physical potential at an electrode. |
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This being the absolute historical tendency, part of the working population will tend to become surplus to the requirements of capital accumulation over time. |
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By 1982, the National Executive Committee had concluded that the entryist Militant tendency group were in contravention of the party's constitution. |
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Karl Marx worried that the capitalist system would eventually lead to wages only sufficient for subsistence due to the tendency of the rate of profit to fall. |
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