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Trilling frog tadpoles can metamorphose within 17 days, pumping the same hormone through their systems that induces premature births in humans. |
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It is dark, apart from the glitter of icons and the lights in front of the iconostasis. |
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Her voice was slow but determined, the fires and winds quieting at the sound of her low voice. |
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The head teacher was invited to Highgrove to meet His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. |
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At the end of the larval stage, the animals drop down to the seafloor and metamorphose into adults. |
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Cixi clicked her tongue and finished lighting the last candle, and then sat down on the bed next to her brother. |
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There is a National competition for best photograph of a family, pet or farm animal, so now is the time get those cameras out and get clicking. |
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You must click on a connect button inside that window and wait to complete the process, less than 20 seconds in my experience. |
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After assuring herself of the quality of the picture, she said I could go back to the emergency room. |
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The Captain let out a low whistle as he opened the cabinet, its contents a vampire killer's dream. |
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So a historic visit was made, and His Majesty gave audience to the Prime Minister in his own home. |
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We do get on well because the Tommies did liberate Crete, but what they did immediately afterwards was not made public. |
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Embryonic coelomic structures have specific fates as the bilaterally symmetrical larvae metamorphose into radially symmetric adults. |
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There is not a sound, apart from the faint wheeze of someone playing a harmonica. |
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The nursing profession as a group well understood the low opinion other professions had of them. |
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The parent, having assured himself of the child's understanding, once again sets up the situation and calls the child. |
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The heavy hinged wood was slammed and a light clicking noise was audible as the door was locked from outside. |
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I think most of the squad will get a run-out in the next two weeks, with a few people being rested with niggling injuries. |
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You will be able to bring up the scoreboard, click to bring up a mouse cursor, and click on the name of the player you want to mute. |
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And the audience sees the clock and they see it coming around to where it's going to go kaboom and we don't know anything about it. |
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Both continue their comeback from injury with run-outs for the Second XV against Fylde. |
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Sometimes it's really easy, and I reference the sample bank in my head of wheezy sounds, or tick tocks or whatever. |
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The advertising is designed to inform the public of the services offered by primary health organisations. |
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It is through small bribes of chocolate, coffee, cognac and the like that patients are able to assure themselves of quality care. |
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They live for up to several months in the bush, where they learn to overcome pride, egotism, and selfishness. |
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This allows the acrylic base drawing to appear clearly through the oil overlayer. |
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The basement of the Precordillera and Chilenia terranes are Grenville-age igneous and metamorphic rocks. |
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Third-place chasers Goole are at full strength for their match although manager Paul Marshall is still on the lookout for some new faces. |
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The size of the deal is more than enough to make her former colleagues in the Sunday Independent green with envy. |
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When pulling rank fails to get him off the hook, Wade resorts to desperate measures to escape justice. |
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Still have a bit of a chesty wheeze and cough too, but, hopefully it will all be cleared in the next day or two. |
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He listens to the oxygen machines hum and burble and gasp, the humidifier wheeze, the buzz of the fluorescent light in the hall. |
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Over the years, the TV umpire has been asked to assist in dismissals such as run-outs, stumped, caught and hit-wicket. |
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Our concern is that this is all a wheeze not to pay rent for the foreseeable future to the detriment of the pension fund. |
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This was no time to be helping the Guardian fill its pages with droll wheezes. |
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The Wimbledon MP said he had assured himself that everything had been done in the borough to prepare for every eventuality. |
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There was the sound of the phone clicking, and then Aunt Emily strode back into the kitchen. |
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We could swab the walls for traces of biological or chemical agents and assure ourselves that nothing was happening. |
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He taught Lilly the rudiments of astrology, but Lilly had a low opinion of his tutor. |
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To maintain the requisite clearance between the tire and the wheel well required another manufacturing change. |
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The City substitute, just on for his first run-out in eight games, was clattered by him in the corner of the box as both disputed a high ball. |
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It would be the most richly observed advertisement for the values of freedom we can imagine. |
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In fact they probably enjoy making the screeching sound of the brakes and the big kaboom sound of the impact. |
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A recent Gallup poll showed that the American public has a very low opinion of journalists. |
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I made several changes in the second half to give players the run-out they needed and we lost our shape a bit. |
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I chat to one guy on the phone whose voice is so husky and his chest sounds wheezy if he talks for long. |
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So much so that the English Golf Union has got a page on its website which advertises such vacancies. |
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I was happy to be left with the geeky nerd in bottle glasses and the fat wheezy kid. |
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After all, torture victims are the best possible advertisement for terrorist recruitment. |
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If you need to escape an oppressive regime, can you afford to advertise that fact by filling out an asylum claim in the street? |
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Uriah wheezes a laugh and swaggers back to the picnic table for more wine and cheese. |
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But at the same time, he chose a method of expression that assured secrecy and anonymity. |
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If you don't see the Picture Tasks menu in the left window, click on the Folders button at the top. |
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He clearly has a low opinion of what the state system has done for Britain's pensioners and will look for a wholesale reform. |
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Yes, he might appear distant and archaic but he is the heir to the throne and one day it will be his. |
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Tagmosis can ultimately lead to the outright fusion of neighbouring segments and the loss of apparent metamerism, as seen for the arthropod head. |
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No such difference in the pressure or temperature of metamorphism in the country rock is detectable. |
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The time is ripe over here for a revival of the song the British Tommies liked to sing on the way to the trenches. |
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Mirrored his and hers arrangements stretch the length of those double sinks. |
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In general the squad has a great mix of talent, experience and youth that would make any Premiership manager green with envy. |
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Many polychaetes hatch into a particular type of planktonic larva, the trochophore, which later metamorphoses into a juvenile annelid. |
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Amid all the gloom and doom in the advertising industry giant adverts seem to be bucking the trend. |
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Their food and water supplies were dangerously low and the elf rationed it harshly. |
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When the group had hit ground, there was a faint glitter of light in the distance. |
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Then we sat and chatted as the little thermal printer attached to the spiro-whatsit machine wheezed out its report. |
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Cash raised will be used to plant and maintain the area where the advert is displayed. |
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It adverted to the widespread recognition that the region would be a separate national state. |
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A valet whisks a car away for arriving patrons, while down at the corner, a Metro bus wheezes and clanks to a stop. |
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A West Indian spinner then took control and with two other Heworth batsmen falling to run-outs, the innings closed at 154 all out. |
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Tracy was busy sketching a diagram of Sed's room, while I was clicking my tongue every time the clock's second hand ticked to amuse myself. |
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He sought an order quashing the resolution and by-law of the township, which permitted the closing of the shore road allowance. |
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Elsewhere, as you'll have noticed, tactical buttons were the wheeze of the week. |
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It was nighttime outside, dark and cloudy, so the sewers were pitch black, and he landed knee deep in rank stinking water. |
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On the way home I might suddenly get a new low opinion of the flowers, and feel embarrassment at having bought them. |
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Information gained by Bedfordshire on Sunday has revealed that the service is already running desperately low on crews. |
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Most of the ones I know have a low opinion of them but never seem to be asked. |
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They were clinging to a rock about 4 metres square and barely one metre above the sea. |
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We have to maximise the turnout of ordinary rank and file members on the 19 June protest. |
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Artistically ripped jeans hung gracefully around his gently jutting hips, his bright t-shirts bringing out the glitter of his eyes. |
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Then he was given the longest of his four run-outs from the bench and once again gave a glimpse of a potential talent. |
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Once I put on my new rims I loved them, expect for the large gap that I now had in my wheel well. |
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It was either he wasn't too interested in talking or the fact that my status was too low for him. |
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She heard the click of the closing door and then the sound of the latch falling into place, but still she did not move. |
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The 17-in. alloy wheels and all-weather tires fill the wheel wells offering up a smooth ride. |
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I cannot bear the thought of one so compassionate and noble as you having such a low opinion of me. |
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The rank-and-file member who's not inside the leadership is dependent on those leaders to lead. |
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He had too much on his mind and too many things to do than get apologies from the low classes. |
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It is now essential to organise democratic debate among the rank and file to define our demands and our strategy. |
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Keep your hips square to the ceiling, and try to avoid letting your pelvis rotate. |
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In the past, colleges of agriculture placed a low priority on agricultural economics. |
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I have removed the identifying information from this email, after assuring myself of the writer's veracity. |
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When cuneiform writing was first invented in ancient Sumer, the scribes scratched signs on the moist clay by means of a pointed instrument. |
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The department's collection of cuneiform tablets is among the most important in the world. |
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Before the trip the agency will advertise the vacancies in all major Australian cities. |
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In most cases, if you point to the icon for your antivirus and click the right mouse button, a menu will pop up with an update option. |
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They encourage the use of medicines without any prescription by advertising their products on television and radio. |
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Ms Gordon explained that that house would be advertised for tender in the near future. |
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So it makes perfect sense to leave the masses to their low culture, and they will likely do the same for you. |
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Unhappy at work and in love, our heroine has been the worst imaginable advertisement for women's independence. |
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But despite the rapid growth rates estimated above, just a small proportion of workers in the economy are engaged in coworking. |
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The doorframe must be as square as possible, so that the door seals tightly to the jamb and swings properly. |
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A lot of people don't want to advertise the fact that they have a personal trainer. |
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Remove labels from new trees and shrubs as this advertises the fact that they are new and easy to remove. |
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Moreover, the high quality and low prices of these goods played a major role in forcing changes in the economies of Europe and other nations. |
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These days, the divide between high culture and low culture seems to be disappearing. |
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Abruptly the old man wheezed and slumped back in his chair, one stiff, gnarled hand to his chest. |
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I am aware of his comments but one or two of the other youngsters could also be given a run-out. |
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She was vague about the reasons, but she didn't want to advertise the fact I was intelligent. |
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With the top three places resulting in automatic GB selection, John assured himself of a place in the team. |
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However, cheap carries with it the connotation of low quality and low performance. |
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But in the end he lacked the sagacity or the low cunning to do the one thing necessary. |
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We've had a disastrous year in our local lobster fishery, with catches down by half and the catch of low quality. |
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It's a heavyweight clash of the two-mile champion chasers at Sandown tomorrow when the two go head to head in the trophy competition. |
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The initial pressure of the cavity gases exceeds the pressure from overlayers of hard dirt and rock by many orders of magnitude. |
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I immediately changed how I talked to people, because the message that was true, the metamessage, was that they were valuable and of worth. |
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The exhibit is an isomorphic extension of Cage's metamessages to the medium of the museum. |
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France at that time, he says, was full of former Tommies on the run, many of whom had taken up with local girls. |
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Another aspect of Germany's malaise, however, is the low opinion the public has of its politicians. |
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I'm not promising we'll win it, but I can assure all the supporters that we're determined to give it our best shot. |
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The walk on Sunday was a huge success story and was a very good advertisement for the Walkway. |
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Thousands of British Tommies passed through on their way from or to the frontline. |
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However, the 55 staff at the call centre have been assured by the company they will be redeployed in other positions. |
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Well, of course, the Democrats are really green with envy because they don't have an Arnold Schwarzenegger. |
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He was the personification of the kind of low cunning to which Nixon himself aspired but could never quite achieve. |
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Once infected, the device can move about and click at will, completely taking over your computer. |
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It seems, however, that it is not just the adverts that prey on young minds. |
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Their unprecedented public embrace confirmed the government was closing ranks against a common foe. |
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The leaflets back a cinema advert being aired locally with the same message. |
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Through the village she was silent, except to say that the women needed seed, for their store was very low. |
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When I walked around the Hayward my first thoughts had nothing to do with low art. |
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The sound of the keyboard clicking furiously drifted over the phone again as he worked. |
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The brakes wheeze and the windows shudder, the seats are cracked and creaky. |
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Quickly I entered my car and started the engine, which coughed and wheezed into life. |
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However, our first adverts of the season hit the shelves next week, and then our traffic will rocket. |
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During the war he rose through the ranks from an officer school cadet to a major in command of a rifle battalion. |
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Despite low supplies and starvation, the French army put up stiff resistance for two months. |
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When the season is at the peak, lobsters are held in corrals until the supply becomes low. |
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In most general discussions of types of state, the city- state is opposed to "the territorial state". |
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If residents strengthen the city's identity, they will be ready one day to leave the mainland and form a city-state akin to Singapore. |
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These symptoms last a day or 2 and are followed by worsening of the cough and the appearance of wheezes. |
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And assure yourself that you are committing to the best product, not just the one that pays the salesman good commission. |
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Only a hagiocracy could provide them a safer border in the region, especially in the face of the perceived threat. |
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He is tennis's most high-profile advertisement for the benefits of an alternative education. |
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The text begins with a review of the characteristic properties of local microstructures around whisker and monticule grains. |
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The parklike understory turned into rank undergrowth, and the inevitable result was a bushfire that destroyed all the old-growth, hollow trees. |
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The rank smell of the soaking water and the crispness of the soaked cabbage shreds indicate that this is a worthwhile step. |
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As she got closer she could smell the sweat on him and the rank smell of horse. |
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Scars were abundant in the little group and there was a definite rank smell about them. |
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Mounted fans whirred overhead, efficiently distributing the rank air and grime into all corners. |
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Though he was low on cash and feeling squeezed, he didn't like the terms the banks offered. |
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The rank smoky smell recalls the lamp at Uncle Don's lodge on the lake where Jack and I went to swim on hot nights. |
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And when taken to extremes, such as at these schools in Kirkland and Puyallup, political correctness sinks to the realm of rank stupidity. |
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If someone's bucket was low on squid, the folks with good catches poured in a few. |
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Many dealers, even though they were successful, tired of the labor and low status and opted out. |
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A further complication is the very low status of woman in many of these societies. |
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She heard the click and slight whirring sound as Raider snapped pictures of her. |
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A muffled click sounded behind the door, and I heard the man chuckle softly. |
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Padlin felt cool, wet air against his cheeks and he caught the rankness of the East River. |
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The catalytic mechanism and the active-site fold, however, are largely conserved among the protease classes. |
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These women, although they lived a rich life depending on their beauty, still had a low status in the family. |
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The old man wheezed and gasped terribly, groaning out a little as the pain of his performance finally caught up with him. |
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Should the gas tank, situated in the spare wheel well, run dry, the switch back to petrol is automatic. |
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The cytoskeleton is the overall name given to protein filaments and motor proteins in the cell. |
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In addition to acting as a cellular scaffold, the cytoskeleton has roles in organelle transport, cell division, motility, and signaling. |
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The wheel well all but disintegrated and the already broken front axle shattered to pieces that fell at odd angles. |
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Junior, positioned in the wheel well, uses a hydraulic hand pump to push the metal into the proper alignment. |
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In fact, there's only one exterior panel that's stamped, which is a small panel between the front wheel well and door edge. |
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When members of the public make a complaint, they are classed as low priority and have to wait until more serious crimes are dealt with. |
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Steps are also being taken to address the traditional low status of judges. |
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Hot gas began flowing into the wheel well through vents around landing gear door hinges. |
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His office is a five metres square room reached down a long corridor, one floor above the concourse at London's Euston station. |
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We drove on the sidewalk, from the sidewalk which was still up above the wheel well, up to Canal Street, where it was a dry area. |
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On Christmas Eve, JFK Airport workers found the body of a man in the wheel well of an American Airlines flight from Jamaica. |
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It remains to be seen whether the Institute's rank-and-file members support the policy. |
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Panday has himself stated that this is a matter for the rank and file to decide. |
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Since then, Johnston has been a rank-and-file member and is still active in the union as a shop steward. |
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At ministerial level, it usually does, but among the rank and file, it often does not. |
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Pictograms, or drawings representing actual things, were the basis for cuneiform writing. |
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No figure in the history of Zen is more closely associated with meditation practice than the thirteenth-century Japanese master Dogen. |
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It cannot be said with certainty that such political moves benefited the rank and file. |
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The listed carpetmaker saw his revenue increase slightly to $101.9 million in the six months to December 31. |
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The perception persists among some gay people that their issues are a low priority within the party. |
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Joe, one of the bad guys, who was part of the low class of the gang, slides the wood board on the door like a window. |
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He heard then the hard click of boots on stone, and soon a man dressed in plain black pants, boots, and jacket stood before him. |
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He heard the distinctive click when she switched off the answering machine. |
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It was started by the Barrett family and until 1932 it was the home of ironfounders, wheelwrights, millwrights and general engineers. |
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Isaac was a wheelwright and wood turner and probably worked with his father in the spinning-wheel shop. |
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In the case of cuneiform text, trying to look at language use in terms of oral/literate dichotomies only obscures our understanding. |
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Uncovered in the debris of the Treasury were hundreds of clay tablets with inscriptions in Elamite cuneiform. |
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Stepping through it into the apartment, I froze as I suddenly heard the sharp click of a gun hammer being pulled back. |
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She slammed the serrated edge into a hidden spot on the parasol and heard a sharp click. |
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It could become a much more attractive advertisement for paleontology and for the Society. |
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Nail a temporary brace diagonally across the unit to keep it square and stable. |
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The detective said the prostitution service was advertised as an an escort service. |
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The lecture's organizers have said the lecture was clearly advertised as a series of yarns. |
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However, it has struggled to recruit the 550 staff it needs in its new location, despite advertising the vacancies. |
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Mrs Darlington got the job after the town council advertised the vacancy last summer. |
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They have already advertised for a Principal and will advertise a teaching post once the Principal has been appointed. |
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Frank, 41, applied for the post when the parish council advertised two vacancies. |
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Let's go back to our practice hill, the one that is wide, not very steep and has a nice run-out at the bottom. |
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Blackfish, or Luderick, which are predicted to be found in numbers on run-out tides once the river water is clear. |
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Blackfish still seem to be slow but no doubt they will be running as soon as the water is clearer on the run-out tide. |
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Connolly's excellent run took him into the Sherwood area but he elected to shoot when a square pass would have left Lofthouse with an open goal. |
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She heard an angry voice swear outside the dumpster, then she heard a click and something that sounded unmistakably like dial tones on a phone. |
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The draft City by-laws have been extensively publicised in the media to allow members of the public to comment. |
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Our members will one week be asking employers to advertise vacancies and the next they'll be asking for a job. |
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Recreational activities and evening classes are advertised for the longer nights approaching. |
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I didn't want to advertise the fact that we'd be away from the flat for a while. |
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They would also have to pay to advertise the fact they would be applying for the licence. |
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Regis also took the opportunity to advertise the quality of the police department that he headed. |
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Globular theories, the precursor to the cell theory, were quite popular at the beginning of the 19th century. |
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The modern understanding of cells is largely determined on the basis of Cell Theory. |
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You need to know the cell theory and how continuous investigations and/or new scientific information influenced the development of cell theory. |
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The reasons for the increased use of mobile phones also include the low quality and unreliability of fixed-line services. |
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Let's face it, most of them came here to escape the low quality of life and the glaring risks. |
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Long moans, clicks of his tongue, and the sucking of his teeth were clearly heard. |
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With one quick click of the mouse button, you can easily learn which domains he owns and the current status of these domains. |
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We have installed additional signs on the road and done everything possible to advertise the fact that the speed limit has been reduced. |
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That was Jessica's voice, slightly nasal, desperately advertising the fact that any pity would be welcome. |
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The captains of the guards advertised the Emperor of it, who sent out scouts. |
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No one bothered advertising the fact that, in order to live, I need to keep breathing. |
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Poor allocation of Government funds often contributes to the low quality of rural education. |
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He suddenly leant threateningly over the child, eyebrows furrowed, eyes glittering menacingly. |
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Over the next few days I wheezed and huffed and puffed my way slowly along the mountain paths. |
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Patients with severe asthma may not have any wheezing as there is very little air moving in and out of the lungs. |
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The movie has failed miserably at the box office and the producers have blamed the low quality of the latest game for the poor ticket sales. |
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He assured her that Pakistan had a positive and constructive attitude towards the ongoing bilateral talks. |
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He promised and assured all that this was but a preliminary visit and that he would be back on Christmas Eve with the toys they had written for. |
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With two clicks of the mouse button you can export your screen recording to the Macromedia Flash format. |
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I want to be convinced the council acted prudently and want to be assured members' wishes were implemented by officers. |
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In recent weeks, the Daily Bugle has printed more than a dozen large advertisements for cigarettes. |
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That is why so many advertisements for products consist of nothing more than the name of the product and perhaps a smiling face. |
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Most provocative of all the Ediacaran forms are those exhibiting real or apparent metamerism. |
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Evidence for this fact can be found in the terribly low quality of this entry, and my true inability to write anything better. |
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The mark up and transportation costs may overprice the product, while at the same time its quality may be low. |
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Apologies for the relatively low quality but it's in order to keep the file size down. |
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This has led to the low quality of most of this sector's products, and hence its decreased credibility. |
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And scores of promos through print and television advertisements announce the arrival of new films. |
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But Rooney's square ball fell behind the unmarked Van Nistelrooy and was smuggled away for a corner. |
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Over the years, I've noticed various advertisements for customised designer beds. |
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To restore your natural biomechanics, these Body Geometry shoes add a wedge under the forefoot that tilts the foot back to the lateral position. |
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But advertisements for massage services will continue to appear in the paper. |
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And nowhere is this science more exciting than in the advertisements for personal care products. |
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Littered throughout today's newspapers there are job advertisements for positions in the public service. |
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It has produced non-commercial public service advertisements, including ones for the 1999 election. |
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The organisation is looking for more volunteers and there could be no better advertisement for the group than Julie. |
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The International Rules was the most frightful advertisement for sport that one could ever want to see. |
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Without making promises, he assured Kim the team would consider that possibility over the winter. |
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A cultural icon, the structure is continually surrounded by tourists, their cameras clicking away. |
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The chairman confirmed the company was seeking two new directors and assured everyone that they would be extremely independent. |
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However, I assure you that the Hogbetsotso festival is a genuine Ghanaian event. |
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There is full Internet capability, so at the click of a mouse you can login for free online events and matchmaking. |
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Before dawn broke, the bar on my cell door slipped away, and the key clicked in the lock. |
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As the sons and daughters of professional Army officers, our impulse was to close ranks and stand where we were told to stand. |
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They have taken out expensive adverts in the trade press, complete with favourable reviews. |
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The food industry was closing ranks today over the prospect of introducing a traffic light-style scheme to label the healthiness of foods. |
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If viewers could rate adverts they like, perhaps the insulting ones would quickly get weeded out. |
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It is not, however, clear that the community is united enough yet to effectively close ranks against coalition forces. |
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But this morning, the Administration's best and brightest were closing ranks. |
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Check the actual fat grams per serving to determine whether a food is truly low in fat. |
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Have you ever noticed how the adverts at London tube stations vary depending on where you are? |
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The source of the large fireball that streaked over Southern California on Wednesday has been traced to debris from the Comet Encke. |
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I was looking for the advertising costs so I can put in an advert for my new venture! |
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Following the horrific loss of life and injury in Bali, blood supplies are critically low. |
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February is the month when there is no vegetation to cover this awful advertisement for the town. |
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After a minute of strained concentration, a small click sounded and the door swung open, revealing a very long set of marble stairs. |
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The 60 mostly uninhabited islands which comprise the group lie within an area only 20 miles square. |
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The force of character is cumulative. All the foregone days of virtue work their health into this. |
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It also provides ample cushioning with shock-absorbing HydroFlow technology in the heel and forefoot, and has a water-repellant upper. |
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Poster adverts that talk to people walking by could soon be hitting the high street. |
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It's not just about bus shelter adverts and nice shelves in the supermarket. |
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He graduated from West Point in 1917 and rose through the ranks as an infantry officer. |
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Trying to spot what on earth adverts are selling helps fill the gaps between television programmes. |
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Michael quickly rose through the ranks as orderly sergeant, first lieutenant and captain. |
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I had to become a soldier who would rise through the ranks and emerge a commander of men. |
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That is what the parties agreed to, albeit because they did not advert to that consequence. |
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In the process, he became a military strategist, rising through the ranks from major to brigadier general. |
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When he returned from his act of bovicide and saw that the butter was indeed in the bowl, he was stricken with regret. |
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Earlier this month the Vatican announced the installation of free showers for the homeless in public bathrooms in the city-state. |
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Yale should learn from the city-state, he and others have argued, not condemn it. |
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I want the city-state of London to join the other nations reshaping the union. |
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While a few animals will starve to death when food supplies are low, the species will survive. |
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Given the already low supply, some towns reportedly did not have any plywood left to sell. |
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Water comes up to the second floor, they are out of gasoline, and food supplies are running perilously low. |
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There was a brief pause on the opposite end of the connection, filled only with a short click and the background sounds of conversation. |
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His report is not helpful and given the shortcomings already adverted to, I prefer to rely on the evidence. |
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Yet isn't this what is implied in the allusion which does not advert to the activities of the army? |
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The first semi-final however was an absolute humdinger, a marvellous advertisement for the sport. |
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Now, that is a matter which was adverted to in this Court in a case referred to on page 72 of the application book. |
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The Boston Globe's Jeff Jacoby has also commented on the rank hypocrisy that is being demonstrated here. |
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Light weight and enormous toes enable them to negotiate rank vegetation by simply walking over the top. |
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Engulfing new plantings, the rank growth took on the appearance of an emergent urban ecosystem. |
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We were up quite high on the southern side of the Uldale, a flank of rough rank grasses, rushes, and countless seepage and springs. |
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She was so low on money these days that she felt the need to beg for money. |
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I heard the click of a switch as the light went off next door, plunging the awaiting table into darkness. |
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But as the rains progress, they abandon the tall, rank grass in the floodplains and woodlands in search of more palatable foodstuff. |
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He needs to do something about the rank smell of dead fish emanating from the bathrooms. |
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The flesh was pale grey in the thin light and the stomach had a harsh, rank smell. |
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Barnet midfield player John Doolan has become the latest new arrival at big-spending Conference promotion chasers Doncaster Rovers. |
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