According to zoology, the origin of blue bull is not traced to the species of cow. |
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Calls to Crimestoppers are not traced or taped and you do not have to give your name. |
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And as with many social forces in Santa Monica, the roots of this debate can be traced to rent control. |
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Despite an extensive investigation, the parents have not been traced and the circumstances of the birth remain a matter of speculation. |
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Police traced the stolen VW Polo and discovered it had been stolen from a house in Park Road, Prestwich. |
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Inquires conducted at the time resulted in a sighting of a man, who was never traced but later eliminated from the investigation. |
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The occupants of the BMW have never been traced despite an extensive police investigation. |
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Its origin has been traced back as far as 1856 by noted historian John Ridge. |
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Debates over who is the best ball-flyer, who gets the most sleep, and who eats the most dog, can be traced to the origins of our profession. |
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The history of these games can be traced to the early development of gaming on PCs, consoles, and various other platforms. |
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Its origins can be traced back to as 1085 when King Alfonso VI of Castle reigned here. |
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Although these developments are unexpected, their origins can be traced to China's 1996 military exercises. |
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The secret of how lava lamps work can be traced back to the molecular nature of oil and water. |
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In other words, user's expenditures by credit card can be traced while cash payments are untraceable. |
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Last, the sketch was held firmly against the watercolor paper, while the outline of the shoe design was gently traced over with pencil. |
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The smiles was coquettish, fetching, and she traced the modest neck on her dress as if an invitation to seeing what was under it. |
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After a life-long search for his real family, Gerard has traced and finally met with the relatives of his birth mother in Swinford. |
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Kroto and Smalley made their own models, and then, using a Xerox machine, enlarged Polaroid images of those models and traced their outlines. |
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I had prepared a template for two portraits, which they traced onto their paper. |
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The spaceship traced out a complex path across the desk, leaving a faint red screw-thread line floating in the air. |
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A single tear traced its course down her cheek and dropped softly to be absorbed by the wood. |
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The confusion can be traced to the uniformitarian expectations that the deposits were laid down over eons of time. |
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The trajectory is the path traced by the center of gravity of the projectile from the origin to the level point. |
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It seems that the foot-and-mouth outbreak in England has been traced to cheap, unseparated swill. |
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The inflaming of nationalist tendencies in Europe can only be traced back superficially to disputes over the draft constitution. |
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A lone tear traced its path down Serena's face as she set off into the forest, holding Gideon's hand tightly. |
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We traced its improbable development to the bottom-up dynamics of the Bazaar model of software engineering. |
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A lonely tear traced a path much traveled down her cheek, but she wiped it away. |
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They traced the length of her neck, stopping to rest at the bottom of her throat. |
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For this part, she has traced an astonishing abundance of literature and unpublished archival material. |
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The cause of Sunday's fire was traced to an electrical fault in the bilges of the vessel. |
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Yohanna's fingers traced a silver crescent mark on the babe's forehead and in that brief moment Yohanna recognized her. |
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The head is covered with a circular piece of muslin fabric traced from a pattern. |
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If her owners are not traced soon a new home will have to be found for her. |
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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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The spacefaring brotherhood that now exists can be traced back to that handshake in orbit. |
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In short, for laws to be deemed sound, they must be traced to some higher principle that is unchanging. |
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Many of the problems of getting an accurate model to render properly can be traced to what happens during translation to those formats. |
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Likewise your warranty could be invalidated if something goes wrong with the car and the fault is traced to the chipping. |
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I might even claim that welfare-state-ism can be traced to a desire to simply salve one's conscience. |
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Each inhabitant has chosen an image that most represents their life to be traced onto a blind affixed to the windows of the south-facing facade. |
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For example, certain liver problems can be traced to problems in the kidneys and urinary system. |
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Vicki sighed and traced his phone number in her journal with her mechanical pencil. |
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The story of their rise to popularity as jazz music evolved from ragtime to bebop is firmly traced in Brotherhood in Rhythm. |
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The source of this parallel intoning of liturgical melody may be traced to the natural range of the human voice. |
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Anonymity was maintained by having students use a student identification number that could not be traced by the investigators. |
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Instead of taking an algebraic approach, however, Halton used a shortcut inspired by the geometry of paths traced by rays of light. |
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Oak-Apple Day at Great Wishford can be traced back to 1603 and was originally celebrated at Whitsun. |
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As it happened, I got a phone call at work the next morning by a medical student who'd discovered my wallet and traced it back to me. |
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A lot of the excess liquidity you speak of can be traced to the aggressiveness of their monetary policy. |
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The reason for this mistaken notion can be traced to the events of our recent past. |
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His fingers traced the sides of my face, like a child would who was examining the skin of a grandparent. |
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The picture is then traced onto the boards, using a pointer or toothed wheel, and marked out with cones from the alder tree or with coffee beans. |
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Finally, it has been suggested by Wilenski and others that Vermeer might have traced over images reflected in mirrors. |
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The team's vast improvement can be traced to a more balanced offense, which complements an improving defense. |
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This time it was traced to a college student in Romania who had also left obvious clues to his identity in the code. |
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A smaller unit is the lineage, a kin group of four or five generations descended from a male ancestor traced though the male line. |
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Moreover, all other lineages can be traced to one of the ancestral types found in Africa. |
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Many of these families traced their ancestry to the earliest English settlers of this country's oldest fishing port. |
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McGhie traced his ancestry back by recording the names, birth years and birthplaces of his ancestors. |
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The Davis and the Somes families traced their ancestry to Cape Ann's earliest settlers. |
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The bears were subsequently traced back to a zoologic gardens in Hong Kong. |
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I zoomed the lens to his face and traced his features, moving the camera swiftly from his perfect hair to his flawless complexion. |
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His finger traced the institute on the map, and the trail to the rest of the Yellow society. |
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With her gaze she traced his jaw, smooth and angular, edging up towards his eyes. |
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He sighed, and traced a vein in the table wood before answering, and it was obvious this came hard for him. |
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The history of lexicography in England can be traced back to the 16th Century or even earlier. |
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Mr Fowler's antipathy can be traced to his father, who fought in the First World War and was less than impressed by the French war leaders. |
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My finger traced out his features as I suddenly became aware that any minute now, I would faint. |
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He was traced ten years later and restored to his rightful position in the lineage. |
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Using a light table, students traced their enlarged drawings onto good student quality watercolor paper. |
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My appetite gone, I pushed the bowl aside and traced my finger around the rim of my wineglass. |
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His finger traced a path to the south-west, navigating mountains and rivers with deceptive ease. |
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There were some 20 years between these commercial clunkers, yet the same thread of dull-wittedness can be traced through the origins of both. |
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Winning in football has long been traced to controlling the line of scrimmage. |
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Similarities in language that can be traced to an Atlantean lingual root are across the world, not limited to a single continent. |
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The Arabians themselves were broken up into various clans who traced their lineage to Abraham and his son Ishmael. |
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He traced the gender differences to the intermarriage of Carib men to Arawak women. |
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Sometimes the testicular vessels are traced to an abdominal, inguinal or scrotal testicular remnant, which is then removed. |
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It suggests that Jesus Christ had direct descendants, in a bloodline that can be traced down the centuries. |
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I looked down and silently traced the flower pattern on the armrest of the chair with the tip of my finger. |
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He then traced the gradual erosion of the conventions that had supported religious practice in Ireland. |
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The post was found hours later by a dog owner and police traced the temporary worker from staff rotas at the sorting office. |
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Even the emotional experience that Tchaikovsky's music affords us can be traced back to his consummate artistry. |
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In contrast, dinosaur fossils have been traced in Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. |
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Audit trails would help you determine the source of a possible problem if law enforcement spotted a trend that traced back to your company. |
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All personal salutes may be traced to the prevailing use in earlier days to ensure that the saluter placed himself in an unarmed position. |
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Today's hip hop music can be traced through it's roots of funk, jazz, and soul music. |
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The three forms are traced to the three gunas, namely rajas, sattva and tamas. |
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While in the Pacific the crew of the auxiliary traced the footsteps of Sir Francis Drake by landing boats on a Costa Rican shoreline. |
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The history of the use of solmisation in voice training has been traced in the west and in India. |
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The staff of Asclepias, which can be traced back to the magic wand of the early Egyptians and Moses, depicts a single serpent twined around it. |
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Her blade traced a horizontal line on his throat, a scratch that just barely broke the skin, but not enough to draw blood. |
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Twenty-one Presidents can be traced back to seventeenth-century origins among New England colonists. |
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It is a cheerful pagan rite that can be traced at least as far back as the Saturnalia and Kalends of Roman times. |
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Charlie sat down at the table, and traced its scars and stains with her eyes. |
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They traced a path to a repository on the far side of the room, a row of bright, neon green cubes. |
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The drive she feels to achieve, Simone says, can be traced directly to the unyielding support she has felt from her family. |
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Is there a realm of objective consciousness which has been scientifically traced and methodically explored? |
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According to David Block's new book Baseball Before We Knew It, the game may be traced to a continental ball game called la soule. |
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When I got to school I traced around the red swollen mark on my face with a purple texta. |
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One of the earliest motion toys, the thaumatrope can be traced to 1826, and may be even older. |
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A flash of pain traced a thin course across his chest and he reeled backward to sprawl in the twilit clearing. |
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Thus, his Lordship continued, money stolen from a bank account can be traced in equity. |
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So that he could appreciate the massiveness of the volcano, she took his hand and traced with him its profile on the horizon. |
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On this panel, Brunelleschi painted a view of the baptistery from a representation that he had traced on and over its mirror reflection. |
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He traced the origins of the Order in Ireland back to their arrival with their Anglo-Norman overlords and patrons in the twelfth century. |
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However, I was my mother's only child, and since her lineage was traced maternally, I would inherit something from her at her passing. |
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His hand gripped the hilt of his sword, the blade drawn but down so the point traced a line in the snow. |
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Family relations are traced back equally both matrilineally and patrilineally, and active kin groups often extend to the great-grandparents. |
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Although they traced descent patrilineally, they had matrilocal settlement patterns and alliances were formalized through the exchange of women. |
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As Baptists, our beginnings are traced to dissenting sects of English and European Protestants. |
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The researchers traced the dioxin to chicken feed, specifically soybean meal. |
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He smiled as he traced his fingernails down Ford's cheek, then dug them into the front of his throat. |
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But she says her love of the ancient sport traced back to a family passion for historical weaponry. |
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We made a mosaic of the photographs covering each survey zone, and then we traced a new base map off the composite image. |
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Unlike social networks like Facebook and Twitter, messages sent through BBM cannot be traced back to the sender's phone. |
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Psychiatrists explain that people's feelings of fear can be traced to self-suggestion and imagination. |
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He moved to Boston as a young man, where his early career is traced in a memoir written shortly after his death. |
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The volume was plated with a thin layer of beaten gold, and a row of high-quality garnets traced up its spine. |
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A friend of mine working in New York merchant banking said that every major American deal can be traced back to Texas money. |
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Between the cups, the center band or center front piece can be traced while still attached to the other half of the bra. |
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The computer, one of the greatest discoveries of all times, was born in his head, the head of a man whose origins can be traced to Bulgaria. |
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I traced the carved mahogany bedposts with my fingertips, and went to the window, blurry with dust and grime. |
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By this method, the path of a neural tract can be traced from its origin to its termination. |
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Using traced photos, Breslin's snapshot style gets at the scenario's serio-comic complications. |
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The genealogy of domestic service in India can be traced as far back as the Vedic times. |
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Michelangelo also traced the figure of Tityus on the other side of the paper. |
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Now as you hike or bicycle or drive with your GPS on, your path is traced onto the topo map automatically, or you can pinpoint particular spots. |
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A deliberate policy of promoting free trade can be traced back to the mid nineteenth century. |
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No nerve cells have been traced to innervate the longitudinal and circular muscle cells of the midgut. |
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Detectives eventually traced Young, who was living in Glasgow with a wife and children. |
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The boat was also traced to the tsunami, Curt Hart of the Washington Department of ecology told The Daily Beast. |
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Usually, anacolutha are close enough to a grammatical construction, or can be traced back to a familiar pattern, to be understood without problem by the receptor. |
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The implication of Pennell's comment is that Vermeer might have copied or traced the outlines of an image and in this way obtained relative sizes for the objects depicted. |
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Henceforth I will follow the way of the Cross traced out for me by my Redeemer, and journey onward to my heavenly home, there to dwell forever and ever. |
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The miscreant was traced and brought round for a stern talking to. |
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Johnathan traced her with his eyes until she was out of sight, then sat up, unstrapping the gun and putting it onto the counter with a dull thud that no one heard. |
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In addition, bill curvature was measured, taking the radius of the height of the upper mandible from the line traced from the base to the tip of the bill. |
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With dogged perseverance and considerable luck, the author, Alexander Haley, traced his ancestry back through seven generations to a Mandingo village in Africa. |
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Popular legend would have it that the cause of the plague was traced to an old beggar man, who was buried under a heap of stones by the infuriated populace. |
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My finger traced a smiley face onto one of the condensation-covered windows of Matt's car as it pulled onto the grass that was my grandmother's driveway. |
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Around 50 men, whose bones can be traced back to Scandinavia, were rounded up and beheaded at some point in the 11th Century. |
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It had claw marks across its wooden panels, and when I traced them with my finger I decided that they were far too big to be from some kind of animal. |
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It was a four inch line that traced his vein and it had welted up. |
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That disproves nothing as Jessica's mobile phone signal has been traced to this area until 1.30 am when the signal faded as the battery died or it was switched off. |
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But this means that we should expect that dozens of other Black English words had been traced to, say, Bambara, Mende, Twi, Yoruba, Efik, Umbundu, and so on. |
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Previous studies had also traced the monkeys' ability to associate the visual cues with the reward to the rhinal cortex, which is rich in dopamine. |
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Woven tapestry is one of the oldest and richest mural arts, and can be traced right back to the Ancient Greeks, Egyptians and Native North Americans. |
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All this can be traced to a Faustian bargain Republicans made precisely 100 years after President Lincoln was re-elected. |
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Perhaps this can all be traced to the hand-holding, touchy-feely pop psychology that has penetrated our schools, our office buildings and our doctor's offices. |
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The contamination was ultimately traced back to a scrub technician named Kristen Parker. |
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The new radios transmit a code that can immediately be traced to the user. |
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Like most of the terms that refer to major conceptual anchors of the western intellectual tradition, its origins may be traced to classical antiquity. |
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I set down my glass deliberately and traced the rim slowly with my finger. |
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The only confirmed cases of vcjd in humans in the U.S. have eventually been traced back totime spent in other countries. |
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In the 1870s, Shakers outside Maine began to use commercial line engravings traced from photographs when they wanted to picture their home villages. |
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These time wasting activities can likely be traced to the ways that you talk to yourself unconfidently and do not manage workplace stresses head on. |
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But as time passed, one began to wonder whether Diana could sustain romance of any kind, due to insecurities that she herself traced to an unsettled childhood. |
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In a general sense, Parliament may be traced back to the Saxon witan and the Norman Council, each of which included the chief men of the realm, lay and clerical. |
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The paralyzing narrowness of American political life, with its minuscule differences between two big business parties, can be traced back to this period. |
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On the contrary much of what is taken to be so distinctive about the Victorians can be traced back to eighteenth-century developments that have featured in this volume. |
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The origins of the term dyslexia can be traced back to late nineteenth century Europe. |
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Like the wheel of karma that cycles through every life, the roots of present events can be traced back to earlier events in this or previous lives. |
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Deeper roots can be traced in medieval romances of chivalry. |
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And it retains aristocratic liveries, a ceremonial jargon derived from Norman French and a strict code of manners that can be traced to the laws of chivalry. |
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The difference this time around can be traced to four new developments. |
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More tears fell from her eyes and traced the preceding paths of tears. |
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The roots of his biliousness can be traced to his upbringing as the eldest of four sons to Jim and Eileen, an Irish crane driver and his wife, in north London. |
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The historians involved have traced the cup back to King Fernando I of Spain. |
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Claire traced her lips along Mark's neck, tickling him softly. |
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The first steps to ruination can be traced to the Russo-Japanese War. |
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One of the assassins was traced to the village of Lidice which was to pay a terrible price for having one of its townsfolk involved in this killing. |
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The show, which starred Lynda Carter as Diana Prince, traced her story from World War II to the present day. |
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Just as the ancient sages can't be blamed for the ideology of the Sangh Parivar, the actions of these so-called leaders cannot be traced to the Sikh values. |
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A hole, though shaped like an ellipse, in which this well-hung stud had placed it would look as if a compass traced it. |
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In Ethiopia the concept of tombs has been traced back 3,700 years with the discovery of a stone necropolis in the south-eastern area of Awash Chercher. |
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Historians have traced its genealogy to the architecture found in Asia Minor under the rule of the Seljuks in the early centuries of the second millennium. |
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It is still an ethos that is found in contemporary pubs, particularly in rural and remote regions, yet its cultural origins can be traced back to colonial mores. |
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This was the most intricate painting of the show, as well as the most recent, and its development could be traced in the predecessors that hung around it. |
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There was a small walk-through exhibit on the second floor that traced the process of making corn flakes, with real Corn Flakes going through the room. |
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His ungloved fingers traced slowly along his bare upper arms. |
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He reached out his hand and his fingers traced her laughing smile. |
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Using graphite paper, they traced their portrait onto the map pieces. |
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Areas of the landscape were traced onto tracing paper and then transferred to the appropriate color, using a rubbing on the reverse of the tracing paper or carbon paper. |
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Capitalism in its modern form can be traced to the emergence of agrarian capitalism and mercantilism in the Renaissance. |
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The children traced their hands onto the sidewalk with chalk. |
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Sarima drew her robes about her, and traced a pattern in the cold dust on a nearby stack of codexes. |
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An outline of the same device might be traced on his shield, though many a blow had almost effaced the painting. |
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I traced around the cap of a pen to get some of the inner curvature I was looking for, and even freehanded a few of the transitions. |
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The origins of the home help service can be traced back to the Sick Room Help Society based in the East End of London. |
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Dedications to many different Cornish saints can also be traced to this period. |
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The ingredients for the modern mince pie can be traced to the return of European crusaders from the Holy Land. |
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He traced these themes to the works of Macrobius, Apuleius, and Giordano Bruno. |
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It has been traced certainly to the 13th century, and conjecturally to the 12th. |
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In all, about 160 stallions of Oriental breeding have been traced in the historical record as contributing to the creation of the Thoroughbred. |
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Thoroughbred pedigrees are generally traced through the maternal line, called the distaff line. |
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Honda's automotive manufacturing ambitions can be traced back to 1963, with the Honda T360, a kei car truck built for the Japanese market. |
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It can be traced back to 1823 when it was created as a signal flag, never intended as a civil jack. |
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The origin of these tales must be traced to the inventions of the Trouveurs, who doubtless often adopted them from various nations. |
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Howbeit we have not yet been able to overtake young madam, we may account it some good fortune that we have hitherto traced her course aright. |
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Each of the doctrines found in this creed can be traced to statements current in the apostolic period. |
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His obesity and other medical problems can be traced from the jousting accident in 1536, in which he suffered a leg wound. |
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Anglican concern with broader issues of social justice can be traced to its earliest divines. |
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The origins of Chartism in Wales can be traced to the foundation in the autumn of 1836 of Carmarthen Working Men's Association. |
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Their origin can be traced back to the early Gulf of Mexico, when the shallow ocean had high rates of evaporation. |
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Solid evidence for the origins of Ripon can be traced back to the 7th century, the time of the Anglian kingdom of Northumbria. |
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They traced the ancient lineages of two species to reveal the insects' lengthy history of asexual reproduction. |
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The problem was traced to a fatigue crack in an oil pipe requiring the replacement of some engines and modifications to the design. |
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However, when the source was traced by Ashley Montagu, it was found to lack a verifiable connection to Hooke. |
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The recorded history of art in Bangladesh can be traced to the 3rd century BCE, when terracotta sculptures were made in the region. |
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The formal foundation of the Liberal Party is traditionally traced to 1859 and the formation of Palmerston's second government. |
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German literature can be traced back to the Middle Ages and the works of writers such as Walther von der Vogelweide and Wolfram von Eschenbach. |
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For example, almost every place name in use can be traced back to the Vikings. |
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The company said the problem was traced to stress and material used for the fittings. |
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If such a system emits signals that can be directly traced back to the compact object, it cannot be a black hole. |
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Presbyterian influence, especially through Princeton theology can be traced in modern Evangelicalism. |
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The origin of the pathogen has been traced to Toluca Valley of Mexico, whence it spread first within North America and then to Europe. |
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Some may date back to the late Medieval era and deal with events and people that can be traced back as far as the thirteenth century. |
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The tangram portion defined by the edges traced during the first and second encounter constitutes a subpuzzle. |
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Even in this case, the prototypes can be traced back to the works of Rotella and Baj, both far from neutral in their relationship with society. |
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The volumes traced events from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688, and was a bestseller in its day. |
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Cricket in Scotland has a long history, which can be traced back to the 18th century. |
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The foundations of geography can be traced to the ancient cultures, such as the ancient, medieval, and early modern Chinese. |
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The United States puts immediate quarantines on imported products if the disease can be traced back to a certain shipment or product. |
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The Gaels traced their ancestry to two different mythological daughters of two different Egyptian Pharaohs in the 11th century named Scota. |
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They traced their origins to Freskin, a man believed to have Flemish origins. |
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The strands of thought that eventually led to modern art can be traced back to the Enlightenment, and even to the 17th century. |
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The disappearance of liberal education can also be traced to Liberal Art Colleges. |
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One of Barbour's known lost work is The Stewartis Oryginalle which is described as having traced the genealogy of the Stewarts. |
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Parts of this and other roads, including Sarn Helen, can be traced and walked. |
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The 1970s juvenile group The Osmonds have traced their ancestry to Merthyr. |
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To some extent, it can be traced back to the wars of religion, land and power arising out the 16th and 17th century Plantations of Ireland. |
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Inspectors may also check fish processing factories to ensure that all fish is documented and can be traced to its source. |
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Dwarf rootstocks for apple trees can be traced as far back as 300 BC, to the area of Persia and Asia Minor. |
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Most nations and several royal houses traced their origins to heroes at the Trojan War. |
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The Mediterranean outflow water layer can be traced for thousands of kilometres west of the strait, before completely losing its identity. |
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English Asia can be traced through the formation of English literature to Latin literature, where it has the same form, Asia. |
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A template is simply the cut-out outline of a board traced onto a permanent material such as cardboard, particle-board, Plexiglas, or masonite. |
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The emergence of stemmed points has been traced to Korea during the upper Paleolithic. |
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Newfoundland's northern cod fishery can be traced back to the 16th century. |
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The genetic structure of Africans was traced to 14 ancestral population clusters. |
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The beginning of rowing is rather clouded in history but the use of oars in the way we use them today can be traced back ancient Egypt. |
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In some form, it can be traced back almost 5000 years to Mesopotamian writings describing daily rations of beer and bread to workers. |
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Evidence of Aboriginal art in Australia can be traced back at least 30,000 years. |
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Part of Charlemagne's success as a warrior, an administrator and ruler can be traced to his admiration for learning and education. |
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Unilineal lineages can be matrilineal or patrilineal, depending on whether they are traced through mothers or fathers, respectively. |
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The roots of the Western media can be traced back to the late 15th century, when printing presses began to operate throughout Western Europe. |
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The history of American football can be traced to early versions of rugby football and association football. |
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There are both distal and proximate causes which can be traced in the historical factors affecting globalization. |
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Inoculation, although it can be traced to earlier Chinese folk medicine, was detailed in Chinese texts by the sixteenth century. |
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No passage in Mandeville can be plausibly traced to Marco Polo, with one exception. |
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The Hammudids claimed a family relation to the Idrisids, and thus traced their ancestry to the caliph Ali. |
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Human habitation in Newfoundland and Labrador can be traced back about 9,000 years. |
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Human habitation in Newfoundland and Labrador can be traced back about 9000 years to the people of the Maritime Archaic Tradition. |
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One of the miraculous passages in the life of Mohammed himself is traced plausibly by Sprenger to such a pragmatized metaphor. |
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Felix Jacoby's Fragmente der griechischen Historiker contains 36 pages of content traced to Megasthenes. |
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The process that leads from a free construction to a discourse marker can be traced back through grammaticalisation studies and resources. |
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Zwingli's turn to relative pacifism and his focus on preaching can be traced to the influence of Erasmus. |
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It also included annotations, in the form of footnotes that traced the development of institutions and legal doctrines back to the 17th century. |
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The first instance of a grand jury can be traced back to the Assize of Clarendon in 1166, an Act of Henry II of England. |
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The testimonial concept can also be traced to Normandy before 1066, when a jury of nobles was established to decide land disputes. |
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Negotiability can be traced back to the 1700s and Lord Mansfield, when money and liquidity was relatively scarce. |
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The rite of consecration of virgins can be traced back at least to the fourth century. |
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The petrochemical industry can be traced back to the oil works of James Young in Scotland and Abraham Pineo Gesner in Canada. |
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The advance in the accuracy of machine tools can be traced to Henry Maudslay and refined by Joseph Whitworth. |
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Despite cultural differences, the successes and failures of entrepreneurs can be traced to how leaders adapt to local conditions. |
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Evidence of the use of interchangeable parts can be traced back over two thousand years to Carthage in the First Punic War. |
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The roots of the cooperative movement can be traced to multiple influences and extend worldwide. |
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His ancestry traced back through the dukes of Song to the Shang dynasty which had preceded the Zhou. |
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Some elements of Taoism may be traced to prehistoric folk religions in China that later coalesced into a Taoist tradition. |
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Such nearby settlements as can be traced from the era of the Romans and the years after their departure seem to have been predominantly Celtic. |
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In some areas of Europe, the spread of blanket bogs is traced to deforestation by prehistoric cultures. |
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Evidence of lead mining has been traced back to Roman times with finds at the Hurst mine. |
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Historically in Yorkshire's West Riding, Leeds can be traced to the 5th century name for a wooded area of the Kingdom of Elmet. |
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A design is sketched on paper, often of a religious theme, and this is traced onto the clay. |
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Tim traced the voice to a tall, suspendered gentleman in thick glasses with a scrabbly grey-white beard and introduced himself. |
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Although he was clean-shaven, black Benday dots traced the narrow pathway of his thin mustache and the stippled edge of his jaw. |
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Were it not that folk-lore has almost died out, more than one domestic rite might be traced back to the stone age. |
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An Alabama jury acquitted him after a four-day trial in which experts traced the musical and cultural developments of rap music. |
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Someone brought a sack of flour and we cut a hole in the bottom and traced a batter's box and foul lines in the infield. |
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It is composed of sabkha evaporites and subaqueous evaporites with thin carbonate interbeds that can be traced for hundreds of kilometers. |
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Sciatic nerve branches were traced and dissected at their insertion points. |
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He was staying with a foster parent until his owner was traced down. |
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Rare book cataloguer Ken Gibb traced the book's history by tracking down the owners of several bookplates left inside it. |
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Descent is traced patrilineally, not matrilineally, and Minang men marry late because they go on rantau in order to earn enough money to marry. |
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Metapolitics traced the disastrous role of perverted imagination and correspondingly perverse politics in Germany. |
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He further said that the writer could be traced as the letters were hand written and a calligraphist could help. |
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A 2009 outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in Spain was traced to a milling machine used in street asphalt repaving. |
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They added radioactively labeled MTBE and TBA to the samples and traced the breakdown of the compounds into carbon dioxide. |
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Mike has traced the early development and birth of the teddy bear up to the modern day. |
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Running like an immense rip in the earth, a snaggy line of dizzying clefts and crags traced the mountains' edge. |
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In the process, he further traced the condition of theophobia to a strict interpretation of monotheism. |
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Their discovery can be traced to the use of salt that was contaminated with potassium or sodium nitrate, also known as saltpeter. |
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Paul Gibbons, 47, traced John Jones, 43, after they exchanged insults in a chatroom. |
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Rao traced his passion for space exploration to toddlerhood, when his mother would show him the moon. |
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I HAVE traced my familiy line in Birmingham back nearly 300 years to button makers, pen nib toolmakers and muscicians. |
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Scientists traced the effect to a sub-group of immune system cells called natural killer T-cells. |
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The infected birds were traced back to a poultry farm in Tin An Dong commune, Quang Ngai city. |
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A NASTY niff that invaded the UK yesterday was last night traced to the French. |
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