Grit braced himself as the carriage rattled along the old road, heading towards the town. |
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Grit is essential in most birds' diets, both as an aid to digestion and as a source of minerals. |
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He explained that they were the sites where millstones were cut from the outcrops of Millstone Grit. |
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Grit is used by many birds to help them grind their food in their gizzards. |
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Grit and dirt were being thrown up from the roads and plastering windscreens and there were even reports of motorists queuing at garages to buy screenwash. |
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Plus, his remake history is a mixed bag, with the solid True Grit and the atrocious Oldboy. |
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The rock above the Millstone Grit layer has been eroded away, which explains the comparative flatness of the summit. |
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The Millstone Grit dates from the Namurian Stage of the Carboniferous Period. |
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The areas of Millstone Grit form an 'inverted horseshoe' around the lower uncapped limestone areas of the White Peak. |
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The Millstone Grit Group comprises over thirty individually named sandstones, some of regional extent, others more local in their occurrence. |
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A small area of Millstone Grit Group rocks stretches through Flintshire and Wrexham into the northwest corner of Shropshire near Oswestry. |
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The catchment lies on carboniferous rocks of Millstone Grit, and is heavily reservoired, with 39 reservoirs licensed to provide water. |
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The Millstone Grit outcrops at the Cow and Calf Rocks near Ilkley form a rolling dissected plateau. |
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The Millstone Grit is, in turn, underlain by limestone rocks from the lower Carboniferous period. |
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A millstone shaped from Millstone Grit quarried in the area has been adopted as the emblem of the Peak District National Park. |
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It is formed from the Millstone Grit and Coal Measures of the Carboniferous age. |
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Each of these structures consists of Carboniferous limestone overlain with Millstone Grit. |
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There was a local jetty to export the oil shale, and smaller operations occurred at nearby Bencliff Grit east of Osmington Mills. |
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In most places, the Coal Measures are underlain by coarser clastic sequences known as Millstone Grit, of Namurian age. |
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The underlying geology is the Millstone Grit series with sandstones and coarse gritstones separated by bands of shale. |
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Lots included The Duke's last driving licence, the eye patch he wore in True Grit and his green beret from The Green Berets. |
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Tenders are invited for Silicon Carbide Waterproof Abrasive Paper Electro Coated, Different Grit. |
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The geology of Oldham is represented by the Millstone Grit and Coal Measures series of rocks. |
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The oldest, and hence lowermost in the succession is the thick Pendle Grit of central Lancashire. |
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Other uplands the erosion of which would provide the source material for the Millstone Grit lay to the north and northeast of the region. |
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Grit particles are angular because they are produced by crushing round and semiround particles. |
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Various of the sandstone beds of the Millstone Grit have been quarried for building stone, paving flags and roofing material. |
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It is succeeded by the sandstone known variously as the Brennand Grit, Warley Wise Grit and Grassington Grit. |
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Underlying the upper reaches of the Trent, are formations of Millstone Grit and Carboniferous Coal Measures which include layers of sandstones, marls and coal seams. |
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The thickest bed of sandstone within it was known as the Basal Grit. |
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I've written previously about naming my current Irish setter Mattie after the young heroine of True Grit, noting that she lives up to the character's willful spunkiness. |
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Geologists refer to the whole suite of rocks that encompass the individual limestone beds and the intervening mudstones as the Millstone Grit Group. |
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In earlier times, probably up to the mid 19th century, the Millstone Grit, or gritstone, which forms the flat top of the fell, was used for making millstones. |
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The term Millstone Grit Series was formerly used to refer to the rocks now included within the Millstone Grit Group together with the underlying Edale Shale Group. |
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The western margin of the vale is composed of Permian Magnesian Limestone and further to the west are Carboniferous Millstone Grit and Coal Measures. |
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It was driven through mostly Millstone Grit, interspersed in places by patches of argillaceous shale and softer sandstone on a gradient of 1 in 201, rising toward the east. |
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The sloping plateau summit of Pendle Hill is formed from the Pendle Grit, a coarse Carboniferous age sandstone assigned to the Millstone Grit Group. |
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This comprises Lower Coal Measures overlying Millstone Grit, both of which are classified as minor aquifers which will only hold relatively small amounts of water. |
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Far from the hustle and grit of Berlin, it follows a quartet of young Germans lazing their lives away in a picturesque ski town in the Alps. |
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Sam was, by all accounts, a practical hands-on man whose grip had the grit of hard work. |
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Through pure grit and determination the pair put on 41 for the first wicket. |
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If anyone can add a little grit to the well-worn formula, you might reasonably expect she could. |
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Rusty iron railings beside the tower's 112 steps also need sand and grit blasting. |
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That one had insects, grit and vegetation perfectly condensed but coloured a deep raspberry. |
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Regaining my determination, I grit my teeth and ignore the agonising, torturous pain in my wrist which was quickly spreading through my body. |
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Rising from political wilderness, the Sonia-led Congress showed that it had the grit and gumption to be an engine of change. |
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He has since embarked on a winning streak courtesy of his grit, tenacity and persistent style. |
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The enemy had not reckoned on the resilience of young Americans, whose grit, loyalty, and mordant humor saw them through the worst. |
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Now and then Jack turned on the wipers to clear black grit off the windshield. |
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This episode was a stretch in every way, causing me to grit my teeth until it wrapped. |
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What I normally do in these circumstances is grit my teeth and carry on regardless. |
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The home side struggled to overcome Edinburgh, but despite labouring for long periods the grit of the Irish forwards eventually saw them through. |
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The geology here is alternating layers of limestone and shale topped with millstone grit. |
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The next day I placed the figure upright on a piece of 400 grit sandpaper and smoothed out the rough surface of the putty. |
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I then used some 180 grit sandpaper to roughen up the surface of the plexi to create the desired effect. |
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It is written with a great deal of intellectual grit, and its thesis is developed with considerable lucidity and eloquence. |
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He could hardly believe his luck, and used his Northern grit and determination to become a local and national hero. |
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The paintings have been created using tactile road-surface materials such as sand, grit, gravel and liquid tar. |
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The difference between dreamers and achievers is grit, guts and spirit, which the former might lack but the latter have in abundance. |
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And the fact that we know the island of St Gregory is a fiction doesn't help make for true grit. |
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Once I had it smooth I used some 220 grit Wet and Dry and sanded the edges smooth under running water. |
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Minor stains and scratches may be removed using 1200 grit wet sandpaper with a small sanding block followed by a good polish. |
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Last step was sanding with 400 grit sandpaper to get a smooth but imperfect surface for the primer to bind to. |
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Sand the first coat smooth with an orbital sander or sanding block using 80 to 100 grit sandpaper before applying the next coat of mud. |
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The texture is smooth, with a tiny amount of dark red and orange grit that buries itself deep in the crevasses between your tongue's taste buds. |
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She has none of the grit, grace, or animalistic sexuality of those brown sugar babes that came before her. |
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Most tile stores sell grout saws, an inexpensive tool with a wooden or plastic handle and a tip covered with carbide grit. |
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In that case the context was a very different one, namely the failure of an authority to salt or grit the road when there had been a weather forecast of freezing conditions. |
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Nonetheless, it is prudent to make sure your boot pivot sockets are clean of grit, since heavy use combined with abrasive material could accelerate wear. |
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His distinctive voice resonates like polished grit over a combination of searing strings, Hawaiian lap steels, mellotrons and even enchanted lyres. |
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The quiet sterile environs offer a safe haven for those looking for a cinematic adventure in the inner-city without the grit that downtown provides. |
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A friend of mine is recovering from alcoholism and she just has to grit her teeth at weddings. |
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To do so in a Salvadoran prison defies comprehension and inspires respect for their grit and determination. |
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In the lower third of the unit, a conspicuous 15-40 cm thick lignite with quartz grit matrix occurs and includes plant stem fragments, some more than 5 cm long. |
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True, they had no shower gel at the time and the heat treatments softened the grit and grim for removal while the cold waters revived the weary bather. |
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You would not expect a smooth surface from coarse grit sandpaper. |
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Horned larks appear to come into the Hamlet to feed on grit and seeds. |
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In 175 well-chosen words, he sums up the trials and the grit and bravery of the civil rights movement. |
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There's a crunchy ration of grit tracked in to the hall and kitchen now, joining with the Dolly-fluff to show just how very bad I am at routine vacuuming. |
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There's a storm coming, so I grit my teeth and start rowing with all my might. |
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Sand and grit in a zipper can cause it to stick, but it doesn't have to stay that way. |
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Not that Pritchard expects anything other than Yorkshire grit being required against Guiseley. |
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In common with many other birds, the house sparrow requires grit to digest the harder items in its diet. |
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During testing in Norway, the team blasted grit through a house window, set fire to a man and ran into a car hidden by snow. |
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It was also converted to a gritter using the grain chute, capable of blasting grit through the windows of nearby cars. |
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The boxes were manufactured from casts of ten distinct cardboard boxes by a company that produces grit bins and traffic bollards. |
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Both combatants showed enormous grit and determination, landing and taking huge shots from one another without even flinching. |
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It expanded from bleary delay rippling with looped phrases to embrace molten metalloid raunch and blues grit, acoustic guitars and pedal steels. |
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On poorly drained impermeable areas of millstone grit, shale or clays the topsoil gets waterlogged in winter and spring. |
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But, showing true Yorkshire grit, he bounced back with rounds of 74, 74 for a respectable finish. |
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But she respects grit and determination, in allies and opponents alike. |
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This placed all major heavy industries which emitted smoke, grit, dust and fumes under the supervision of the Inspectorate. |
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Yorkshire grit and determination and we couldn't get through them. |
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As Paul Collingwood lifted the trophy above his head in Barbados, it was a pity the victory hadn't been down to Yorkshire grit or Surrey artistry. |
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Netherlands, one of the pre-tournament favourites, combined their undoubted guile, creativity, pace and attacking quality with midfield grit and organisation. |
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We hear much about the use of kitty litter as an alternative grit to be used in place of sand, but as I have never made use of it, I cannot recommend it. |
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The grit of the abrasive-whether coarse or fine-the amount of contact and the differential speed between nonwovens and abradant all greatly affect the end result. |
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They are also given small quantities of seeds, spiders, and grit. |
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From the area near Eggleston, the river is crossing over millstone grit. |
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