City of Spades is adapted for radio by Biyi Bandele and Directed by Toby Swift. |
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The minibuses are specially adapted for wheelchair users and the timescale to obtain a replacement is four to six months. |
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The fact that they were twice baked and very dry meant that they could be kept for long periods and were well adapted for use by travellers. |
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As with any film that is adapted from a novel, the movie often does not do the book justice. |
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Before the internal combustion engine was adapted for use in fishing boats, human strength was the only means of conquering the seas. |
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I normally stay away from movies which are adapted from books I've read and enjoyed. |
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The Notebook and The Proof, by Agota Kristof, is a trilogy which has been adapted from novel to stage. |
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Though the film was adapted from the stage musical of the same name, all of the songs have been cut. |
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The desert sheep is an interesting breed, well adapted to local conditions. |
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A process used to coat the inside of drinks cartons was adapted to deposit a thin film of acrylic acid polymer on to the discs. |
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Even those who were most receptive to foreign ideas adapted them in line with traditional Russian concerns, interests and attitudes. |
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In the current investigation, a number of existing measures were adapted for use. |
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Some of the most successful films of all time have been adapted from popular novels. |
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The building's original gymnasium space and kitchens were adapted for Church use. |
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Reupholstering an existing armchair and draping a round table with pale ivory quilted fabric adapted them to the updated color palette. |
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The low maintenance Africander is heat-tolerant and well adapted to withstand harsh conditions. |
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An existing in-house induction programme was adapted for the company's overseas staff. |
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But her eyes had hardly adapted to the darkness when a new shock made her jump. |
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The irony is that the German breweries rendered idle by Pasteur's strategy were adapted to manufacture acetone for cordite production. |
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The long claws, strong leg and shoulder muscles of these bears are well adapted for digging dens and food. |
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An example is Euglena which have adapted to become mixotrophs which as means that they are both heterotrophic and autotrophic. |
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Many of them flourish in a broad range of habitats, and nearly all of them are adapted for wide dispersal. |
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Birds use them for flight, and they are exquisitely adapted for flight in their subtlest details. |
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The same can be said of any number of films adapted from fiction and nonfiction sources. |
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As with most programs adapted from true events, the adaptors took some dramatic license. |
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Unlike kelp and other seaweed, sea grasses are descended from terrestrial plants, which adapted to shallow non-rocky coastal waters. |
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It's also a departure, his first period piece and his first film adapted from pre-existing material. |
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The insect's wings have properties to reflect light that scientists hope can be adapted to camouflage tanks and aircraft. |
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The kangaroo mice are narrowly adapted, so finding the correct floral and soil composition is essential. |
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Indeed, the procedures and trappings of the hunt were adapted for military purposes. |
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To sustain this kind of stamina, they are exquisitely adapted to the rarefied mountain air of their high-altitude stomping grounds. |
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However, I remember her chiefly for the stage play The Woman in Black, which was adapted from one of her books. |
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This target simulator was eventually adapted for simulations of the guidance of a radio-controlled missile. |
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Lord of the Flies is another in a long line of films adapted from various print material. |
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The show runs until January 25 and is adapted from the much loved classic book by Philippa Pearce. |
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The first pair were adapted for feeding, the next four were walking legs, and the most posterior pair formed large swimming paddles. |
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In fact he adapted so well that he was to spend the next twenty seven and a half years in the Police Force. |
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Like Minority Report, it was heavily adapted for the screen, but in a way that's necessary. |
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The musical, which wowed the crowds when it visited Bradford last year, is adapted from the 1961 film. |
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He broke his back three years ago and was helped by the charity to purchase a specially adapted wheelchair so that he can play wheelchair rugby. |
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It was adapted for theatre by Marcy Kahan, from Nora Ephron's original screenplay. |
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The research approach used was action research, adapted for the specific context of business and information technology research. |
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When they got to a brand-new racetrack, surprisingly everybody adapted to the track. |
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One of my favourite films of 2001 was Wu Yen, which is adapted from a folk tale that was also made into a Cantonese opera. |
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This essay is adapted from the afterword of the paperback edition. |
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He should've adapted to us rather than trying to make us adapt to him. |
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In modern Africa large oil drums are often adapted for the purpose. |
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According to Terry Root, a biologist at the Stanford University, creatures adapted to previous changes in climate by migrating. |
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This article was adapted from one originally written by Aida Qajar for IranWire. |
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It was grand, loud, had delicious swagger, guns, sheriffs, goodies and baddies, and was adapted from a Cormac McCarthy novel. |
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I adapted pretty quick to it so it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. |
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Even if they are somewhat distorted or adapted, they remain accounts of experienced events, and as such they are valuable sources for the historian. |
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He adapted a wine press to make the first movable type printing press. |
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The control unit also has a receiver electrically connected to the relay switch and is adapted to receive a control signal for actuating the relay switch. |
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What do you think is the best fantasy work that has not been adapted that should? |
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His voice, as heard over the television, is not ideally modulated, but it was probably adapted to the acoustics in the room as he heard his own voice. |
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Here you find the most extreme desert adapted fauna and flora including Hartmann's Mountain zebra, chameleons, 1,000 year old welwitschia mirabilis and quiver trees. |
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The film, adapted from the novel by Robert Harris, is based in fact. |
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Since the 1950s, fluoride has adapted itself to the prevailing concerns of the time. |
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When I first read the musical, which was adapted from the book by some guys in New York, I was very aware of how big it felt and how American it seemed. |
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In an insular environment a plant family may undergo adaptive radiation with new taxa adapted to and occupying different and sometimes narrow habitats. |
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Ngar said authorities in the past introduced pioneer species such as acacias and eucalypts that adapted quickly to badly eroded areas on barren land. |
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The Judo practice uniform and belt system eventually spread to many of the other modern martial arts such as aikido and karate which adapted them for their purpose. |
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Both Lamarckians and Weismannists admit that the better adapted to its surroundings a living form may be, the more likely it is to outbreed its compeers. |
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The creator Armando Iannucci adapted the concept for an American audience in Veep. |
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The follow-up story is how those who survived both the competitive onslaught, as well as the recession, have adapted. |
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Scottish folk guitarist Bert Jansch helped inspire Page, and from him he adapted open tunings and aggressive strokes into his playing. |
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However, the second entry was adapted and conducted by William Ross due to Williams's conflicting commitments. |
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During the 1950s and 1960s many major British playwrights either effectively began their careers with the BBC, or had works adapted for radio. |
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It can also be adapted as an athletic stadium by erecting a temporary platform over the lowest tier of seating. |
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A cinder track was laid inside Wembley Stadium and all other venues were adapted. |
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These bundles have different types of fibers within them, and horses have adapted over the years to produce different amounts of these fibers. |
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Type I muscle fibers are adapted for aerobic exercise and rely on the presence of oxygen. |
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While it was never raced in Formula One due to technical changes, WHP has since seen its technology adapted for a range of applications. |
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In the early period of motorcycle history, many producers of bicycles adapted their designs to accommodate the new internal combustion engine. |
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Many of these games owe their origins to older outdoor sports, adapted and transformed over time for indoor play. |
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In 1921, Gustav Holst adapted the music from a section of Jupiter from his suite The Planets to create a setting for the poem. |
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Round provided a family tree to embody his essential findings, which is adapted below. |
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These equations are adapted to the conditions of the gas system in question. |
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French fries, Mexican dishes such as burritos and tacos, and pasta dishes freely adapted from Italian sources are widely consumed. |
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In 2015, it was adapted into a film of the same name, which won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. |
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The Bermuda sloop became highly regarded for its speed and manoeuverability, and was soon adapted for service with the Royal Navy. |
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In addition to these countries, several others have adapted the common law system into a mixed system. |
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The resulting TF34 was adapted to become the CF34, whose wide variety of models powers many of the regional jets flying today. |
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Steam had in its favour familiar technology, adapted well to local facilities. |
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The ethnic groups have adapted to mountains, deserts, grasslands, and forests. |
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During the modern period, words have also been adapted from European languages, such as Portuguese, French, and English. |
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When borrowing, pronunciation was adapted to Polish phonemes and spelling was altered to match Polish orthography. |
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Pinter composed 27 screenplays and film scripts for cinema and television, many of which were filmed, or adapted as stage plays. |
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He has also adapted many of his stage works for radio, film and television winning extensive awards and honours from the start of his career. |
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In 1930, Milne adapted Kenneth Grahame's novel The Wind in the Willows for the stage as Toad of Toad Hall. |
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His short story collection Tales of the Unexpected was adapted to a successful TV series of the same name, beginning with Man From the South. |
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It was adapted into a major motion picture released in 1946, then again in 1984 starring Bill Murray. |
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The character has also been adapted for television, radio, comic strip, video games and film. |
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The first Young Bond novel, SilverFin was also adapted and released as a graphic novel on 2 October 2008 by Puffin Books. |
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In 1956 the novel Moonraker was adapted for broadcast on South African radio, with Bob Holness providing the voice of Bond. |
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Following its success, a second story was adapted and on 3 April 2010 BBC Radio 4 broadcast Goldfinger with Stephens again playing Bond. |
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The play was adapted from Fleming's novel by Archie Scottney and was directed by Martin Jarvis. |
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In 1967 Casino Royale was adapted into a parody Bond film starring David Niven as Sir James Bond and Ursula Andress as Vesper Lynd. |
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Also adapted for the stage were Guy Mannering, The Bride of Lammermoor and The Abbot. |
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As a songwriter he provided his own lyrics, sometimes adapted from traditional words. |
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He also adapted work by Scottish renaissance poets such as MacDiarmid, Sorley Maclean and William Soutar. |
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Under Milk Wood is a 1954 radio drama by Dylan Thomas, adapted later as a stage play. |
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Under Milk Wood is a 1954 radio drama by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, commissioned by the BBC and later adapted for the stage. |
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Sullivan's operas have often been adapted, first in the 19th century as dance pieces and in foreign adaptations of the operas themselves. |
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Badly translated and adapted French operettas and poorly written, prurient Victorian burlesques dominated the London stage. |
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These have been toned down in recent decades as he has adapted and transformed the techniques into more subtle methods. |
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The book was adapted by Arthur Laurents, with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by newcomer Stephen Sondheim. |
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The film's script, adapted from Albee's play by Ernest Lehman, broke new ground for its raw language and harsh depiction of marriage. |
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Our soil and climate are peculiarly adapted to the culture of what has contributed so much to the comfort and welfare of the Native Californian. |
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Upon Hutchins' resignation, the university got rid of the program, but an adapted version still exists at Shimer College. |
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The earliest known animals fully adapted to terrestrial conditions appear during the Mid Silurian, including the millipede Pneumodesmus. |
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They have small rounded, highly sensitive ears and sharp teeth adapted for eating small mammals, birds, insects, frogs, and carrion. |
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She adapted the name Kerrisdale from her old family home, Kerrysdale, in Gairloch, Scotland. |
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Bhangra and Giddha are two forms of Punjabi folk dancing which have been adapted and pioneered by Sikhs. |
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Welsh adapted three of the stories for a later film of the same name, in which he also appeared. |
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Curling has been adapted for wheelchair users and people otherwise unable to throw the stone from the hack. |
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Their short wings are adapted for swimming with a flying technique under water. |
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Doctor Faustus was adapted for the screen the following year by both Burton and Coghill, with Burton making his directorial debut. |
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The camel is specially adapted to its hostile desert habitat. |
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Acanthocephalans are dioecious pseudocoelomate worms remarkably adapted to a parasitic lifestyle in that there is no mouth or digestive system. |
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Every society should adopt an order of business adapted to its special wants. |
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The whole of the soil of the isthmus is admirably adapted for the labours of canalisation. |
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Kiss the Girls, adapted from a novel by James Patterson, is cut from the same cloth as The Silence of the Lambs. |
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But the De profundis has only eight verses and so it is not surprising that all of it should have been adapted. |
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It has a vernier adapted to the decimated, or the duodecimated division of the unit of length. |
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Hastily adapted by slovenly hacks, their librettos became incredible farragos of metreless doggrel and punning ineptitude. |
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These same forest images appeared when he adapted his frottage technique to the roughly rubbed and scratched painting techniques of grattage. |
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However, some species, such as the brown rat, red fox, and introduced grey squirrel, are well adapted to urban areas. |
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An adapted version of the old Board of Ordnance flag has also been used, after it was left behind when munitions were removed from the isles. |
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From China the major exports were silk and porcelain, adapted to meet European tastes. |
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Flora in the Pennines is adapted to moorland and subarctic landscapes and climates. |
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The war was over by the time the plant opened and it had to be adapted to new manufacturing. |
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As the last and most derived member of the Pleistocene rhinoceros lineage, the woolly rhinoceros was well adapted to its environment. |
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Following various military conquests in the Greek East, Romans adapted a number of Greek educational precepts to their own fledgling system. |
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The ocean beneath the arctic ice cap hosts many unique organisms adapted to the cold and shortage of light. |
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The material culture evidence shows that people adopted and adapted styles based on set roles and styles. |
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As it spread, its ideas diversified and changed, being adapted to local culture. |
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In the past, through the means of the Auld Alliance with France, they had adapted their surname to the French form, Stuart. |
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In the 20th and 21st centuries, his works have been repeatedly adapted and rediscovered by new movements in scholarship and performance. |
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The last line, adapted from Coleridge, reminds us that we are never such kleptomaniacs as in our juvenilia. |
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The United States adapted Louisiana law by adding parts of US or southern state laws. |
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The divisions of the High Court are not separate courts, but have somewhat separate procedures and practices adapted to their purposes. |
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For example, in England's Exmoor is found the rare horse breed the Exmoor Pony, which has adapted to the harsh conditions of that environment. |
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Wheelchair access is possible at several places on the former railway trails, and cycle hire centres offer vehicles adapted to wheelchair users. |
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The basic frame could be adapted with modules to allow a baby to lie flat or a bubble windscreen to completely enclose the child. |
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He still viewed organisms as perfectly adapted, and On the Origin of Species reflects theological views. |
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However, Elaine Mason's husband, David, a computer engineer, adapted a small computer and attached it to his wheelchair. |
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Construction was carried out in a specially adapted dry dock in Bristol, England. |
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Eventually he adapted his engine to produce rotary motion, greatly broadening its use beyond pumping water. |
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This is the result of a single ancestral structure being adapted to function in different ways. |
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Modern electric light sources come in a profusion of types and sizes adapted to myriad applications. |
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In 1966, the play, A Man for All Seasons, was adapted into a film with the same title. |
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It was directed by Fred Zinnemann and adapted for the screen by the playwright. |
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The motif of the triumphal arch was also adapted and incorporated into the facades of public buildings such as city halls and churches. |
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This form is very common in castles adapted for guns, found in Egypt, Italy, Scotland, and Spain, and elsewhere in between. |
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That project was cancelled because of the Great Depression, and he adapted the design for an oil pipeline and equipment company in Oklahoma. |
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Typically, he is said to be hiding under the bed, although the details of his story is adapted by the parents in a variety of ways. |
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In the 19th century the Robin Hood legend was first specifically adapted for children. |
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Architectural techniques were adapted and developed to build churches that reflected this teaching. |
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Many have adapted to local communities or emigrated to the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, the United States and New Zealand. |
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In the wake of the Republic's collapse, State religion had adapted to support the new regime of the Emperors. |
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He now adapted this skill to the smaller form, somehow retaining a monumental effect. |
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There are two known instances where saint's lives were adapted into vernacular plays in Britain. |
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Romeo and Juliet has been adapted numerous times for stage, film, musical, and opera venues. |
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It has been adapted to film, television, opera, novels, comics, and other media. |
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Karanth's Barnam Vana of 1979 had adapted Macbeth to the Yakshagana tradition of Karnataka, India. |
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Gu Wuwei's 1916 play The Usurper of State Power adapted both Macbeth and Hamlet as a parody of contemporary events in China. |
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Macbeth has been adapted into plays dealing with the political and cultural concerns of many nations. |
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Joe de Graft adapted Macbeth as a battle to take over a powerful corporation in Ghana in his 1972 Mambo or Let's Play Games, My Husband. |
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Dev Virahsawmy's Zeneral Macbeff, first performed in 1982, adapted the story to the local Creole and to the Mauritian political situation. |
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Benjamin Britten The play was adapted into an opera, with music by Benjamin Britten and libretto by Britten and Peter Pears. |
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Oliver Twist and Great Expectations are also frequently adapted, and, like many of his novels, evoke images of early Victorian London. |
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Many of his works were adapted for the stage during his own lifetime, and as early as 1913, a silent film of The Pickwick Papers was made. |
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Shorter in 1896, is that he adapted his name to associate himself with Admiral Horatio Nelson, who was also Duke of Bronte. |
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It was adapted for the stage by Elizabeth Wright in 2010 and first performed by Moving Stories Theatre Company. |
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It has been adapted several times, complete or in part, for radio, television, stage and cinema. |
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In 1954 Blyton adapted Noddy for the stage, producing the Noddy in Toyland pantomime in just two or three weeks. |
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Twenty one of Pratchett's novels have been adapted as plays by Stephen Briggs and published in book form. |
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The novel was adapted by playwright Mark Ravenhill and directed by Melly Still. |
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It is possible that the rhyme was acquired from one of these sources and then adapted to fit the most famous bridge in England. |
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The Indian Queen was adapted from a tragedy by Dryden and Sir Robert Howard. |
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In the years after his death, the work was adapted for performance on a much larger scale, with giant orchestras and choirs. |
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In September 1970 Britten asked Myfanwy Piper, who had adapted the two Henry James stories for him, to turn another prose story into a libretto. |
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Unlike their dolphin counterparts, they are adapted for coastal shores, bays, and estuaries. |
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Thus, speech is usually adapted and accommodated for convenience, lack of misunderstanding and conflict and the maintenance of intimacy. |
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The comprehensive range of passenger station buildings has been preserved and sympathetically adapted for use as cafes and tourist shops. |
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Over time, various cuisines have blended with indigenous dishes, while foreign ones have been adapted to local tastes. |
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These cuisines have been adapted to local tastes, and have also affected local cuisines. |
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They revived an adapted version of the production at Shakespeare's Globe in 2015 as The Mysteries. |
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These too are adapted to the low soil water content and have small, prickly leaves which reduce transpiration. |
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Peatlands are adapted to the extreme conditions of high water and low oxygen content, of toxic elements and low availability of plant nutrients. |
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Their distinctive, flattened tests and tiny spines were adapted to life on or under loose sand. |
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Many benthic copepods eat organic detritus or the bacteria that grow in it, and their mouth parts are adapted for scraping and biting. |
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Like other sea turtles, the leatherback has flattened fore limbs adapted for swimming in the open ocean. |
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For instance, seabirds are a diverse group of birds that have adapted to a life mainly on the oceans. |
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As leatherback turtles spend the vast majority of their lives in the ocean, their eyes are not well adapted to night vision on land. |
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An ecological species is a set of organisms adapted to a particular set of resources, called a niche, in the environment. |
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Some larger species, particularly those adapted to drier habitats will take larger prey including insects and small reptiles. |
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For example, the cultures in the region and the Arctic indigenous peoples have adapted to its cold and extreme conditions. |
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Surface feeders that swim often have unique bills as well, adapted for their specific prey. |
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Due to the fact they are not fully adapted to Arctic conditions, they are more vulnerable to predators, most notably polar bears. |
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In addition, the blood vessels in their flippers are adapted for countercurrent exchange. |
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The polar bear is well adapted for hunting Arctic seals and walruses, particularly pups. |
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Some Unionists in the south simply adapted and began to associate themselves with the new southern Irish regime of Cumann na nGaedheal. |
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The Chamber was adapted for use as a Parliament from its former use as a lecture theatre. |
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This book was unusual, as it was written specifically by Christopher Awdry to be adapted by the show. |
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Birds adapted to living in the marine environment are often called seabirds. |
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The limbs of this archaeocete were adapted to swimming, but terrestrial locomotion was still possible. |
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In contrast, both otters and the polar bear are much less adapted to aquatic living. |
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In some respects though, the sea otter is more fully adapted to water than pinnipeds, which must haul out on land or ice to give birth. |
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For example, the cheek teeth of pinnipeds and odontocetes are specifically adapted to capture fish and squid. |
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In this year, Charlemagne was crowned emperor and adapted his existing royal administration to live up to the expectations of his new title. |
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This car must be legal to drive on the open road, and adapted for racing on circuits or closed courses. |
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In addition, many land animals have adapted to living a major part of their life on the oceans. |
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Other birds that have adapted to oceans as their living space are penguins, seagulls and pelicans. |
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Most are specially adapted to life under the greater pressure of the water column above it, and the total darkness of the deep sea. |
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The Skagerrak is habitat for approximately 2,000 marine species, many of them adapted to its waters. |
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It is adapted to habitat made up of shifting, accreting sand layers, as well as that composed of stabilised dunes. |
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However, they were strongly built, with hands adapted for powerful grasping. |
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Some fish have specially adapted kidneys that vary in function, allowing them to move from freshwater to saltwater. |
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For a parasitic organism, its habitat is the particular part of the outside or inside of its host on or in which it is adapted to live. |
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It is highly adapted to fire, producing large amounts of flammable detritus and increasing the frequency and intensity of wildfires. |
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In Europe and Asia, the common carp frequently lives in naturally Eutrophic or Hypereutrophic areas, and is adapted to living in such conditions. |
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Combatant nations quickly adapted ships to the task of minesweeping, including Australia's 35 civilian ships that became Auxiliary Minesweepers. |
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These breakwaters have been extended and adapted so that the port lies almost entirely on reclaimed land. |
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During the 20th century, Cherbourg, a strategic point during both world wars, adapted to new threats. |
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Even when adapted to more conventional methods, the new plan provoked a storm of protest from the majority of German generals. |
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It is, however, not as adapted for a purely carnivorous diet as the Tibetan fox. |
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It is among the largest hare species and is adapted to temperate, open country. |
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They have adapted to change their pulse emission frequency in relation to their flight speed so echoes still return in the optimal hearing range. |
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Their eyesight, unlike that of their microbat relatives, is adapted to both night and daylight vision including some colour vision. |
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It has adapted to life in suburban areas and urban parks, although not to the extent of red foxes. |
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Most species have strong legs and long toes which are well adapted to soft uneven surfaces. |
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A few specialized species such as the mergansers are adapted to catch and swallow large fish. |
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In cities such as Amsterdam, they are ever present and well adapted to modern city life. |
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Well adapted to living around humans, it frequently lives and even breeds indoors, especially in factories, warehouses, and zoos. |
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Pheasants are well adapted to the British climate and breed naturally in the wild without human supervision in copses, heaths, and commons. |
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Finches have stout conical bills adapted for eating seeds and often have colourful plumage. |
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They have corpulent bodies with a rounded snout, webbed feet and long hind legs adapted for swimming in water and hopping on land. |
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Gorse is closely related to the brooms, and like them, has green stems and very small leaves and is adapted to dry growing conditions. |
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In their natural state they are adapted to mountainous areas with temperate climates. |
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Hyphae are specifically adapted for growth on solid surfaces, and to invade substrates and tissues. |
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Intertidal organisms experience a highly variable and often hostile environment, and have adapted to cope with and even exploit these conditions. |
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Mesopelagic fish are adapted for an active life under low light conditions. |
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The Antarctic toothfish have large, upward looking eyes, adapted to detecting the silhouettes of prey fish. |
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Albatrosses are so well adapted to this lifestyle that their heart rates while flying are close to their basal heart rate when resting. |
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The vast majority of humans stayed in Africa and adapted to a diverse array of environments. |
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The building was originally constructed as a movie set, but was later adapted into a church. |
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Marshes provide a habitat for many species of plants, animals, and insects that have adapted to living in flooded conditions. |
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War Horse was also adapted as a 2011 British film directed by Steven Spielberg. |
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The early divisions form most of the current counties, albeit with adapted boundaries. |
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The underside consists of a muscular foot, which has adapted to different purposes in different classes. |
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The basic body type is a terrestrial quadruped, but some mammals are adapted for life at sea, in the air, in trees, underground or on two legs. |
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While the earliest mammals were probably predators, different species have since adapted to meet their dietary requirements in a variety of ways. |
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These efforts have resulted in significant regionally adapted breeding lines and hybrids, such as the Mountain series from North Carolina. |
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The knees of many species of reindeer are adapted to produce a clicking sound as they walk. |
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Many aspects of language use can be seen to be adapted specifically to these purposes. |
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Another theory suggests that the name of one of the two groups was adapted by the other one later without any significant migration taking place. |
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Orchids have adapted to these conditions through the use of mycorrhizal fungi to extract nutrients. |
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Therefore, storytellers in England adapted legends of Charlemagne and his 12 Peers to the Arthurian tales. |
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Virtually any Swiss Standard German word can be borrowed into Swiss German, always adapted to Swiss German phonology. |
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Modern animal husbandry relies on production systems adapted to the type of land available. |
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They appear in English mythology as the Wyrdes, who were later adapted to become the Three Witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth. |
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Thus, although a male may have a well adapted Y chromosome free of excessive mutation, it may never make it in to the next gene pool. |
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It was the West that first developed steam power and adapted its use into factories, and for the generation of electric power. |
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The first is the idea of Eastern Origins, which shows how Western states have adapted and implemented learned principles from the East. |
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These ideas were adopted and adapted in western Europe to the high risks and rewards associated with colonial ventures. |
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The common ostrich is well adapted to hot, arid environments through specialization of excretory organs. |
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In the absence of monkeys and other competitors, these primates have adapted to a wide range of habitats and diversified into numerous species. |
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Most Brazilian regulations are optimized, harmonized, or adapted in order to be applicable and extended to the entire Mercosur economic zone. |
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The Spanish rendering of this geographic formation is Sierra Leona, which later was adapted and, misspelled, became the country's current name. |
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Gradually, this inland sea became a massive swampy, freshwater lake and the marine inhabitants adapted to life in freshwater. |
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The novel The Guarani is regarded as a foundational text of Brazilian Romanticism, and has been adapted twice to film. |
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Canoes can be adapted to many purposes, for example with the addition of sails, outboard motors, and outriggers. |
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Most natives adapted in 'guerrilla fashion' by only shooting at the legs of the conquistadors if they happened to be unarmored. |
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The Huguenots adapted quickly and often married outside their immediate French communities, which led to their assimilation. |
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The Atlantic tomcod are a unique species that adapted resistance to the toxic effects of the PCBs polluting the river. |
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The blue gum, as well as other species including the Harding grass, are much more flammable and better adapted to wildfires than native species. |
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Horses are herbivores with a digestive system adapted to a forage diet of grasses and other plant material, consumed steadily throughout the day. |
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As a prey species, a sheep's system is adapted to hide the obvious signs of illness, to prevent being targeted by predators. |
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The sign is possibly adapted from an Egyptian hieroglyph for a staff sling, which may have been the meaning of the name gimel. |
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Hooker worked largely from Thomas Aquinas, but he adapted scholastic thought in a latitudinarian manner. |
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Much of the legislative style was adapted from the Roman Law Code of Justinian. |
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Traditions may also be adapted to suit the needs of the day, and the changes can become accepted as a part of the ancient tradition. |
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Indeed, the ancient Roman custom of arbitration has now been adapted in many common law jurisdictions to a more inquisitorial form. |
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The last has rarely been out of print since its publication in 1813 and was adapted for the screen in the 1926 British film, Nelson. |
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The jenny was adapted for the process of slubbing, being the basis of the Slubbing Billy. |
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For accurately checking the dimensions of the gears he adapted the sector, which he developed for sale to other engineers. |
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Additional historic manufacturing and commercial buildings were adapted as residential units and office space. |
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Dogs were sometimes used on machines such as a treadmill, which could be adapted to churn butter. |
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Her memoirs were later adapted for television as Housewife, 49 starring Victoria Wood. |
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Wartime diarist and local housewife Nella Last's memoirs were adapted for television, with parts of the town used in filming. |
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Some species adapted to disturbed, sunny areas are well adapted to urban conditions and are commonly found in cities. |
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Coppice management favours a range of wildlife, often of species adapted to open woodland. |
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Ospreys have vision that is well adapted to detecting underwater objects from the air. |
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A particular set of plants and animals tend to be adapted to a relatively narrow range of climate. |
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The Hound of the Baskervilles has been adapted for radio for the BBC by Bert Coules on two occasions. |
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The story was adapted in 1977, starring Christopher Plummer as Holmes and Thorley Walters as Watson. |
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The Shell Seekers sold more than five million copies worldwide and was adapted for the stage by Terence Brady and Charlotte Bingham. |
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