In a purely spiritual sense, the two are poles apart and without the material could never be brought together in a single entity. |
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They recently renewed their acquaintance after more than 10 years apart. |
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I took apart the engine piece by piece and put it back together again. |
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He stood apart while the other members of the team celebrated. |
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They separated and have been living apart for the past year. |
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Forward players from each team line up a metre apart, perpendicular to the touchline and between 5 m and 15 m from the touchline. |
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All the group's matches were played at Wembley Stadium apart from the match between Uruguay and France which took place at White City Stadium. |
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The Olympic Games are held every four years, with the Summer and Winter Games alternating by occurring every four years but two years apart. |
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Super League has been sponsored since its formation, apart from the 2013 season. |
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But it is his dedication and commitment to the game which really sets him apart. |
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A minute or two apart on the road, they were rarely a few seconds apart on time each lap, Hailwood losing by just 2 seconds. |
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This reviewed devolution and considered all constitutional options apart from independence. |
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Late Jurassic strata are also poorly represented apart from the spectacular Tendaguru fauna in Tanzania. |
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With the end of the Cold War, the Eastern Bloc fell apart, effectively ending the Soviet sphere of influence. |
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Once formations had fallen apart, stragglers could be picked off one by one. |
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This provision usually applies, apart from torture, to cases of severe police violence and poor conditions in detention. |
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From the seventeenth century the shires started to be used for local administration apart from judicial functions. |
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Unlike common law systems, civil law jurisdictions deal with case law apart from any precedent value. |
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In 1657, he pumped the air out of two conjoined hemispheres and demonstrated that a team of sixteen horses were incapable of pulling it apart. |
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Again I assert the Right of Trespass on any plot of Holy Ground which any man has set apart. |
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The two strands of DNA in a double helix can thus be pulled apart like a zipper, either by a mechanical force or high temperature. |
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If they are twisted in the opposite direction, this is negative supercoiling, and the bases come apart more easily. |
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The UIC classification is used mostly in European countries apart from the United Kingdom. |
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It applies to all water intended for human consumption apart from natural mineral waters and waters which are medicinal products. |
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In 1950, the UK standard of living was higher than in any EEC country apart from Belgium. |
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Nothing else is known of him, apart from one peculiar incident discovered by William Matthews. |
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Overcoming his despair, he fetches arms, tools and other supplies from the ship before it breaks apart and sinks. |
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Wells was a friend of many years, and tried to intervene when Barrie's marriage fell apart. |
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The Who were not close friends either, apart from Moon and Entwistle, who enjoyed visiting nightclubs together in the West End of London. |
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In the late 1990s, the EPs released by the band had characteristics of dream pop, setting them apart from later studio albums. |
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The recording of Heathen Chemistry was much more balanced for the band, with all of the members, apart from White, writing songs. |
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The song, apart from becoming a hit around Europe and Latin America, caused sales of his album to skyrocket. |
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In the final quarter the Bravehearts fell apart, leaking in 21 points to lose the match. |
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These were growing industrial centres, and apart from the lack of a charter, they had identical powers and privileges to the royal burghs. |
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There were no sports or fraternities and few extracurricular activities apart from literary societies. |
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However, apart from placenames, little remains of their presence on Skye in the written or archaeological record. |
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In these instances, not only the crust, but also entire tectonic plates, are in the process of breaking apart to create new plates. |
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This is what set Europe apart from the technologically advanced, large unitary empires such as China and India. |
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After this period, the hatching activity accelerates and the shell is broken apart in 35 hours. |
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Mated pairs produce one to three eggs per year, laid two to five days apart in March or April and incubated for 38 days by both parents. |
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The noded philosophy is also about flexibility and efficiency in collaboration, especially among people who are geographically far apart. |
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They share a set of grammatical features that set them apart from all other Slavic languages. |
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The Renaissance architecture is almost absent in the region, apart in Upper Brittany, close to the border with France. |
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Networked and regional programming is the same in both regions, apart from regional news and advertising. |
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Because each major was developed and is run by a different organization, they each have different characteristics that set them apart. |
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Asquith, the Liberal leader in the House, took up the allegations and attacked Lloyd George, which further ripped apart the Liberal Party. |
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If two rigid sections of a glacier move at different speeds and directions, shear forces cause them to break apart, opening a crevasse. |
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Gildas and that the discrepancies between the two versions can be accounted for by the fact that they were written several centuries apart. |
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Gunhild had taken great pleasure in pointing out that, after today, she, too, would sit there, since Norsewomen ate apart from the men. |
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It is distinguished from the harbor seal by its straight head profile, nostrils set well apart, and fewer spots on its body. |
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It has, apart from minor realignments, identical borders to the former county. |
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This created a major social scandal and set her apart from many of her former close friends such as Augusta Hall. |
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The water flowing down the tunnel towards the cages is real, apart from the fact it now flows down a channel rather than over the miners feet. |
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The slices have a tendency to fall apart, due to the layered structure of the leek. |
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Wrexham has a fierce rivalry with Chester, the clubs are just 10 miles apart, but are English and Welsh respectively. |
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When this happens, the coral organisms are smothered and the reef dies and ultimately breaks apart. |
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It can be challenging to tell male and female apart in the wild for many cetacean species. |
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Prey that is too large or awkward is taken to the surface to be torn apart. |
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However, the climate shifted and became more humid as Pangaea began to drift apart. |
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A rift is a region where the lithosphere extends as two parts of the Earth's crust pull apart. |
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Sometimes a sheen or gloss is used as well as color to set the contour lines apart from the base map. |
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The sea otters eat while floating on their backs, using their forepaws to tear food apart and bring to their mouths. |
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Some islands lie on sections of continental crust that have rifted and drifted apart from a main continental landmass. |
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In this parliament, apart from the nobles and military commanders, also sat the representatives of each township and village. |
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However, the ocean liner fell apart after some years and parts of ship washed away. |
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In geology, a rift is a linear zone where the lithosphere is being pulled apart and is an example of extensional tectonics. |
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The ligament provides tension to bring the valves apart, while one or two adductor muscles can contract to close the valves. |
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The northeast coast of England was largely unsettled by Roman civilians apart from the Tyne valley and Hadrian's Wall. |
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In the Kingdom of France, the duchy was occasionally set apart as an apanage to be ruled by a member of the royal family. |
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In general terms, the angular difference between satellites in each orbit is 30, 105, 120, and 105 degrees apart, which sum to 360 degrees. |
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In Alexandria, apart from the Patriarchate, there is a Patriarchal theology school that opened recently after 480 years being closed. |
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A type of basin formed by the moving apart of two pieces of a continent is called a rift basin. |
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Their toes are long, and are webbed to keep from spreading apart as the animal jumps. |
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Orchidaceae are cosmopolitan, occurring in almost every habitat apart from glaciers. |
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On time scales lasting hundreds of millions of years, the supercontinents have assembled and broken apart. |
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It assembled from earlier continental units approximately 335 million years ago, and it began to break apart about 175 million years ago. |
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Fossil evidence for Pangaea includes the presence of similar and identical species on continents that are now great distances apart. |
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Divergent boundaries also form volcanic islands which occur when the plates move apart to produce gaps which molten lava rises to fill. |
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In order for zooplankton to have a continuous food supply, the phytoplankton blooms must not occur too far apart. |
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This event happened in less than 10,000 years and occurred just before Pangaea started to break apart. |
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It is known that sea level is generally low when the continents are together and high when they are apart. |
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They appeared to have been strung, but on taking them up the miner let them drop apart. |
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The pirates of the early eighteenth century, however, were men who acted on their own apart from official political sanction. |
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Finally, gas particles spread apart or diffuse in order to homogeneously distribute themselves throughout any container. |
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The two parallel road bridges are four miles apart, with the Bourne Bridge to the west, and the Sagamore to the east. |
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Eventually Tristan cannot stand to be apart from Isolde any longer and they start their adulterous relationship. |
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The two brothers were never reconciled and although both are now buried in the same cemetery, they are spaced as far apart as possible. |
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All regional news bulletins broadcast from BBC regional news bases around England ended in August 1980 apart from in the south west. |
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Events such as these contributed to a drift apart between the British government and many of its subjects in the Thirteen Colonies. |
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In 1642, at the commencement of the English Civil War, the Royalists took control of the entire county apart from Poole and Lyme Regis. |
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In hunting larger prey, crocodiles swarm in, with one holding the prey down as the others rip it apart. |
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Sir Richard's marriage quickly fell apart, and the couple's only child, a son, died in infancy. |
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If the rowlocks are too far apart then the boat will be overly large and rowing will be inefficient, wasting a rower's effort. |
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New Zealand English is similar to Australian English and many speakers from the Northern Hemisphere are unable to tell the accents apart. |
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The use of basic technology is also a feature of other animal species apart from humans. |
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Even though standard Swedish and Danish were moving apart, the dialects were not influenced that much. |
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The Triumvirate was eventually torn apart by the competing ambitions of its members. |
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This marked the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century, a time period in which the Roman empire came close to falling apart entirely. |
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The Nordic states had been neutral during World War I, but during World War II they could no longer stand apart from world politics. |
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Within Belgium the Flemings form a clearly distinguishable group, set apart by their language and customs. |
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Cranach, apart from portraits, developed a format of thin vertical portraits of provocative nudes, given classical or Biblical titles. |
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Their native places were over a thousand li apart, and there were a thousand years between them. |
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According to the story, Alexander proclaimed that it did not matter how the knot was undone and hacked it apart with his sword. |
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At this level, science and magic are poles apart and yet they are the same. |
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These, apart from nocturnal ambulism, are the simplest conditions of systematised partial waking. |
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A handful of examples apart, an English preposition precedes its complement. |
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In the chaos after the bomb went off, I was forced to tear apart my shirt to use as bandaging. |
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I was living at home at her age, by and large doing what my parents told me, apart from beaking school. |
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All the joists and bridgings of the mezzanine floor to have stout double herringbone strutting not more than 6 feet apart. |
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To the left the caravan animals, securely picketed, at regular distances of some fifteen yards apart, occupied an area of several acres. |
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The three of them could hardly tell themselves apart, became a sort of congeries of loving emotions, all mutually complementary. |
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Water damage caused the plywood of the floor to delaminate. The layers came apart and the whole piece had to be replaced. |
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Nicholas and his black-masked companions waited with feet planted apart as the dungeon master fumbled for his key ring. |
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The advent of email has simultaneously brought our society closer together and farther apart. |
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Their rulers, politicians, revolutions set apart, and this horrible engouement for Bonaparte. |
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Like C. S. Lewis's Narnia, the southwest tip of Michigan is an accessible escapeland, just an hour and a half from the city yet worlds apart. |
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There was old Tommy with his back to the dining-room door, his Glengarry awry on his tousled head, and his bandy legs stretched firmly apart. |
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Quite apart from the gruesome road hazards, snow is awful even when you don't have to travel. |
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The first border between Wales and England was zonal, apart from around the River Wye, which was the first accepted boundary. |
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As with the other regions of England, apart from Greater London, the south east has no elected government. |
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Many characteristics set it apart from the other works of Tacitus, so that its authenticity has at various times been questioned. |
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Posidonius and Strabo described an island of women where men could not venture for fear of death, and where the women ripped each other apart. |
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The death of Crassus removed some of the balance in the Triumvirate and, consequently, Caesar and Pompey began to move apart. |
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Further, you will not acieve your anything by posting idiotistic threads like these, apart from resorting to spam and swearing. |
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Constantine II ruled Scotland, apart from the southwest, which was the British Kingdom of Strathclyde. |
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Thus by 1057 the Godwin brothers controlled all of England subordinately apart from Mercia. |
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John lost control of all his continental possessions, apart from Gascony in southern Aquitaine. |
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If you stack high columns of these boxes without using interleafs they'll fall apart. |
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Children being born in this country, just a few miles apart, couldn't witness a more wildly differing start to life. |
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The Act in Restraint of Appeals, drafted by Cromwell, apart from outlawing appeals to Rome on ecclesiastical matters, declared that. |
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England in this era had some positive aspects that set it apart from contemporaneous continental European societies. |
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The jarred peppers should be firm enough to dice without falling apart under your knife. |
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He spent the summer reconnoitring the French coast, but apart from a failed attack on Boulogne in August, saw little action. |
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The marriage would prove to be unsatisfactory and the two would spend years apart while Wellesley was campaigning. |
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They lived apart for most of the time and occupied separate rooms in the house when they were together. |
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Britain itself was now just one part of the NATO military alliance in which the Commonwealth had no role apart from Canada. |
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Its decisions are binding on all courts, including itself, apart from the Supreme Court. |
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The Hunnic threat remained until Attila's death in 453, when the Hunnic confederation he led fell apart. |
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Around 1866, William Low and Sir John Hawkshaw promoted ideas, but apart from preliminary geological studies none were implemented. |
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The major landmark in Folkestone, apart from the harbour, is the Leas, the cliffs above the beach. |
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Liverpool has more galleries and national museums than any other city in the United Kingdom apart from London. |
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There is little evidence of Roman occupation apart from two fortlets on the coast. |
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Thinner timber transoms were used to keep the baulks the correct distance apart. |
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A decision had to be made about how far apart the rails of the double track should be. |
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Stationary steam engines in fixed buildings may have the boiler and engine in separate buildings some distance apart. |
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All lighting columns from Junctions 10 to 14 have now been removed completely, apart from some slip roads. |
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If the tracks are further apart, poles on either side with span wire are used. |
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This was necessary as at points the two tracks are several miles apart and some destinations can only be accessed from one of the lines. |
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Nowadays most schools pay little regard to family connections, apart from siblings currently at the school. |
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Every pupil at Winchester, apart from the Scholars, lives in a boarding house, chosen or allocated when applying to Winchester. |
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They now tended to dominate their cities from opulent palaces and country villas, set a little apart from traditional centers of public life. |
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Burmese curries almost overwhelmingly lack coconut milk, setting them apart from most southeast Asian curries. |
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Moore's works are usually suggestive of the female body, apart from a phase in the 1950s when he sculpted family groups. |
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Puck distracts Lysander and Demetrius from fighting over Helena's love by mimicking their voices and leading them apart. |
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Milton had come to stand apart from all sects, though apparently finding the Quakers most congenial. |
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Paine's new justification of property sets him apart from previous theorists such as Hugo Grotius, Samuel von Pufendorf, and John Locke. |
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Their marriage began to fall apart in 1901 when it occurred to Russell, while he was cycling, that he no longer loved her. |
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What set apart this and following collections was full musical score along with an adequate stock of lyrics. |
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His presence as an exclusive performer of sailor songs did much to establish sea music as a revival genre apart from or within folk music. |
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The early operetta Paul Bunyan stands apart from Britten's later operatic works. |
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The film was released to cinemas in 1974 but until now it was never available for home release apart from the numerous bootleg copies. |
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Cuju players could use any part of the body apart from hands and the intent was kicking a ball through an opening into a net. |
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An aerodrome, chiefly of steel, weighing, apart from fuel and water, about twenty-four pounds, was launched on the Potomac River on May 6, 1896, and flew for over half a mile. |
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With the addition of South Sudan 14 July 2011, there are 193 UN member states, including all undisputed independent states apart from Vatican City. |
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Treivus has pointed out that the anentropy, apart from a constant factor is equal to the chemical affinity for one componenent in a themodynamic system. |
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Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness. |
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In this definition, Western culture is the set of literary, scientific, political, artistic and philosophical principles which set it apart from other civilizations. |
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When Cromwell died in 1658, the Commonwealth fell apart without major violence, and Charles II was restored as King of England, Scotland, and Ireland. |
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The Southern Ocean, geologically the youngest of the oceans, was formed when Antarctica and South America moved apart, opening the Drake Passage, roughly 30 million years ago. |
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The theory was breath-catching, but quickly fell apart when the accountant could give no account of what Sibyl might have done with Theresa's body. |
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British Citizens have similar rights to Irish Citizens in the Republic of Ireland and can vote in all elections apart from presidential elections and referendums. |
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England's World Cup dreams fell apart under a French onslaught on a night when their shortcomings were brutally exposed at the quarter-final stage. |
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Wightman proposed that apart from such theories, it may be possible that the reasons for the situation reported by Caesar may have been more political. |
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In 1931 MacDonald's government fell apart in response to the Great Depression, and the Liberals agreed to join his National Government, dominated by the Conservatives. |
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The crownings of the two successive monarchs were only a year apart. |
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The hectic nature of the French Revolution, however, tore apart France's old army, meaning new men were required to become officers and commanders. |
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By 1911 Wilhelm had completely picked apart the careful power balance established by Bismarck and Britain turned to France in the Entente Cordiale. |
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Chinese exports had been seriously disrupted by civil wars as the Ming dynasty fell apart, and the Japanese exports increased rapidly to fill the gap. |
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But his attendance there fell apart, first when his father, a worker in a motor-tyre factory, was endorsed out of the town on an Order under the Urban Areas Act. |
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The quarterback picked apart the secondary defense in the first half. |
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Additionally, after these separations, it has also been discovered that the separated land masses may have also continued to break apart multiple times. |
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My old briefcase is falling apart. I'll have to buy a new one. |
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In telegraphic succession, the parents two-step, Charleston, lindy, twist, and frug, their dance harmony always splintered apart by their offspring. |
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But fashion and authority apart, and bringing Plato to the test of reason, take from him, his sophisms, futilities, and incomprehensibilities, and what remains? |
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Quite apart from the rules of precedent, the weight actually given to any reported judgment may depend on the reputation of both the reporter and the judges. |
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It took the combined skills of three great civilizations far apart in time to frame that godlike concept in which the tangible universe itself was only a single factor. |
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They've been going out for three years now, but still live apart. |
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Growing up in a family that included 12 brothers and sisters, Harmony James needed to find something that set her apart from the crowd. And boy did she succeed in that one. |
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In the 1800s and early 1900s, once great and powerful Empires such as Spain, Ottoman Turkey, the Mughal Empire, and the Kingdom of Portugal began to break apart. |
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Military port activity ceased in the early 1960s, when most of the military infrastructure was abandoned, then dismantled, apart from the pier and lighterage wharf. |
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This includes all animals apart from the subphylum Vertebrata. |
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Buoyed by his success as a research student, he would be free, apart from some tutoring and examining duties, to pursue scientific interests at his own leisure. |
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The function of the spiral thread is uncertain, but it may absorb stress when prey tries to escape, and thus prevent the collobast from being torn apart. |
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This species can be distinguished from other scoters, apart from black scoter, by the lack of white anywhere on the drake and the more extensive pale areas on the female. |
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Just over a minute after the third stage had burned out, the payload was released, and gas generators were used to push the spacecraft and spent upper stage apart. |
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As the difference between them is mainly distinguished by the length of the pectoral fins and tooth counts, it is extremely hard to tell the two species apart in these areas. |
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His Liberal party was increasingly pulled apart on the Irish issue. |
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In radio, British audiences had no choice apart from the upscale programming of the BBC, a government agency which had a monopoly on broadcasting. |
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At divergent boundaries, two plates move apart from each other and the space that this creates is filled with new crustal material sourced from molten magma that forms below. |
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The main island and Middle Eye are less than a hundred yards apart. |
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The islands are uninhabited apart from the personnel of a weather station. |
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The Jurassic North Atlantic Ocean was relatively narrow, while the South Atlantic did not open until the following Cretaceous period, when Gondwana itself rifted apart. |
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Given that their material culture was very similar to their Gaelic and Anglian neighbours, it is arguable that what set them apart was still their language. |
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William's mother showed little personal interest in her son, sometimes being absent for years, and had always deliberately kept herself apart from Dutch society. |
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His legacy, apart from writing the Savoy operas and his other works, is felt perhaps most strongly today through his influence on the American and British musical theatre. |
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It has the second largest fleet of ballistic missile submarines and is the only country apart from the United States with a modern strategic bomber force. |
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The eggshell structure is very conservative through evolution but there are enough changes to tell different species apart by their eggshell microstructure. |
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Confusingly, such districts sometimes have city status, and so for example the City of Canterbury contains several towns apart from Canterbury, which have distinct identities. |
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Older seamounts east of these hotspot trails formed at the edge of the African swell where the oceanic crust was spreading apart and are not the product of hotspot volcanism. |
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If knaidl is dark in the center, ascertain whether this is the horseradish filling or an uncooked part. Don't overcook the knaidlach or they will fall apart. |
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As Pangea split apart, the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico opened. |
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As a result of being addicted to heroin, she was falling apart. |
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Quite apart from the rules of precedent, the weight actually given to any reported judgment may depend on the reputation of both the court and the judges. |
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These are almost the only paintings from the classical world that have survived, apart from frescos, though many sculptures and portraits on coins have fared better. |
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They are nearly all of animals, apart from one, which is a pineapple. |
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Some Arctic species like Gynaephora groenlandica have special basking and aggregation behaviours apart from physiological adaptations to remain in a dormant state. |
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In terms of media coverage, apart from Challenge Cup matches rugby league is not shown on Scottish terrestrial television and no matches are usually broadcast on radio. |
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Sure, as the captain of your ship, you are the one to blame when things go wrong or fall apart, but you are also large and in charge when they go well. |
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A lake is an area filled with water, localized in a basin, that is surrounded by land, apart from any river or other outlet that serves to feed or drain the lake. |
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The Highways Agency is the executive agency responsible for trunk roads and motorways in England apart from the privately owned and operated M6 Toll. |
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It has also been found One article suggests that other senses, apart from vision, need to be targeted when trying to communicate a brand with consumers. |
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It is his lesbophilia that sets Proust's narrator apart from the author, that marks the novel as a novel rather than a perverse exercise in selective autobiography. |
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He became the only man apart from Groves and his second in command to have access to all the American research and production facilities for the uranium bomb. |
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By 679, the Northumbrian hegemony was beginning to fall apart. |
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Some books that are set apart in the Masoretic Text are grouped together. |
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The Swedes were not militarily defeated at Fredriksten, but the whole structure and organisation of the campaign fell apart with the king's death, and the army withdrew. |
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The Napoleonic invasions of Spain led to chaos, triggering independence movements that tore apart most of the empire and left the country politically unstable. |
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A rift valley is formed on a divergent plate boundary, a crustal extension, a spreading apart of the surface, which is subsequently further deepened by the forces of erosion. |
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By contrast, a double track with signal boxes four minutes apart can allow up to 15 trains per hour in each direction, provided all the trains travel at the same speed. |
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When the tensional forces were strong enough to cause the plate to split apart, a center block dropped between the two blocks at its flanks, forming a graben. |
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The Empire did not inherit a set bureaucracy from the Republic, since the Republic did not have any permanent governmental structures apart from the Senate. |
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But, apart from such beings as fairies, who are created with magical powers, it is virtually impossible for any individual to have all-encompassing ability in magicology. |
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The Norwegian Sea was formed about 250 million years ago, when the Eurasian plate of Norway and the North American Plate, including Greenland, started to move apart. |
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The adoption of this compromise likely would have prevented the secession of every southern state apart from South Carolina, but Lincoln and the Republicans rejected it. |
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He believed that, though work on ancient history is a useful preparation for the study of modern history, either may advantageously be studied apart. |
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The exterior, apart from the modified windows, gives the impression of a massive Norman building and indeed, it is the longest medieval church in the world. |
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Males and females typically live apart, but close to each other. |
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The combined vision of education and exhibition to establish a national school of art set the Royal Academy apart from the other exhibiting societies. |
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Conventionally, the South Guelderish dialects are distinguished from Brabantian, but there are no objective criteria apart from geography to do so. |
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All of these deposits are in international waters apart from the Penrhyn Basin, which lies within the exclusive economic zone of the Cook Islands. |
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A disadvantage was that it split apart the integrated military command structure which before had balanced the importance of the navy within overall defence considerations. |
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He wrote it not as a quick pamphlet but as a long, abstract political tract of 90,000 words that tore apart monarchies and traditional social institutions. |
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The American Academy of General Dentistry says that noncola carbonated beverages and canned iced tea harm tooth enamel, especially when consumed apart from meals. |
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The combined effect of the wind and the tides can generate a rapid change of weather in a single day, with sun and rain which can be a few hours apart. |
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Brass fasteners are commonly available but apart from being softer and weaker the common brass alloys are much more prone to corrosion through depletion of their zinc content. |
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Nearly all fish are predator fish to some measure, and apart from the top predators, the distinction between predator fish and prey or forage fish is somewhat artificial. |
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In terms of archaeology, language, lifestyle, and religion there was little to set the Phoenicians apart as markedly different from other residents of the Levant. |
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At local level, the councils are generally divided, apart from the Wakefield district, which has long been one of the safest Labour councils in the country. |
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There was a trial assembly made of the iron framework of the dome in Manchester, then it was taken apart again and transported to London via horse and cart. |
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By 1938, the couple had drifted apart, as both focused heavily on their work, although Goddard was again his leading lady in his next feature film, The Great Dictator. |
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Selznick thought that not only was she more suitable for the role, but that it was best to keep Olivier and Leigh apart until their divorces came through. |
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One of the most persistent criticisms of the National Gallery, apart from those who criticise inadequacies of the building, has been of its conservation policy. |
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Two city living however has its own flipside, not the least the difficulty straddling the two different cultures of two cities that are poles apart. |
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Most of the surface buildings have been removed, and apart from a winding wheel outside Radstock Museum, little evidence of their former existence remains. |
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He may have controlled all Wales apart from Gwent and Morgannwg. |
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Since then Chelsea have always worn white socks with their home kit apart from a short spell from 1985 to 1992, when blue socks were reintroduced. |
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Unusual for snakes, the sexes are possible to tell apart by the colour. |
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All of the lordships of the Hundreds of Cornwall belonged, and still belong, to the Duchy of Cornwall, apart from Penwith which belonged to the Arundells of Lanherne. |
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In 2006, apart from appearances in the Masters and at the Open Championship, Faldo played in only two other events on the European Tour that year. |
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Evidence of the original broad gauge can still be seen at many places where bridges are a wider than usual, or where tracks are ten feet apart instead of the usual six. |
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We have no specific concept of the noumenon, but think of it merely as whatever the object may be apart from the manner in which our knowledge exhibits it. |
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