We trembled from the initial bolt of lightning to the moment when the quickened corpse stirred, arose and lurched from the laboratory table. |
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He added that they had monitored the stream up to Tubbercurry and it appeared that the problem arose in the vicinity of the town. |
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All the inmates had to be protected and watched over, and any problems that arose would have to be sorted out at once. |
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A deafening cheer arose from the cockpit as the Snow Eagle dropped out of warp space right next to them. |
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The police argue that some of the tactical errors arose out of more fundamental problems with the system that need to be addressed. |
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On the part of the wife it arose from her conscious decision to let matters lie for a considerable period of time. |
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There was little in Georgian or Abkhaz national mythology to explain the depth of hatred that arose during the conflict there. |
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Other results arose from his study of how to defend against kamikaze bombers. |
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In both the West and East there arose a network of almshouses for the poor, old-age shelters, medical hospitals, and orphanages. |
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There was also a benefit for many banks from fees which arose when borrowers refinanced their mortgages because of lower interest rates. |
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The problems arose because people were abdicating responsibility and were not getting the right person to do the job. |
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The time for completion expired in 2001 and the right of re-entry arose on that date. |
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Reggae music arose from the streets of Kingston and reverberates around the world. |
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This practice arose with the change in value of the preceding vowel at the time of the Great Vowel Shift, after which the final e fell silent. |
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He said the intent of the clause was merely to ensure that the committee would continue operating when problems arose. |
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Perhaps my disappointment arose because I went in with a wide-angle lens on my camera and a preconception of vertical walls and clear waters. |
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The Katangese were thus restricted to exercising a variant of self-determination and no issue arose under the African Charter. |
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The Walkman arose from a coincidental brainwave by Sony's three famous co founders. |
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He said the problem arose when businesses began to grow and owners found it difficult to pass on the extra workload. |
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The biggest problems arose in cases where people were building their homes by direct labour. |
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As the nineteenth century drew to a close, disputes arose between the Kanaka and those of foreign descent. |
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The two authors discussed the coding and when disagreements arose the transcripts were restudied and discussed until a consensus was reached. |
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It was a well attended meeting and what arose from it was the success of the youth discos over the year. |
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We enjoyed bruschetta so much that we kept ordering it whenever the occasion arose. |
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The dispute arose from a one day walk-out in 2001, which was called after employees were balloted on a pay cut. |
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In this case the problem arose because the judge knew the Chief Constable who was a witness for the prosecution. |
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There I continued to watch people and to drink vanilla lattes, but also gained the ability to look something up as the need arose. |
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But in this case there was the agreement and the demand arose by reason of that. |
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Similar new castes have been established as the need arose by gurus and priests throughout Hindu history. |
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For instance the Irish linen industry arose because British textile barons successfully lobbied to kill the Irish cotton industry. |
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Coroner Nicholas Rheinberg said the accident arose from a chain of tragic incidents. |
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Critics of the scheme maintain this would prevent regulators from taking action against a person if a problem arose in a particular case. |
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It is likely that most of the conspirators had details of the plot drip-fed to them as the need arose. |
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The situation arose from the lateness of his instructions for which his clients must accept responsibility. |
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The need for the Thames Estuary sea forts arose in the last war on account of the mining of our waters with magnetic mines. |
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A riotous round of applause arose from the crowd, congratulating Will. |
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Feeling like she should get up and do something, other then laze around all day, she arose and wandered about the guildhall's many corridors quietly. |
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It opens with a bombastic set piece, but it was far less compelling than many of the little, dialogue-driven conflicts that arose. |
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Trouble arose most frequently in maintaining the delicate visual balance between the engraved image and the transparent layers of watercolor applied over it. |
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I knew I caught a whiff of something flammable in the office air Friday afternoon when a cacophony of squawking arose from a neighboring borough of Cubeville. |
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But this Arcadian vision arose in spite of a volatile modern history. |
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A great scruple arose even in the minds of the most confident Assassinates, whether the nocent and the innocent might be destroyed and perish together. |
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So yea and verily it came to pass, like a storm force wind from the breath of God, a great wailing and gnashing of teeth arose from the multitude. |
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Consequently, haemodynamic and arrhythmic complications arose, with the need for repeat catheterisation and revascularisation, prolonged hospital stay, and increased costs. |
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Louis sprang to his feet and I arose also, and flung the paper marked with the Yellow Sign to the ground. |
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There arose the likelihood that the monster had committed both attacks and might strike again. |
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The need for the new predischarge ward arose in the context of attempting to address the shortage of bed accommodation in St. Luke's General Hospital. |
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Trouble arose after the final whistle when a gang of 200 to 300 Leeds supporters gathered outside in wait for Cardiff fans leaving the Elland Road stadium. |
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Many linguists argue instead that language arose independently of music. |
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In several cases, serious complications arose, and at least one death was documented. |
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The familiar notion of the press as a watchdog for government only arose much later. |
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Further problems arose when the health authorities made a highly critical assessment and withdrew the surgical unit's status as a training facility for junior doctors. |
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That case was cited in Pirelli in support of the argument that, since in that case there was economic loss when the chimney was built, the cause of action arose then. |
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As always, the NRA suggests it is some kind of grassroots organization that arose out of a common concern. |
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The idea was rejected because it would have proved too costly and, additionally, after difficulties arose with getting permission to use the land. |
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When the opportunity to rejoin Bedford arose, he jumped at the chance. |
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Patterson decided that meant they just left the eaglets at the mercy of whatever danger arose. |
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As a member of the baby boomer generation, who was immunized as a child against smallpox, is that immunity still good, or would we have to be revaccinated if the need arose? |
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Eventually the partnership was wound up and a dispute arose as to what should happen to the property that the parties co-owned for their business purposes. |
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Ghost Hawk arose like a mist from the estuary salt-marsh on the South Shore where she built her island home. |
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But the shuttle was still the launch vehicle that government programs were required to use, and it was subsidized in a manner to make sure no commercial competitors arose. |
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The question arose as to who would be responsible for caring for our grandmother. |
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Several days out, however, a storm arose and the vessel was driven before the wind in a constant southerly direction, headed toward the South Pole. |
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Similar practices arose in other east European states, China, and Cuba. |
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Rebellion over the rule of the English Crown arose and Dafydd was joined by Llywelyn. |
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It arose as a fusion of the imported Roman culture with that of the indigenous Britons, a people of Celtic language and custom. |
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Following the First World War and the establishment of the League of Nations, the need for codification of international law arose. |
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Rather, it arose because the credit expansion created the illusion of such an increase. |
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In its most extreme form, this theory claims myths arose to explain rituals. |
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He speculated that myths arose due to the lack of abstract nouns and neuter gender in ancient languages. |
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The genus arose some time in the Late Oligocene to Early Miocene epochs, in the Iberian peninsula and adjacent areas of southwest Europe. |
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Subgenus Hermione in turn arose in the southwestern mediterranean and north west Africa. |
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Conflict arose over renovating Calder Hall and preserving the towers, but costs effectively defeated all attempts to do so. |
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As a result, the Armorican peninsula was renamed Brittany, Celtic culture was revived and independent petty kingdoms arose in this region. |
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In the late 19th century nationalist movements arose in the Philippines and Cuba. |
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They arose along the breakers' edge where the water surge piled up sediment, and behind which sediment was carried away by the breaking waves. |
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Over time, shoals arose, which ultimately were only covered by infrequent storm floods. |
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The Danish Islands, the next in the chain to the north, arose from sandbanks. |
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A local rebellion arose in the north, and it became increasingly clear that Warwick was unable to rule through the King. |
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Other terms arose during periods of conflict between the colonizers and indigenous peoples. |
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Mass extinctions seem to be a mainly Phanerozoic phenomenon, with extinction rates low before large complex organisms arose. |
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This means that Northern Hemisphere species arose over a land area roughly six times greater than was available to South American species. |
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The first debates about the nature of human evolution arose between Thomas Henry Huxley and Richard Owen. |
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Over time a large civil rights movement arose to bring full civil rights and equality under the law to all Americans. |
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For Darwin, the problem was how species arose from a common ancestor, but he did not attempt to find rules for delineation of species. |
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At the end of the war, a transport vacuum arose when the Ministry of Shipping withdrew the wartime service between St Mary's and Penzance. |
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Although this type of programming arose from necessity it has given the station diversity. |
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A legal dispute arose in 1966 regarding a record contract that Hendrix had entered into the previous year with producer Ed Chalpin. |
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The first amniotes apparently arose in the Pennsylvanian subperiod of the Carboniferous. |
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As a result, there arose court cases throughout the 1990s where excluded people demanded that their Aboriginality be recognised. |
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Empirical temperature scales are historically older, while theoretically based scales arose in the middle of the nineteenth century. |
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This was the feudal system, in which new princes and kings arose, the greatest of which was the Frank ruler Charlemagne. |
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At the end of his reign quarrels arose with his Roman subjects and the Byzantine emperor Justin I over the Arianism issue. |
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He was uniquely poised to fight the Byzantine Empire when that conflict arose after Charlemagne's imperial coronation and a Venetian rebellion. |
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The popularity of German identity arose in the aftermath of the French Revolution. |
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The importance of this trade relationship led to military action when disputes arose. |
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Founded and ruled by a Varangian warrior elite and their descendants, the medieval state of Rus arose in the 9th century. |
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In 58 BC, trouble arose in the Gallic provinces, sparking one of the most important wars of Caesar's career. |
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However, in the 18th century, due to their mastery of shipping and commerce, a wealthy and dispersed Greek merchant class arose. |
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Controversy over Arianism arose in the late 3rd century and persisted throughout most of the 4th century. |
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Additionally, a dispute arose between Attila and Aetius about the rightful heir to a king of the Salian Franks. |
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Concepts of what is the West arose out of legacies of the Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Roman Empire. |
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It was with these intellectual discoveries and technological advances that the nation state arose. |
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For others, the nation existed first, then nationalist movements arose for sovereignty, and the nation state was created to meet that demand. |
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Tensions between the new administration and the ethnic German minority arose in the Polish Corridor. |
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They thought Negroid pigmentation arose because of the heat of the tropical sun. |
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The other two races arose by survivors' escaping in different directions after a major catastrophe hit the earth 5,000 years ago. |
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Mercantilism arose in France in the early 16th century soon after the monarchy had become the dominant force in French politics. |
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In the first years of the Republic, controversy arose within the Reformed Church, mainly around the subject of predestination. |
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This changed the former balance of power, and new conflicts arose between the southern populations and Moors. |
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While Ibn Battuta visited a mosque on shore, a storm arose and one of the ships of his expedition sank. |
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Medieval surgery arose from a foundation created from Ancient Egyptian, Greek and Arabic medicine. |
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Disputes arose between the Portuguese and the Castilians regarding control along the African coast. |
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Others arose through the faulty positioning of actual islands, or other errors in geography. |
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Although a smaller proportion of the population of Cuba was enslaved, at times slaves arose in revolt. |
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A danger now arose in the shape of a conspiracy by the deposed despots, the Orsini, and of some of Cesare's own condottieri. |
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However, a conflict soon arose between the Portuguese traders and the established Arab merchant guilds in the city. |
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The Inca civilization arose from the highlands of Peru sometime in the early 13th century. |
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In its stead arose the independent taifa principalities under the rule of local Muladi, Arab, Berber, or Slavonic leaders. |
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The racial and social segregation that arose from Spanish colonialism has continued to the modern era. |
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Fortunately, a strong wind arose at this point and scattered the pursuing Ming fleet. |
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The Quartodeciman controversy, the first of several Easter controversies, arose concerning the date on which the holiday should be celebrated. |
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New cities arose near the Caribbean and Gulf coasts, and new trade networks were formed. |
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Though the Spaniards had halted the Azrtec wars and human sacrifices an unexpected problem arose. |
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Amid the economic crisis and Barletta's efforts to calm the country's creditors, street protests arose, and so did military repression. |
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Also compelling was the possibility of missionary work, an opportunity that rarely arose in a Protestant stronghold. |
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In the 1960s proposals were made for a bridge across the Sunda Strait and in the 1990s further suggestions arose. |
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These Neolithic civilizations, known as the Yellow River and Yangtze civilizations, arose millennia ago. |
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However, a widespread problem of malnutrition soon arose wherever maize was introduced as a staple food. |
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Some scholars believe that Modern Orthodoxy arose from the religious and social realities of Western European Jewry. |
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Another factor conducive to printing arose from the book existing in the format of the codex, which had originated in the Roman period. |
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In particular, the long vowels sometimes arose from short vowels, via Middle English open syllable lengthening or other processes. |
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Abrahamism arose in an artificially Abrahamized Europe as a schizophrenic rejection of the incontrovertible excesses of religious Abrahamism. |
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The sun of righteousness arose, dispersed the clouds of darkness, and poured noonday affulgence into the dungeon of the tomb. |
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This idea arose in view of the anomotreme pollen-grains studded with apertures. |
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Historically, the formalism which first arose for the material we discuss is that of measured foliations in surfaces. |
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We may find ourselves going through stages foretyped by the forerunner and pioneer of our faith even as He died and arose again. |
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All three families arose in the Northern Hemisphere and, except for a few of the more derived goerids, are confined to that hemisphere. |
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However, many modern surnames derived from old Welsh personal names actually arose in England. |
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The jurisdiction of Parliament arose from the ancient custom of petitioning the Houses to redress grievances and to do justice. |
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In the High Middle Ages, new sources of education arose, with song and grammar schools. |
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The development of hill forts may have occurred due to greater tensions that arose between the better structured and more populous social groups. |
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Adventist, Baptist, Methodist, Pentecostal and other Protestant confessions arose in the following centuries. |
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Scholars indicate that Media Lengua arose largely via relexification mechanisms. |
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However, a war arose in Kent due to a dispute between Hengest and Vortigern's son. |
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The dynastic question, which arose due to an interruption of the direct male line of the Capetians, was the official pretext. |
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From the start of Elizabeth's reign, it was expected that she would marry and the question arose to whom. |
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Order in the streets broke down as rumours arose of suspicious foreigners setting fires. |
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An invasion of England by Napoleon seemed imminent, and a massive volunteer movement arose to defend England against the French. |
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The question then arose as to whether or not appeals could be taken from Scottish Courts. |
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By 1700, a political crisis arose, as all of Anne's children had died, leaving her as the only individual left in the line of succession. |
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Soon arose the notion of a tranquilizer which was quite different from any sedative or stimulant. |
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In this way, the question arose as to what, if anything, Newton owed to Hooke. |
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A culture of megalithis temple builders then either supplanted or arose from this early period. |
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The first arose in the English Reformation, when the Church of England declared itself separate from papal authority. |
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Sprung from Methodist and Wesleyan roots, it arose out of meetings at an urban mission on Azusa Street in Los Angeles. |
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When disorder arose among some members of the societies, Wesley adopted giving tickets to members, with their names written by his own hand. |
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In subsequent years, conflict arose among Gurneyite Friends in relation to the Richmond Declaration of faith. |
|
The dispute arose over funds left by the Lady Margaret, the King's grandmother, for financing foundations at Cambridge. |
|
The soldiers arose at this time and shortly after collected in the company area for breakfast and assembly. |
|
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One post was typically filled by four men, one sentinel and the others at ease until a situation arose or it was their turn to be sentinel. |
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Similar problems arose in Exeter, originally the scene of more traditional celebrations. |
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Eden was annoyed that the accusations against Knight arose during a trial in which he played no part. |
|
A new cult of the sacral art masterpiece arose, endorsed by the German Romantics. |
|
In the late 19th and early 20th century several forms of pragmatic philosophy arose. |
|
For example, the technical concept of time arose in science, and timelessness was a hallmark of a mathematical topic. |
|
From 1660 onwards, new dramatic genres arose, mutated, and intermixed very rapidly. |
|
Before another opportunity arose, he had set out on his career as a writer. |
|
Concern arose that academics were taking over Austen criticism and that it was becoming increasingly esoteric, a debate that has continued since. |
|
Problems arose on set between Peter Sellers and director Joseph McGrath and between Sellers and Orson Welles. |
|
Still, throughout this period, there arose some notable bare knuckle champions who developed fairly sophisticated fighting tactics. |
|
Midway through the season, an opportunity arose at the uncompetitive Mooncraft F3000 team. |
|
The incident arose after Verhaas asked O'Sullivan to tuck his shirt in during the match. |
|
When the need arose for soldiers it hired mercenaries or financed allies who fielded armies. |
|
The initial movement within Germany diversified, and other reform impulses arose independently of Luther. |
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Lacrosse and surfing arose from Native American and Native Hawaiian activities that predate Western contact. |
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Ottoman classical music arose largely from a confluence of Byzantine music, Armenian music, Arabic music, and Persian music. |
|
A great part of this desire for local and foreign manuscripts arose in the 15th Century. |
|
Social stratification, based on caste, emerged in the first millennium BCE, and Buddhism and Jainism arose. |
|
The error arose because two bills of the same title had originated from the House. |
|
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There have been a number of times when alternative theological ideas arose to challenge the Orthodox faith. |
|
Neither could death contain the Son of God, the Fountain of Life, who arose from death even in his human nature. |
|
Hence arose an urgent demand on the part of the managers of Vienna and Berlin that I should have my plays performed by them first. |
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Closed circuit racing arose as open road racing, on public roads, was banned. |
|
Mostly mountainous, the region arose through faults resulting from the Rift Valley. |
|
The phenomenon arose as an attempt by local fishermen to protect their livelihood from illegal fishing by foreign trawlers. |
|
A national consciousness arose in the first half of the 19th century, inspired by romantic and nationalist ideas from mainland Europe. |
|
The musical tradition of the Czech lands arose from first church hymns, whose first evidence is suggested at the break of 10th and 11th century. |
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Once Barroso put forward the candidates for his next Commission, another opportunity to gain concessions arose. |
|
New religious feasts arose, including celebrations of the Presentation, the Visitation, and Mary of the Snows. |
|
A legend arose that James had been warned against invading England by supernatural powers. |
|
No money bill had been rejected by Lords for over 200 years, and a furore arose over this vote. |
|
Cases of conflict between the church and the civil power arose in Auchterarder, Dunkeld and Marnoch. |
|
Teacher shortages continued and problems arose in areas where teachers who spoke no Gaelic attempted to teach children who had no English. |
|
Both arose from attempts to resist centralisation and assert Breton constitutional exceptions to tax. |
|
Because of that prejudice, many of the creoles that arose in the European colonies, having been stigmatized, have become extinct. |
|
Controversy arose after officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police used pepper spray against protesters. |
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So, it has been proposed that the accusative system arose from a functional pressure to avoid ambiguity and make communication a simpler process. |
|
Fundamentalism arose among Evangelicals in the 1920s to combat modernist or liberal theology in mainline Protestant churches. |
|
The concept of alternative episcopal oversight first arose a generation ago with the debate over the ordination of women. |
|
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Sizable Lutheran missions arose for the first time during the 19th century. |
|
A wrong became known as a tort or trespass, and there arose a division between civil pleas and pleas of the crown. |
|
The plea arose in local courts for slander, breach of contract, or interference with land, goods, or persons. |
|
Liability for common carrier, which arose around 1400, was also emphasized in the medieval period. |
|
Originally, the notion of in rem jurisdiction arose in situations in which property was identified but the owner was unknown. |
|
This case arose out of a lawsuit challenging the longstanding rural bias of apportionment of seats in the Tennessee legislature. |
|
A dispute soon arose between Spain and the United States regarding the extent of Louisiana. |
|
It is arguable whether the concept of parliamentary supremacy arose from the Acts of Union 1707 or was a doctrine that evolved thereafter. |
|
Severe environmental problems arose through urban traffic congestion, which was aggravated by pollution generated by poorly maintained vehicles. |
|
The timing for this is not automatic and it can be months after the vacancy arose, or even abandoned if there is a general election due soon. |
|
But the whole trouble arose from the fact that there was no fierce resolute Asquith to win this war or any other. |
|
His successor, George V, was asked if he would be prepared to create sufficient peers, which he would only do if the matter arose. |
|
During the debate on the House of Lords Bill, a question arose as to whether the proposal would violate the Treaty of Union. |
|
Disputes then arose as to whether representative peers could still be elected. |
|
As the former Leader of the Opposition had joined the government the issue arose of who was to hold the office or perform its functions. |
|
Debate arose concerning the morality of the system, as workers complained about unfair working conditions prior to the passage of labour laws. |
|
Anatomically modern humans arose in Africa about 200,000 years ago, and reached behavioural modernity about 50,000 years ago. |
|
This literary use arose because the cloth type was often used as padding, hence, the purposeless words are fustian. |
|
Around these cities specialized machinery industry arose in order to enable the mechanization of the plants. |
|
Hereby late in the 18th century arose the first machinery industry in the UK and also in Germany and Belgium. |
|
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These arose at the beginning of the 19th century in England as innovation in the mining industry. |
|
The country prospered until a crisis arose in relations with the southern provinces. |
|
We arose at five the next morning and were given a very good and generous breakfast before we started our descent of the mountain. |
|
In early 2017, doubts arose over government funding and Network Rail's commitment to the project. |
|
Hence arose a dispute between the learned men, in which each delivered the reasons of their several opinions. |
|
For example, in 1993, only 8 per cent of the survey schools said that they were likely to vire funds if problems arose during the year. |
|
When a job opportunity arose at a Prescot-based water cooler company, I decided to go ahead and explore new horizons. |
|
You have not advertently outlined steps as to how you would deal with similar situations if the arose in the future. |
|
After all, black womanism arose in large measure precisely because of the need to combat black male sexism. |
|
I was standing in the background with her husband and I was struck at how word-perfect she was on any matter that arose. |
|
At dawn a group of photographers arose for a boat trip on Ral Ral Creek, one of the anabranches of the Murray. |
|
The same issue arose later in 2012 in a Joint Review Panel reviewing Shell Canada Energy's application to expand its Jackpine oil sands mine. |
|
Gayness as a movement arose from men looking for lost maleness in all the wrong places. |
|
The problem arose when the demand rose for that special dye from a sea snail. |
|
Errors-and-omissions clauses arose in reinsurance as a way to rectify clerical errors in lengthy bordereaux. |
|
As complex civilizations arose in the Eastern Hemisphere, the indigenous societies in the Americas remained relatively simple and fragmented into diverse regional cultures. |
|
Maya civilization arose as the Olmec mother culture gradually declined. |
|
Congregational churches were at the same time the first example of the American theocratic ideal and also the seedbed from which American liberal religion and society arose. |
|
Problems arose when a new bridge carrying the Chester and Holyhead Railway across the River Dee in Chester collapsed in May 1847, less than a year after it was opened. |
|
At that time an affulgent pillar of fire arose before their eyes. |
|
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A crisis arose in 1051 when Godwine defied the king's order to punish the men of Dover, who had resisted an attempt by Eustace of Boulogne to quarter his men on them by force. |
|
Although based on simple principles, Newcomen's engine was rather complex and showed signs of incremental development, problems being empirically addressed as they arose. |
|
To reduce the amount of work on the sidehills, the idea arose of combining the wheat binder and thresher into one machine, known as a combine harvester. |
|
Factories arose with the introduction of machinery during the Industrial Revolution when the capital and space requirements became too great for cottage industry or workshops. |
|
The concept arose to confirm the capability of the Skylon launch vehicle that it can and does enable large human exploration to the Solar System's planets. |
|
Many scholars believe Taoism arose as a countermovement to Confucianism. |
|
The name arose because the society would meet during the full moon, as the extra light made the journey home easier and safer in the absence of street lighting. |
|
In the 1980s and 1990s an increasing number of options arose including, most recently, a new delivery system for the oral contraceptive via a transdermal patch. |
|
The question arose as to which towns were entitled to be called cities, and the chairman, the Earl of Onslow, wrote to the Home Office to seek clarification. |
|
The Barbizon school of painters were part of an art movement towards Realism in art, which arose in the context of the dominant Romantic Movement of the time. |
|
Others including Krishan Kumar, argue that nations arose only in the modern period and that England cannot be described as a nation until the late nineteenth century. |
|
The Russians again avoided battle, although in a few cases this was only achieved because Napoleon uncharacteristically hesitated to attack when the opportunity arose. |
|
And when interesting ideas arose, such as creating a Wikipedia of top-secret content for the intelligence community, he provided cover for those ideas to develop. |
|
The culture arose about 900 and flourished into the 14th century. |
|
Ancient cities dating to the First Dynasty of Egypt arose along both its Nile and Red Sea junctions, testifying to the route's ancient popularity. |
|
The biocompatibility of silk arose during its increasing clinical use. |
|
From the 11th century onwards, a series of Berber dynasties arose. |
|
The civic culture which arose from this urbs was remarkable. |
|
In 1197 the most serious challenge to Sverre's kingdom arose. |
|
Decades, and in some cases centuries, of British rule and emigration have left their mark on the independent nations that arose from the British Empire. |
|
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Suspicion soon arose in the threatened city that the fire was no accident. |
|
He reports that the causes of the war were the doctrines of politics and conflicts that arose from science that disputed those political doctrines. |
|
Opposition to Charles also arose owing to many local grievances. |
|
A scandal arose with her and the Lord Admiral to which she stood trial. |
|
In 1174 a new faction arose in rebellion against Magnus Erlingsson. |
|
The earliest mentions of these ideas arose when the Hellenic Byzantine east made attempts to distinguish itself from the Latin west during the times of the Roman Empire. |
|
The roles of bards in 10th century Wales had been established by Hywel Dda and it was during the 18th century that the idea arose that druids had been their predecessors. |
|
Ukrainian pop and folk music arose with the international popularity of groups and performers like Vopli Vidoplyasova, Dakh Daughters, Dakha Brakha, Ivan Dorn and Okean Elzy. |
|
From 895 Sussex suffered from constant raids by the Danes, till the accession of Canute, after which arose the two great forces of the house of Godwine and of the Normans. |
|
Diachronically, the rise of consonant gradation in Germanic can be explained by Kluge's law, by which geminates arose from stops followed by a nasal in a stressed syllable. |
|
Larger settlements like Jericho arose along salt and flint trade routes. |
|
One Finnish tradition also arose soon after WWII, was confirmation camps. |
|
Like its namesake on the Isle of Wight, this feature also arose as a result of landslips and has become a rare and unusual habitat for plants and birds. |
|
Later, another newly arisen deity arose to eventually reign supreme at Carthage, a goddess of agriculture and generation who manifested a regal majesty, Tanit. |
|
Before the Out of Africa theory was generally accepted, there was no consensus on where the human species evolved and, consequently, where modern human behavior arose. |
|
The earliest hominin, of presumably primitive bipedalism, is considered to be either Sahelanthropus or Orrorin, both of which arose some 6 to 7 million years ago. |
|
A half billion years later, the last common ancestor of all life arose. |
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The alphabet arose from the Phoenician script and was in turn the basis of the Latin, Cyrillic, Armenian, Coptic, Gothic and many other writing systems. |
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The problem of the use of local labour arose early in the occupation. |
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In place of the fallen Western Rome, Barbarian kingdoms arose in 5th and 6th centuries and came to decisively shape European culture of the upcoming Middle Ages. |
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However, Christopher Awdry found himself increasingly coming into conflict with his publishers, which ironically arose through the success of the television series. |
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The virus arose because of genetic recombination of two mouse viruses. |
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The Encyclopedia of Wales surmises that the system arose from Welsh law, which made it essential for people to know how people were descended from an ancestor. |
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A competition arose between Swansea and Cardiff about where the college should be located and on 12 March 1883, after a period of arbitration, the location was set as Cardiff. |
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Much of the city, including railroads and stockyards, survived intact, and from the ruins of the previous wooden structures arose more modern constructions of steel and stone. |
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The Afrikaans language arose in the Dutch Cape Colony, through a gradual divergence from European Dutch dialects, during the course of the 18th century. |
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The social context in which they arose largely distinguishes them from pidgins and creoles and, for some scholars, identifies them closely with mixed languages. |
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These are predominantly based on European languages such as English and French due to the Age of Discovery and the Atlantic slave trade that arose at that time. |
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For example, there were scores of ways of combining households and properties and then dividing the property and its increase when disputes arose. |
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By the time the more compact minuscule scripts arose circa AD 800, some of the evolved uncial styles formed the basis for these simplified, smaller scripts. |
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It arose as a mixed vernacular among ordinary people in the Peiraieus, the seaport of Athens, which was inhabited by Greeks from different parts of the Mediterranean. |
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In circa 1372 a dispute arose between Irvine and Ayr as to which of the two burghs had rights to control trade in the Barony of Cunninghame and Barony of Largs. |
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In each of the hundreds of states that eventually arose, local strongmen held most of the political power and continued their subservience to the Zhou kings in name only. |
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Thus urban complexes arose that reflected the ideals of socialist realism. |
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This association likely arose from aspects of the boar's actual nature. |
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The committee found that, though underwater cables were notorious in their lack of reliability, most of the problems arose from known and avoidable causes. |
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Although many of the varietal names historically arose from the color of the mineral, current scientific naming schemes refer primarily to the microstructure of the mineral. |
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In 1616, two years after Peacham's Case, the case of commendams arose. |
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This question arose due to the discrepancy between the narratives of the Stroganov Chronicle and a different Siberian chronicle, the Yespiov Chronicle. |
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First, that the claim arose out of the health authority's statutory obligations under s117 Act 1983 and those obligations did not give rise to a common law duty of care. |
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