I stayed the night in Dromore with Jimmy and Elise, at Sylvan Hill House, where hospitality was borne on plates of wheaten bread. |
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The coffin was borne in by pall-bearers, marching to a rapid, but light step. |
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I would have perhaps whiled the time away in such a state had not a scent, borne on the ebony breezes, suddenly caught my attention. |
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It should be borne in mind that words or behaviour may be annoying or rude without being necessarily abusive or insulting. |
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Leafy shoots are borne adventitiously on the dorsal side of the long, creeping root. |
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If there's haste, it's a ravishment borne by yourself, not imposed by the medium's structure itself. |
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This is a cost that, if not borne by ratepayers, will certainly be borne by taxpayers. |
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Yet those fears were borne out when, at the age of five, Allegra died of typhus. |
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Borne of slavery, Gullah spiritual music transcends time and takes the listener on a journey through history. |
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Borne along by the flow of traffic, she passed through the forum arch into a stew of noises, colors, and evil smells. |
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As a result, most of the adjustment burden will be mostly borne by the city's workers, past and present. |
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And in all this surely resides the meaning of Borne frontiere, and its universal validity as a model for all demarcation stones. |
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In Scotland the title of justiciar was borne, under the earlier kings, by two high officials, one having his jurisdiction to the north, the other to the south of the Forth. |
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Leaves were borne in spirals or whorls, probably on short shoots. |
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The year was 2006 and Allen, like her fellow UK countrymen Arctic Monkeys, was borne in the freaky fires of MySpace. |
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Graffiti was borne out of the South Bronx streets as one of the key pillars of the hip-hop movement. |
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The most egregious uses of lethal force have been borne by people with intellectual disabilities and children. |
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The first addition to the shield was in the form of a crest borne above the shield. |
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The helm on which the crest was borne was originally a simple steel design, sometimes with gold embellishments. |
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The Sinn Fein receives a financial advantage that will relieve her considerably from the burden borne by Ulster and other parts of the Kingdom. |
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The gallicised spelling was first borne by John Stewart of Darnley after his time in the French wars. |
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The helicopter borne assault of 45 Commando was the first time helicopters were used by UK forces to lift men directly into a combat zone. |
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A stricken ship within 3 miles of the shore had to fly at the main mast a yellow and black flag borne quarterly from sunrise to sunset. |
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This was a successful wartime strategy but, after the war was over, each side believed that it had borne a greater burden than the other. |
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But Frodo is still wounded in body and spirit, having borne the Ring for so long. |
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For the subsidised schools, the main costs such as the teacher's wages and building maintenance completely borne by the Flemish government. |
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The bones of the mandible and quadrate bones can also pick up ground borne vibrations. |
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Marie Stope, the wiff of the said Arnold, borne in Dutchland,.... age of 1 yeares. |
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The shear force of winds can blow off shingles, and air borne objects can cause damage to power lines, roofing and siding. |
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While there was considerable skepticism when he reported these findings, they have been borne out in recent studies and analyses. |
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The cost of the two paramedics is borne by the Strategic Health Authority, by whom they are employed. |
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Flowers are borne in whorls, held on spikes rising above the foliage, the spikes being branched in some species. |
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In Ethiopia there were titles of nobility among the Mesafint borne by those at the apex of medieval Ethiopian society. |
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Before they arrived, Mama Ocllo had already borne Ayar Manco a child, Sinchi Roca. |
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Before acquiring its current name, the town was known as Panyu, a name still borne by one of Guangzhou's districts. |
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The winged seeds or samaras are borne in pairs and twirl to the ground when ripe. |
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The body, wrapped in many clothes, is borne on a kind of bier, round which men leap wildly and abandonly, trying to touch it. |
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Irving is further required, as a matter of practice, to spell out what he contends are the specific defamatory meanings borne by those passages. |
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Since its founding in 1970, Greenpeace has borne witness against environmental injustice through numerous non-violent direct actions. |
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It. must be borne in mind that the bones of a young infant are little more than gristle, and are liable to bend, and so become deformed. |
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The early sources' account that the Saxons were thrown back around this time seems to be borne out by archaeological evidence. |
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The title of Duke of Aquitaine, already revived, was now borne by Rainulf, although it was also claimed by the counts of Toulouse. |
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Ross speculates that he may have borne a grudge against Edward for depriving him of a fortune. |
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Mary's sister, Anne, had borne numerous children, all of whom died during childhood. |
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Since that time, except for King Edward III, the eldest sons of all English monarchs have borne this title. |
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The revenues of the Duchy form part of the Privy Purse, and are used for expenses not borne by the parliamentary grants. |
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However, the cost of any outright war between Scotland and England was to be borne entirely by the Scots. |
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The title of a city which is borne by certain boroughs is a purely titular distinction. |
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On the other hand, no woman who had ever borne a child could be accepted, no matter how free she was of mammilary blemishes. |
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The benediction being concluded, the sovereign rises from the Coronation Chair and is borne into a throne. |
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The aforementioned coronets are borne in place of those to which they might otherwise be entitled as peers or peeresses. |
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It should be borne in mind that Tests in Australia prior to the war were all played to a finish. |
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This is borne out by the fact that the lands and cultures of nearly all of the peoples listed at the end of this article are under threat. |
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They are borne in axillary clusters on the stems above ground and last for just one day. |
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Peanut pods are borne on pegs arising from the main stem and the side branches. |
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Peter's Basilica, with the newly elected pope borne in the sedia gestatoria. |
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She died of an unknown cause in Calvin's childhood, after having borne four more children. |
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Duverger's law certainly seems borne out in the history of British parliamentary politics. |
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Minister of State is a title borne by politicians or officials in certain countries governed under a parliamentary system. |
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All expenses incurred in connection with such rebagging shall be borne by the owner of the cocoa. |
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Volunteers provided training in crafts such as knitting, embroidery and lace making, all costs initially being borne by Lady Brabazon herself. |
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The most of western Georgia and part of Alabama was taken from the Creeks to pay for expenses borne by the United States. |
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Finally, the name is borne by the aristocratic House of Franckenstein from Franconia. |
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A sporophyll frond is a fertile leaf that produces spores borne in sporangia that are usually clustered to form sori. |
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In monoicous liverworts, the two kinds of reproductive structures are borne on different branches of the same plant. |
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In the hundred or so species of this genus, the pitcher is borne at the end of a tendril, which grows as an extension to the midrib of the leaf. |
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Some of the routes mentioned by the work had seemed to have been subsequently borne out and excuses were made for the known errors. |
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Ours was an amicable split, borne out of practical necessity. |
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And since 2000, the White House briefing room has borne his name. |
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One reason is that both regions have their cultural origins in the old Anglian Kingdom of Northumbria, a fact borne out by the linguistic links between the two regions. |
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Thus, water borne bacteria had a less chance of making soldiers ill. |
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Eleanor was the Duchess of Aquitaine, a land in the south of France, and was considered beautiful, lively and controversial, but had not borne Louis any sons. |
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The Hotel Carter is one of the last cheap places to stay in Times Square, a reputation borne out by its waterstained carpets, peeling walls and healthy occupancy rates. |
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Such a cross may be borne before him in liturgical processions. |
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The Swedish national legislature, since medieval times, has borne a different style, Riksdag, which is cognate to the old name of the German national assembly, Reichstag. |
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In the last rays of the setting sun, you could pick out far away down the reach his beard borne high up on the white structure, foaming up stream to anchor for the night. |
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The vast majority of titles borne by nobles were not, however, hereditary. |
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During Ottoman times, voivode was the title borne by the ruler of a province, whose powers included the administration, security and tax collection under a special regime. |
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Her arms have been borne by all of her successors on the throne. |
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The flowers are apetalous and unisexual and borne in panicles. |
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Blood may also be used to pathogens and arthropod borne viruses. |
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It was preceded by a large crucifix borne by a penitant, escorted by two Acolytes, each one of whom carried a lantern fixed at the end of a long wand. |
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He is said, by contemporaries, to have borne the news manfully. |
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As her husband, David used the title of earl, and there was the prospect that David's children by her would inherit all the honours borne by Matilda's father Waltheof. |
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The Times is the first newspaper to have borne that name, lending it to numerous other papers around the world, such as The Times of India and The New York Times. |
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They are characterized by hyaline, ellipsoid, oblong, reniform, allantoid to suballantoid conidia borne on a single locus on monophialidic conidiogenous cells. |
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Although this was much less than the 80,000 sorties flown by fighters, bomber crews suffered about half the total number of casualties borne by their fighter colleagues. |
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Maria had borne him a daughter, also called Maria, who was no longer illegitimate after her parents' marriage and, as the daughter of an Earl, became Lady Maria Walpole. |
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However, Dickerson explains, yellow fever is a prime candidate for reemergence both as a potential terrorist weapon and as a public health threat borne of global warming. |
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By 1538, it was known she had borne Pizarro two sons, Juan and Francisco. |
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Beyond Red Pike to the west are Starling Dodd, Great Borne and the Loweswater Fells. |
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As in his earlier works, Anselm instead held that Adam's sin was borne by his descendants through the change in human nature which occurred during the Fall. |
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Saab has been contracted to develop and deliver a new Water Borne Improvised Explosive Device Remotely Operated Vehicle. |
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The wild and rocky character of the range then gradually diminishes with Starling Dodd and Great Borne, before crossing the pedestrian Floutern Pass to the Loweswater Fells. |
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