Anglers had a selection of baits with them lugworm, ragworm mackerel, sandeel and peeler crab to catch that winning fish. |
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This week's review is a hard cover book with a hard-hitting jacket, determined to catch your attention. |
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There was also a wading pool to see who could make the biggest splash, and trying to catch a fish in a net proved to be challenging. |
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Trawl fisheries catch jack mackerel in other areas including the Taranaki Bight and Chatham Rise. |
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Two more conventional measures, species-specific size restrictions and catch limits, appear in only a small number of fishing accords. |
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Jeff and Eric are available to catch snakes at anytime of the day or night, seven days week. |
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The batter lifted a short fly ball to center field where the Orioles' Jackie Brandt made a shoe-string catch of the ball. |
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Picking up her bag on the way out, she ran outside to catch the bus to school. |
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The rake or dethatcher will create shallow grooves in the soil which will catch the new grass seed that you spread. |
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Eventually we catch him with our bike as he goes for a joyride right back to where he stole it from. |
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For example, the only weapons the journeyers learned about were to catch their dinner. |
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I wondered at first how they always managed to catch us, and soon realized the balcony was our Achilles' heel. |
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Rebecca cast Ansley a hurt look, but Ansley was haltering Matrix and didn't catch it. |
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Another idea is placing cameras on traffic lights to catch drivers jumping red lights. |
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At Volcan Baru, the country's most visited national park and its highest elevation, catch a glimpse of the quetzal or toucan. |
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He decided that he would catch up with Kate by waylaying her on the road towards Cannon Hill. |
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I have a few things to do today, in addition to trying to catch up on some more sleep. |
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In addition to the semiannual inspections, it's worthwhile to walk the roof after major rainfalls, high winds or hail to catch any damage early. |
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Topwaters and soft-plastic jigs catch fish through winter, but for genuine, heart-stopping trout, odds favor suspending lures. |
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The intention is to add more tours to the database each year so that visitors will be able to return and catch up on the latest additions. |
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Mammalian carnivores such as weasels and foxes catch voles by chasing or pouncing and are probably just as dangerous in dense cover as in sparse. |
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Filters are also installed in the hood to catch grease and prevent accumulations in the ductwork. |
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It will be in place on match-days so that fans can catch up on the latest Sunday sporting action before and after the Knights home matches. |
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Ayako wasn't one to scare easily, and she knew full well they'd catch onto that. |
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He obviously hadn't meant to jolt me that much, because his eyes lit in surprise, too, as he made every effort to catch me in return. |
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He eventually holed out to a diving catch at deep cover by Jamie Glasson and walked off to a standing ovation. |
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Based on the Greek legend of Theseus trying to catch and slay the Minotaur, this is a wonderful story ably told. |
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Small fishing communities can band together and purchase a group quota of the total allowable catch of any given fish species. |
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The white water that can be stirred up with a little wind often produces the conditions from which we can catch good tailor and jewfish. |
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To start with, Jude decided to get so drunk that he let his own children catch him giving their nanny a jolly good seeing to. |
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They made no attempt to come and catch them in the act, so they stole the car, used it for joyriding, and burnt it out a couple of streets away. |
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She went back to Ridgeway School earlier in September and couldn't wait to catch up with her friends. |
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Trouble began in the spring of 1816 when Judge Cooper built a weir, a fish trap, across the St. Jones River to catch migrating shad and herring. |
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In the spring children catch butterflies, and in the summer they play with aquatic whirhgig beetles, true water beetles, and snails. |
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A weir is a dam placed across a river to raise or divert the water, or a fence in a stream to catch or retain fish. |
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I got really excited and I started to walk at a faster pace to catch up with the procession. |
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Attractive gemstone paintings, which use garnet, turquoise, yellow agate and red jasper, from Agra catch the attention of visitors. |
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From there, it was a five minute walk back to the station to catch the train back to York. |
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He was clearly suffering from inadequate acclimatization, couldn't catch his breath, and thus couldn't keep up. |
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It is just a shame that Cllr Hudson has nothing better to do than try to catch his fellow councillors in the act of helping out in the community. |
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Usually by the time they catch up with them, the PO Box or accommodation address is closed without a forwarding address. |
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In his Flora, painted as early as 1518, the nails of the jointless fingers are indicated only where they catch flecks of light. |
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A pretty red-haired girl waved frantically to catch Allyson's attention from the school's parking lot. |
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So tonight you're going to catch your breath and put to test that absence makes the heart grow fonder theory. |
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The wind came now from this side, now from that, determined to catch the sails aback. |
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Monday morning I wandered down to the Sports Hall, having arranged with Caleb over the weekend to catch up and play a friendly game of badminton. |
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On the plus side, I've had more time over the past month to catch up with some reading. |
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It's a lovely way to spend time at the waterside, trying to catch what many feel is the most sporting fish in the ocean around the UK coastline. |
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Today's photo is a dream of nearly all anglers, to catch two jewfish this size. |
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We get out big numbers especially at the peak times in the mornings and evenings to catch the scab buses. |
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Crabbers are pleased if they catch a couple on this amorous journey, since they gain simultaneously a hard male and a female shedder. |
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Still, the law has yet to fully catch up with that position, or even fully incorporate and absorb the evidence on which it was based. |
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They usually ask if you can identify the perpetrators and I've pointed out to them that if they arrive quickly, they'll catch them in the act. |
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The wives find out about the plot and put in a plan of their own to catch them in the act. |
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When someone rings up and asks if I wanna catch a movie, my first reaction is how can I get out of this? |
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A German company has sacked one of its employees for smoking at home after hiring a detective to catch him in the act. |
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I am quite content to sit and catch up on all my reading, and I don't have to spend wads of money to do it. |
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You try to expose as much glove as you can and hope to catch it in the webbing. |
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To burn those extra calories, a colony of 150 weavers with no nest would have to catch and eat 4,500 more insects each day. |
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Essentially, the challenge is to catch abusive practices without catching harmless practices, to boot. |
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Explore the sands, catch some fish and learn about quicksands with Cedric Robinson. |
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More so than any lure or rod and reel, or even watertight waders, the greatest ally of any angler hoping to catch a huge trout is patience. |
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Once he was away, he was jet-propelled and nobody would catch him. |
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In a section titled How Ebola Spreads, Alton outlines how exactly readers might catch this disease. |
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The cautious abalone have to be taught to eat it but soon catch on. |
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With Rick, I think the culture just lags behind great artists much of the time, and it takes time for it to catch up. |
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In the last few years, the character has begun to catch on in America, even turning up on a recent episode of American Dad. |
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A Mercury-Jupiter merger urges you to put your boldest, unabridged ideas out there, and watch them catch like wildfire. |
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Back down in the harbour you can hire a boat or catch a water taxi and island hop to the Pakleni Islands, Marinkovac, Vodnjak and St Klement with its sandy beach coves. |
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I swirled around to face him and saw as he jogged up to catch up with me. |
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They can even catch a bird in free flight, so that's how quick they are. |
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We had a mad dash across Paris in the rush-hour to catch our connection to the South and nearly missed it because of confusion over our sleeper-tickets. |
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North Yorkshire clubs use the opportunity of a non-league weekend to catch up on the league programme interrupted by pitches being waterlogged or frozen. |
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The steel jaws of the traps, which will catch any animal or person walking in the bush, are ostensibly for use against jackals but are often used by poachers to trap game. |
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The photo today is of a good catch of jewfish from offshore at Evans Head. |
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You can catch Q fever by eating or touching contaminated meat. |
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I may have looked a wally charging along wearing a cycling lid and rucksack, but it didn't slow me enough not to catch the villain within a couple of blocks. |
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Even though the card would probably not help catch a single villain, it would criminalise many thousands of absent-minded, forgetful and inefficient people. |
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Yet Father Time may may yet catch up with the fiery Lancashireman. |
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Shallow water is the best place to find and catch barble and they normally move into these areas at about 10am although they do not keep time well. |
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It's very difficult to arrest people unless we catch them in the act. |
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Of course, the hoteliers jacked their prices up to the roof and did catch a fair number of those believing the annual myth propounded by the would-be profiteers. |
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Meat was abundant, for those who could catch it or wrest it from the competition, i.e. leopards and lions, not to mention hyenas, jackals, and vultures. |
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To me, death was a mysterious, dark, horrible thing that would catch you and drag you down into a deep abyss, away from everything and everyone you loved. |
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This manga-based masterpiece steams ahead on so many levels and with so much depth, detail and mind-bending imagery that your brain barely has time to catch up with itself. |
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I have caught many large fish during the full or new moon phase and while the catch rate is not as good as on other nights, trout still take my offering. |
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It was a day for the whole family as old friends used the event as a chance to catch up over the festive break and watch the excitement of the races. |
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Whenever I read Matthiessen the naturalist, I am reminded of a film clip I once saw of him trying to catch a snake in the wild. |
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Counterfeit airbags and brake pads have become more of a problem, as have electrical devices that catch on fire. |
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I catch up with Kent again as he takes a breather from the tour, back at his flat in St John's Wood, North-West London. |
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And no squid is safe from the Seattle squid jiggers who flock to the docks at dusk and stay into the wee hours of the night, hoping to catch a few. |
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I try to catch the eye of this third boy, but he plops down onto a stool and avoids my gaze. |
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Both women are too intelligent to put on an act to catch a man. |
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The most interesting part was when the lecturer talked about a character called William Bunting, who used to catch wild adders to feed to the mongooses at London Zoo. |
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A teenager who suffered a brain haemorrhage when he fell from his bike on the way to catch a train has been reunited with the railwayman who helped to save his life. |
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And here is where the beleaguered administration may catch a break from this hostile court. |
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The truth is slippery, and plumbing the past to catch hold of it is as quixotic a quest as the search for the perfect bottle of wine, but it is a noble and necessary one. |
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Look for this aquaculture to catch on as mankind, unfortunately, continues to pollute our waterways. |
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Planners quickly realized that an aircraft intended to destroy its kind in the air had to be fast enough to catch its quarry. |
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In March 2009, guitarist Malcolm Jones suffered a heart attack in Edinburgh whilst running to catch a train. |
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One polecat was reported to frequently wait at a riverbank and catch eels, which it took back to its burrow. |
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These conical teeth are used to catch swift prey such as fish, squid or large mammals, such as seal. |
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Coralling is a method where dolphins chase fish into shallow water to catch them more easily. |
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In 1981, it was legal to kill 22,500 porpoises per year to catch yellowfin tuna. |
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In the confusion of casting nets, the dolphins catch a large number of fish as well. |
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As anyone may catch the salmon when they return to spawn, a company is limited in benefiting financially from their investment. |
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When it is time for them to spawn, they return to where they were released, where fishermen can catch them. |
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A report on the state of the periwinkle industry in Ireland suggests a maximum catch size in order to preserve the population. |
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However, they are small in size with a high escape response, so herring and sprat avoid trying to catch them. |
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The remaining catch of scombroid mackerels is divided equally between the Atlantic mackerel and all other scombroid mackerels. |
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Suitably designed trollers can also catch mackerels effectively when they swim near the surface. |
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Furthermore, the Local Ministry of Fisheries adheres to very strict rules regarding the catch of hake. |
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By 1913, this species became rare, and the catch of fin and blue whales began to increase. |
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A 1977 study estimated Pacific Ocean totals of 9,110, based upon catch and CPUE data. |
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Phenology of catch records in the early twentieth century in Nordic countries shows that whale presences in northern waters was at peak in June. |
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Historical catch records suggest there could have been smaller aggression grounds in the Sea of Japan as well. |
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Currently, the annual quota for the gray whale catch in the region is 140 per year. |
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In the second half of the 19th century, the explosive harpoon was invented, leading to a massive increase in the catch size. |
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Habitat degradation also threatens marine mammals and their ability to find and catch food. |
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Constant catch and constant fishing mortality are two types of simple harvest control rules. |
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Under ITQs, members of a fishery are granted rights to a percentage of the total allowable catch that can be harvested each year. |
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AaDubai Police will soon start using digital radar guns called Al Jin, to catch speeding vehicles. |
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The fishermen would make a beeline to the goals, catch the fish around them, and say the scientists do not know what they are talking about. |
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Catching fish for the purpose of food or sport is known as fishing, while the organized effort by humans to catch fish is called a fishery. |
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Most commercial fisheries do not target Alaska plaice, but many are caught as bycatch by commercial trawlers trying to catch other bottom fish. |
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The easiest way to catch jackknives is to pour salt on the characteristic breathing holes. |
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The marsh terns normally catch insects in the air or pick them off the surface of fresh water. |
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Adults may be robbed of their catch by avian kleptoparasites such as frigatebirds, skuas, other terns or large gulls. |
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They catch multiple small fish by expanding the throat pouch, which must be drained above the water surface before swallowing. |
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Turtle farmers may, therefore, seek and catch the last remaining wild specimens of some endangered turtle species. |
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This acted as a mechanism to catch and secure the mast before the stays were secured. |
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Their idea was to send in a superior force during darkness to catch the German destroyers as they returned. |
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By this time, the rest of the German ships were too far away for the British to catch up. |
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The type of fish caught is checked and compared to quotas of total permitted catch for a vessel. |
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In the Kuroshio Current, the sea near Fukushima, about 11 countries catch fish. |
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Another example is the greater noctule bat, which can catch birds in flight. |
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They catch young rabbits by locating their position in their nest by scent, then dig vertically downwards to it. |
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Wolves may catch infectious canine hepatitis from dogs, though there are no records of wolves dying from it. |
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Wolves may catch tularemia from lagomorph prey, though its effect on wolves is unknown. |
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A few specialized species such as the mergansers are adapted to catch and swallow large fish. |
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Some individuals make use of people feeding them at their homes or share the catch of recreational fishermen. |
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The Irulas are also known to eat some of the snakes they catch and are very useful in rat extermination in the villages. |
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Some television show hosts, like Bill Haast, Austin Stevens, Steve Irwin, and Jeff Corwin, prefer to catch them using bare hands. |
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Chameleons have very long sticky tongues which can be extended rapidly to catch their insect prey. |
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Through the Commission, Norway and Russia also exchange fishing quotas and catch statistics to ensure the TACs are not being violated. |
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This removal of young fish can result in a reduced anchovy catch in the Benguela system if a ring passes through the fishery. |
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Sailors might hope to supplement their meager diets with fish if they were lucky enough to catch them. |
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The outfielder backpedaled a few steps to catch the fly ball. |
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The total catch in 2012 was 754,131 tons, the major fishers being Norway and Russia. |
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I dropped the book but managed to catch it before it hit the ground. |
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However, even with these new statistics brought to light no changes were made in regards to the allotted yearly catch of cod. |
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Marine turtles, functioning as a mobile shelter for small fish, can be impaled accidentally by a swordfish trying to catch the fish. |
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The world annual catch of forage fish in recent years has been around 22 million tonnes, or one quarter of the world's total catch. |
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The catch is then pumped on board the fishing vessel where it is stored in refrigerated holds at below freezing temperatures. |
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They use their tongues to swallow food, but unlike most reptiles, they cannot stick out their tongues to catch food. |
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Some of the catch gets to the local restaurants, while most of it is exported to Asia. |
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Illegal, unregulated, or unreported fishing catch between 11 and 26 million tons a year which accounts for one quarter of global catch. |
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The police are working hard to catch the criminals and put them in jail. |
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Aside from being incredibly funny and personable he is generous, kind and is great fun to play catch with. |
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Around 230 fishing vessels that predominantly catch crab and lobster are based in Dorset's ports. |
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The BBC TV reported that a Nile crocodile that has lurked a long time underwater to catch prey builds up a large oxygen debt. |
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When the birds swooped in to get the sticks, the crocodiles then catch the birds. |
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Paper wasps, including those in the genus Polistes and Polybia catch caterpillars to feed their young and themselves. |
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The lead character, apparently a rock and roll dance diva, dances so quickly that his shoes catch fire. |
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Note that used linseed rags should not be left in a pile as they can catch fire. |
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A fishing vessel is a boat or ship used to catch fish in the sea, or on a lake or river. |
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In the summer, we would catch fireflies and put them in jars. |
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The practice of catching or attempting to catch fish with a hook is generally known as angling. |
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These types of tools were specifically made to catch the eye of many different craftsman who traveled to do their work. |
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Although the weaponry was successful in killing the whales, most of the catch sank before being retrieved. |
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Fish hooks have been employed for centuries by fishermen to catch fresh and saltwater fish. |
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Although most anglers keep their catch for consumption, catch and release fishing is increasingly practised, especially by fly anglers. |
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The practice of catch and release is criticised by some who consider it unethical to inflict pain upon a fish for purposes of sport. |
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Opponents of catch and release fishing would find it preferable to ban or to severely restrict angling. |
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In some jurisdictions, in the Canadian province of Manitoba, for example, catch and release is mandatory for some species such as brook trout. |
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This may have been an attempt to trick the Romans and catch them off guard in a later attack. |
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He had no intention of allowing Charles to catch him unaware and dictate the time and place of battle, as his father had. |
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Women and men who love to shop are in full spree to catch up on their shopping of party wear salwaar kameezes. |
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Eldar Ryazanov's and Leonid Gaidai's comedies of that time were immensely popular, with many of the catch phrases still in use today. |
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We did not catch them napping, but found a well-entrenched battle line confronting us. |
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These tactics consisted of small groups who attempted to catch their opponents by surprise, through an ambush. |
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One of the canoes went fast enough to nearly catch up with Fernandes's boat, prompting Fernandes to turn and prepare for a fight. |
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The center fielder was all set to catch the ball, but at the last minute his eyes were blound by the sun and he dropped it! |
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Stoll was still standing on the car bonnet with the catch of his large-calibre repeating rifle off. |
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With his remaining six crewmen, Dias set sail back to Portugal, hoping to catch Cabral's armada on the return journey. |
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Much of this water is privately owned, with catch and release and fly fishing only. |
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Some networks have started using a broadcast delay on live programs to catch any offensive material before it aired. |
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Martinez had allowed a store of gunpowder to catch fire and was condemned to death, however his friends let him escape downriver in a canoe. |
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Polar bears sometimes swim underwater to catch fish like the Arctic charr or the fourhorn sculpin. |
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Then they begin the long walk from the denning area to the sea ice, where the mother can once again catch seals. |
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When it has located its prey, it pounces and punches through the snow to catch its victim. |
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In the wild, old polar bears eventually become too weak to catch food, and gradually starve to death. |
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Several vessels returned in 1874 but the bowhead catch was so poor that season that they again deserted the area for the rest of the decade. |
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Cattle might catch and develop various other diseases, like blackleg, bluetongue, foot rot too. |
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She would catch her husband watching. Was he proud some? Proudsome, pleased? She thought so. |
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Until food production could catch up with the increasing population, prices, especially those of the staple food, bread, continued to rise. |
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He also changed tongue to the older spelling tung, but this did not catch on. |
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He had been on patrol to catch joyriders, and fired three shots at the windscreen of a speeding car as it approached the checkpoint. |
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Residential housing was in short supply, and it took years for the market to catch up with the population boom. |
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Finally, by actual trial, I have found that I can catch more rainbow by using one fly than with a two or three-fly cast. |
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The decision was influenced by the fact that the buckets could catch and use even a small volume of water. |
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If the beautiful body of the car isn't enough to catch your attention, the purr of the engine will give you a cargasm. |
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The catch was that Whitney's guns were costly and handmade by skilled workmen. |
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He placed the rivet into the hole to be riveted, then quickly turned to catch the next rivet. |
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The result was a deliberate state led industrialisation policy to enable Japan to quickly catch up. |
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Most species catch insects, although the larger ones, such as Nepenthes rajah, also occasionally take small mammals and reptiles. |
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Stop for a moment together and catch a glimpse of Maui, Molokai, Kahoolawe and maybe even the Big Island to guarantee a romantic excursion. |
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The best place to catch a glimpse of one is at the squirrel hide at Kielder waterside. |
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Barrymore arouses further suspicion when Watson and Sir Henry catch him at night with a candle in an empty room. |
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It is also believed that if someone calls one from behind, never turn back and see because the spirit may catch the human to make it a spirit. |
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Sustainable hunting and fishing cares as much for its seed stock as for catch or haul. |
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It was he who removed Peter Bowler with the help of a good catch at third slip. |
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They are sitting up straighter, breaking their arms at the catch and getting on a terrific amount of power at the catch with each stroke. |
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And they send unto him certain of the Pharisees and of the Herodians, to catch him in his words. |
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Stop gathering, in that gradual fashion, and catch the water sharply and decisively. |
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A full breath would take enough time for a deep intake of air, while a half breath would be more like a short catch breath. |
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Remember that refusing special ed help at this point may mean that you go through school feeling like a failure and never catch up. |
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He pulls off his belt, cursing as the studs catch in the tabs of his jeans. |
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She knew he was disposed to catch at anything that seemed to tell against Godwin's claims. |
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Everyone raced to catch squid hiding under floating leaves or wood, or tried to catch seahorses as well as playing tiggy in the water. |
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Still, the thing about being just a little too clever by half is that it tends to catch up with you. |
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I'll catch it for your mischief in running away. And I'll catch it again when the tutor claps eyes on the handwriting. |
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The catch to achieving a 100 percent FF ratio is that the tweeple you follow don't necessarily follow you back. |
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Moran did not support these women, nor did she believe that women should catch their own babies in an unassisted birth. |
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He was tall, dark and handsome. He was considered the catch of the day, except that he never got caught. |
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They stopped for a moment at the end of the set to catch their breath before resuming play. |
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The hand slipped lower to cover her Venus mound, and India felt her breath catch in her throat. |
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If the weather is good, take your summer reading outside and catch some rays at the same time. |
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Fly ball to deep center. Shelby goes back and makes the catch on the warning track. |
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The weir catch of mackerel at Monomoy and along Cape Cod has been a failure. |
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We're not in sync with our appestat when we eat, and we don't allow the body to catch up. |
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A massive drive is to be launched to catch arsonists who cause millions of pounds worth of damage every year in the West Midlands. |
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Owing to his obiter dicta having to be filtered through a zareba of white hair, it was not always easy to catch exactly what Mr. Cornelius said. |
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They all immediately dashed out to their car to catch the bad guys. |
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Not many local fishermen catch walleyes, the largest member of the perch family. |
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I think the kits are a good idea if it will catch the people who are behaving abusively. |
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Basking in the sun whether it's on the porch or on the boat, he just loves to lay out and catch some rays. |
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Each year, fishers catch a fill of crappie, large mouth and white bass, catfish, and bream. |
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The results are blurry and eerie, but bound to catch your eye. |
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But I wonder how many of you have seen the exquisite little red hazel flowers on the same trees waiting quietly to catch the wind-borne pollen. |
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A womaniser CEO might start by flirting left and right with both married and unmarried women to catch attention. |
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Anyway at the end of my day, I decided to give him a call because the worse thing that would happen is that I would have to catch the bus. |
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An all-points bulletin hasbeen put out for the suspects throughout the ports and borders of the UAEin bidto catch them. |
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Rose was three seconds behind, but managed to catch up with the race leader and eventually won. |
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We reached the rim of the canyon just in time to catch the last hint of alpenglow on the peaks. |
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Did the cancellation of Surviving Jack catch you by surprise? |
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Adler's prose seeks to catch the whispers and chirpings of insanity rather than the lamentations of suffering. |
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From a lyrical standpoint, there are precious few that can catch Kendrick. |
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I've been on TV a long time and I've never had a catch phrase. |
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From ATLATL to ZOOZOO, and KAVAKAVA to TUCUTUCU, from DIVIDIVI to QUINAQUINA, and RIRORIRO to CHIQUICHIQUI, they all catch your eye. |
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The right hon. Gentleman has much more claim to the adjective downy than I have, but he really cannot catch me with that one. |
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They are sit-and-wait predators that catch bypassing prey with their strongly incrassate, raptorial forelegs. |
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Granma was in her chair cushioned with egg crating, so she could fall over asleep whenever she wanted and the chair would catch her head. |
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He still owes me a five-star so I try not to let him catch me with my shirt off. |
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The base area is adorned with an immense gelande jump, off which qualified skiers regularly catch 200 feet of air. |
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Throwing to an experienced player, a passer should throw a hard pass knowing he could catch it with no problem. |
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The industrial revolution began about 1870 as Meiji period leaders decided to catch up with the West. |
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We could catch one, Tom said, and eat it raw. Though rats are as they say inesculent. The learned word bounced hollowly. |
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The English ships then used their superior speed and manoeuvrability to catch up with the Spanish fleet after a day of sailing. |
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Nelson put to sea in pursuit of a French frigate, but on failing to catch her, sailed for Leghorn, and then to Corsica. |
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Nearly every engine company in Britain then started their own crash efforts to catch up with Power Jets. |
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Varitek did not start so Kevin Cash could catch the knuckleballing starter Tim Wakefield. |
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Between blinks Tommy saw Temple in the path, her body slender and motionless for a moment as though waiting for some laggard part to catch up. |
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You'll want to use spinnerbaits to catch the largies, or toss topwater plugs working gaps in the vegetation. |
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The piston was then temporarily locked in the upper position by a spring catch engaging a notch in the rod. |
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He observed that people who caught cowpox while working with cattle were known not to catch smallpox. |
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In an alternate reality in which the dinosaurs didn't become extinct, we catch up with a family of Apatosauruses who make a living farming corn. |
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Henry IV seized the castle during his coup in 1399, although failing to catch Richard II, who had escaped to London. |
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Tha'd better pin thi slops first or else they'll happen catch t' masheen an' throw thi off. |
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Buy a rain barrel to catch rainwater off your downs pouts and distribute that water to your garden. |
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It was well received but did not catch the public imagination as The Dream of Gerontius had done and continued to do. |
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Tacklers may not tackle an opponent who has jumped to catch a ball until the player has landed. |
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Highlights of eight games of each round were broadcast as catch up on ITV Local. |
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Despite the final Test being 'timeless', the game ended in a draw after 10 days as England had to catch the train to catch the boat home. |
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The controversy over the Ikin catch was one of the biggest disputes of the era. |
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Harmison delivered another short ball, which Kasprowicz fended and Jones took an athletic catch down the leg side. |
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Australia started their innings tentatively with Matthew Hoggard dropping a low catch Matthew Hayden off his own bowling. |
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Gilchrist missed two stumping opportunities to remove Bell and failing to hold a catch to remove Flintoff. |
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In the evening session, England managed to take three wickets, but also dropped a catch and missed a stumping. |
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Strauss made his 2nd century of the series, before being dismissed by Shane Warne off an acrobatic catch by Simon Katich. |
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Flintoff had a later appeal for a catch behind turned down by Rudi Koertzen, despite it hitting the bat. |
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Geraint Jones dropped a catch off Michael Clarke's bat, but it did not prove to be crucial, as Clarke was lbw to Hoggard in the next over. |
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A spinnaker is a large, full sail that is only used when sailing off wind either reaching or downwind, to catch the maximum amount of wind. |
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That's why he was able to catch Crush out there sleeping and why he murked him before he could ask him any questions. |
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The action between catch and release is the first phase of the stroke that propels the boat. |
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The recovery starts with the extraction and involves coordinating the body movements with the goal to move the oar back to the catch position. |
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The goals, at opposite ends of the field, measure 12 feet wide and 10 feet high and a net is affixed to catch the ball when a goal is scored. |
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Only the goalkeeper may use his hands, but only with an open palm since he is not allowed to catch it. |
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The stoat was a fundamental item in the fur trade of the Soviet Union, with no less than half the global catch coming from within its borders. |
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In flight, ducks are safe from all but a few predators such as humans and the peregrine falcon, which regularly uses its speed and strength to catch ducks. |
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The sharp bill is used to catch fish, amphibians and other animals. |
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The new tailhook has a different shape to better catch arresting wires. |
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It took patience to catch alburns, those hand-sized fish in the Stolpe. |
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She installed a sturdy catch to keep her cabinets closed tight. |
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There was a catch in his voice when he spoke his father's name. |
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I bent over to see under the table and got a catch in my side. |
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Facing the ladies a biretta'd priest appeared to be perusing a little, fat, black, greasy book of prayers which he held aslant so as to catch the light. |
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Frome turned away again, and taking up his razor stooped to catch the reflection of his stretched cheek in the blotched looking-glass above the wash-stand. |
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The total catch in 1976 was probably about 3.5 million tons and was mainly composed of pelagic species such as sardines, mackerels and various carangids. |
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The catch of the perpetrator was the product of a year of police work. |
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