A doctor in a white coat may be seen as a credible endorser of a new headache tablet. |
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So new front windshields are treated to absorb harmful rays, though carmakers don't usually coat side and rear windows. |
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His head was down and his ears back, his coat somewhat darker with the wet. |
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In summer, the wapiti's coat is sleek and tawny brown, with a large buff-coloured rump patch. |
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It's been a very long time since anyone came to the hall in either red coat or jodhpurs. |
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Mike put on the new bulky coat he'd gotten for Christmas, and the cap with woolly flaps that covered his ears. |
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He was wearing a padded coat and I think that was giving him some buoyancy and keeping him afloat. |
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The popular lengths for jackets this fall are waist length, three-quarter length and trench coat length. |
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Jim hung his coat on a peg in the waiting area and walked over to the door, knocking quietly as he opened it. |
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We use a modern water-based timber preservative that doesn't flake, and we just put on one coat with no need for preparation. |
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He followed her inside and as she turned on the lights he took off his coat and rested on a stool at the kitchen counter. |
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On the center band is a coat of arms with a green-and-red quetzal, the national bird. |
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The girl was dressed in a very long black coat and wearing a pair of white flat sandals. |
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When the skillet is hot, add enough oil or other cooking fat to thinly coat the bottom of the pan. |
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The only type of brush capable of getting through an Afghan's coat is one with an air cushion behind the tufts. |
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Bent wood, rattan, wrought iron, or brass give you the best eye appeal in a floor-standing coat rack. |
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You'd think I'd know better, wouldn't you, than to look at a clear November sky and decide to leave my hat and my waterproof coat behind? |
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A sea-urchin egg is surrounded by a protective covering known as the vitelline envelope, which in turn is covered with a thick coat of jelly. |
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The Princess arrived at 2.15 pm, wearing a green checked woollen coat over a red roll-neck and silk scarf with black boots, gloves and handbag. |
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If your blood pressure is elevated only at your doctor's office, you might have white coat hypertension. |
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On formal occasions, the kurta is replaced by an achkan or sherwani, a long coat that buttons up to the neck. |
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The couture-like short coat with three-quarter-length sleeves made a noteworthy comeback, together with redingotes, lamb chop sleeves optional. |
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Once again, wipe the surface clean and if you wish you can apply a coat of paste wax or liquid polish. |
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A typical trick was to coat a gold object with a metal that could be dissolved by an acid. |
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Another large breed with myriad coat colors, Nubians are known as the Jerseys of the goat world for producing milk with high butterfat content. |
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He knelt beside the young woman's shivering body and wrapped her in his coat until an ambulance arrived. |
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The first man looked weedy and was wearing nylon tracksuit bottoms, a long black coat and yellow gloves. |
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He also admitted handling a coat stolen from Chelmsford Grammar School a few days later. |
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A process used to coat the inside of drinks cartons was adapted to deposit a thin film of acrylic acid polymer on to the discs. |
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I was able to imitate the moulding's finish by base coating the wood with red acrylic paint, then applying a coat of black semi-gloss paint. |
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I put on a sweater, pulled my weatherproof coat on, and did the best I could to adopt a brave face. |
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I find a raincoat on the coat rack and pick up an umbrella and take the girls outside. |
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They also counter so-called white coat hypertension, patient nervousness that skews blood pressure readings in the doctor's office. |
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Our hero took his chance and legged it, grabbing his coat and case and jumping train miles from home. |
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You can even have your ideal leather coat made to measure by a leather specialist. |
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In addition, blood pressure measurement is only intermittent, and white coat hypertension might confound results. |
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Doctors are no longer remote gods of the white coat but increasingly hassled and fallible human beings. |
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I remember my mother just catching me before I handed my Sunday coat to the ragman and before someone else's offspring wore it. |
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I would finger varnish the whippings with, on average, eight coats of varnish leaving a day between each coat to dry. |
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To give the sweet peas a jump-start on the season, lightly scratch the seed coat with sandpaper and soak the seed in water overnight. |
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Dolly's coat is back to almost normal, her tail is bushy and splendid once more, proud and prominent and waving in the air. |
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Because tubeless tires need to form an airtight seal, manufacturers must coat the inner walls of the tire with additional rubber. |
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Henceforth Bentham always wore his green coat with scarlet lapels, scarlet waistcoat with gold lace, and white breeches. |
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His short jet-black hair and black trench coat made him almost invisible against the background. |
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He shut the door quickly, and turned to find a thin, raggedy cat licking the snow from its mangy coat in the middle of his kitchen floor. |
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Even though the coat is non-matting the Ragdoll needs to be groomed daily with a wide toothed comb. |
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She was shaking even though she was wrapped up in a thick long coat in the middle of summer. |
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The baby was born in a matter of minutes and I wrapped her up in a coat that was in the car and gave her straight to her mum. |
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If the surface was primed with DG27, this first coat should be thick enough to cover over all of the key. |
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Then, to my shock, she pulled off her coat so she wouldn't get it dirty and started wrapping bandages around the wounds people had received. |
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Wouldn't they be better off with a waterproof coat with a hood and wellingtons? |
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He rushed into the kitchen where a metal coat rack, which was a piece given to Nick from a friend who welded marvelous art pieces, stood. |
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She skipped up ahead of the stairs, her blue trench coat bouncing jollily as she went. |
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Sliding down from the car, she wraps her coat more tightly around her and jogs down the street. |
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For a variation, roll the truffles in grated white chocolate instead of icing sugar, or coat them in a solid chocolate shell. |
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The light reflected off my white lab coat as it billowed behind my thin frame. |
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Then drawing a worn volume from the pocket of his long black coat he sat and read till dawn. |
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Other breeds may be larger, but none as impressive as the Komondor with his thick coat and large size. |
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The base coat contains absorbers to soak up sweat and oil, and the topcoat contains color that evened out my red blotches and discolorations. |
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Lori has this habit of wearing her coat open wide even when it's freezing out, showing off her ample bosom. |
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A floor so clean you could sprawl on it without having to coat yourself in spilled booze or cigarette ash. |
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Add enough soy sauce and Worcestershire sauce to fully coat chicken pieces. |
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I kept on waiting until my tummy began to complain and then I shucked on my coat and went out to investigate. |
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The wind howled down the railway tracks from West Hampstead, slicing through my leather coat and posh kecks. |
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She picks at the cuffs of her coat as we talk, the only sign of her anxiety. |
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A primer is then applied to fill in any small holes, followed by a coat of paint and another layer of protective lacquer until the alloys are almost as good as new. |
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The coat was reportedly created in 2004, though it is still awaiting patent. |
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For this service he arrayed himself in an old-fashioned frock coat with long skirts. |
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Today we associate the morning coat with arch-formality, like weddings, state funerals or an afternoon at ascot or Henley. |
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Then just after 3.30 pm, a group of people shepherding a woman with a coat over her head appeared at the hotel door and made a dash for a waiting car. |
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By the time we got to the place on the hill, the sun had baked one side of the dog's coat so hot you could hardly touch him. |
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He removed her beige Roger Vivier pumps and white lab coat to reveal a denuded ballerina-pink slip dress. |
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It is made into refrigerator gaskets, used to coat fabric for upholstery and to coat wallpaper for washability, and in making floor tile, horizontal and vertical blinds. |
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The puppy's coat should be black and shiny and lie flat to the body. |
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He wore a tall black hat trimmed with gold braid, a black swallow tail coat with a white silk lining, white knee breeches and black, silver buckled shoes. |
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Season the shrimp with the Essence and black pepper, tossing to coat evenly. |
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With racks of lamb at superb value, as always, you should get one, cut out the individual chops, coat them with honey and mustard and pop them on the barbecue. |
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Mom or dad held you on his or her lap while the doctor, wearing a white coat and Cheshire cat grin, pierced your poreless, silken skin with a needle full of weird stuff. |
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Lupoi, on the other hand, wore a dumpy black coat and generally looked like a Brooklyn schlub. |
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On the evening of her disappearance, she was wearing a pink sleeveless top, blue jeans with holes in the knees, a khaki duffel coat and black trainers. |
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Sherlock Holmes put down the Daily Gazette where he had been perusing the agony column, his daily ritual, and retrieved a letter from his coat pocket. |
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She is a natural listener and it is easy to imagine her in a white coat with a stethoscope in her pocket, dispensing sympathy and stern wisdom at the bedside. |
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This clinical dilemma arises in true drug-resistant hypertension, cases of patient noncompliance, white coat hypertension, and cases of pseudohypertension. |
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His face was masked by a grey scarf and dark woollen hat and he was wearing dark trousers, a dark knee-length coat and black trainers with white stripes. |
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He was up in his room getting another coat and in his usual hurry to do everything like a bull at a gate, he slipped and decided to finish the steps off headfirst. |
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I would also advise you take a good waterproof coat and some thigh waders. |
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Excess catecholamine levels play a role in causing white coat hypertension and hypertension in pheochromocytoma, OSA, and other diseases discussed in this article. |
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Named for the Canadian province where it originated, the Newfoundland's webbed feet, rudder-like tail, and water-resistant coat make it a natural swimmer. |
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The white coat of one of the medics is spattered with blood. |
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Do not apply urethane varnish over a coat of shellac or lacquer. |
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The redingote is an indispensable feature in the coat segment. |
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The authors suggest that blood pressure monitoring should include home measurement to identify patients who have white coat hypertension and those with masked hypertension. |
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In person, the foreboding man in the trench coat on the back cover of The Manhattan Hunt Club is a jovial, mischievous elf with a wicked sense of humor and a love of gossip. |
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More patients in the home group were able to discontinue antihypertensive medication, presumably because patients with white coat hypertension were identified. |
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In earlier times religion was a major force, but today many people find a white coat more reassuring than a black one, a medical center more impressive than a cathedral. |
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Micah is 10 years old and he had a coat geared to the season, a Patagonia winter jacket with a hood. |
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Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring may be useful in documenting white coat hypertension and verifying hypotensive symptoms in patients receiving anti-hypertensive agents. |
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It was picked out as the best of the bunch and sent to the workshop to be converted into a driver training bus and given a new coat of green paint. |
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But coat him in paint, butter, or used motor oil and have him recite the above poem while throwing fruit at his audience, and he'd make a dandy performance artist. |
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Hypertensive disease complicates nearly 10 percent of pregnancies in the United States, with white coat hypertension affecting an additional 30 percent of patients. |
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Hemlock woolly adelgids coat the branches of a hemlock tree like cotton. |
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He looked up to see a doctor in a long white coat walking towards him. |
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I pull my coat out of my locker put it on and throw my books in. |
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He was short, this guy, and wiry, in along, fitted wool coat and fashionable mud-kickers of the kind Clyde wore. |
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After using up his ammunition, Cal realizes he gave his coat and consequently the necklace to Rose. |
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By the twentieth century, however, his waistcoat nearly always depicts a Union Flag, and his coat is generally dark blue. |
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The coat is short, flat, and sleek, with colours of red, fawn, white, brindle, and piebald. |
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Passport booklets from almost all countries around the world display the national coat of arms of the issuing country on the front cover. |
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However, the official name of the institution remains the University of Durham and the official coat of arms is unchanged. |
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Brian Tuke mentioned in his letter to Cardinal Bainbridge that the coat was lacerated and chequered with blood. |
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Gladstone holding his coat on my arm while he, in his shirt sleeves, was wielding an axe to cut down a tree. |
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In summer, for all populations of mountain hares, the coat is various shades of brown. |
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In the species' southern range, the coat remains brown, but is denser and sometimes paler than in summer. |
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In the Zoroastrian religion, the stoat is considered a sacred animal, as its white winter coat represented purity. |
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One popular European legend had it that a white stoat would die before allowing its pure white coat to be besmirched. |
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There is also a design called ermine inspired by the winter coat of the stoat and painted onto other furs, such as rabbit. |
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Not a wax or a surface coat, it actually reflows, rejuvenates and resurfaces the clear coat in the same amount of time it takes to wax a vehicle. |
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In winter, the forest wildcat's main coat colour is fairly light gray, becoming richer along the back, and fading onto the flanks. |
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The wildcat's summer coat has a fairly light, pure background colour, with an admixture of ochre or brown. |
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The coat of the red squirrel varies in colour with time of year and location. |
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It is believed to be the White eagle shown in the Polish coat of arms and in the Serbian coat of arms. |
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The red kite is the landscape bird of Scania, and the coat of arms of the municipality of Tomelilla. |
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The winter coat consists of long, coarse bristles underlaid with short brown downy fur. |
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The motto used on the coat of arms of the Royal Burgh is 'Tandem Bona Causa Triumphat. |
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However, when used by the government and not by the monarch personally, the coat of arms is often represented without the helm. |
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Queens consort and the wives of sons of the monarch also have their own personal coat of arms. |
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This table breaks down the official blazons to enable comparison of the differences between the general coat and the coat used in Scotland. |
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The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain ceremonial occasions, but an Earl may bear his coronet of rank on his coat of arms above the shield. |
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Letters patent can be used for the creation of corporations or government offices, or for the granting of city status or a coat of arms. |
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A coat of arms is incorporeal heritable property, governed, subject to certain specialities, by the general law applicable to such property. |
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Internal Revenue has its own crest or coat of arms or something. |
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A specific coat of arms could be protected by copyright as a pictorial, graphic or sculptural work. |
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Without such protection, a coat of arms would be useless as a form of identification and worthless as a piece of private property. |
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Accordingly, an owner of a Scottish coat of arms may obtain a judicial order in the Court against anybody using his arms. |
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The university's coat of arms incorporates those of the founders and locations of the two colleges it is derived from. |
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The tartan was designed by the Weavers Incorporation of Aberdeen and Harry Lindley and incorporates colours from the university's coat of arms. |
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It's inexpensive to add a fresh coat of colorful paint and a new kick plate after it dries. |
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The coat of arms is still in use today, but in the main the SRU use the commercial thistle logo on jerseys and stationary. |
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The top coat can be reapplied indefinitely, minimising future maintenance work. |
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I ran back to my car and got my coat and put it under her head and put her in the recovery position. |
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Dolphins are present in the coat of arms of Anguilla and the coat of arms of Romania, and the coat of arms of Barbados has a dolphin supporter. |
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In 2009 Shrewsbury Town Council was formed and the town's traditional coat of arms was returned to everyday use. |
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The coat of arms incorporates features from the heralds of both of the former institutions. |
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It is possible these were the same 6 Sevier referred to, as the number, brass plates and Welsh coat of arms are consistent with both references. |
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Badges are occasionally taken from a charge in the bearer's coat of arms, or they have a more or less direct reference to those charges. |
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With a suitable undercoating, the top coat may consist of an organosol or plastisol which is free from modifying resins. |
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On the contrary, wealthy merchants bought themselves into the nobility by becoming landowners and acquiring a coat of arms and a seal. |
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A thick coat of blubber insulates its body and provides energy when food is scarce or during fasting. |
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Its coat is dark with silver rings on the back and sides with a silver belly, from which this seal gets its vernacular name. |
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In art, a sturgeon is the symbol on the coat of arms for Saint Amalberga of Temse. |
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In 1489, out of gratitude for services and loans, Maximilian I awarded Amsterdam the right to adorn its coat of arms with the king's crown. |
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The coat of arms of Cherbourg dates from the late 12th century, at the time of the Crusades. |
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They do not know the use of the coat of mail or greaves and the majority leave the head uncovered, only a few wear the helmet. |
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Antelope have a wide variety of coverings, though most have a dense coat of short fur. |
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By the time they are 36 hours old, the second, outer coat of spines begins to sprout. |
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Different species of brocket deer vary from gray to reddish brown in coat colour. |
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Most herds consist of the common coat variation, yet animals of the menil coat variation are not rare. |
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During winter, the coat becomes darker and shaggier and the spots less prominent, and a mane forms on the back of the males' necks. |
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The coat is an overall golden brown color, and may be interspersed with black hairs, while the undersides are white. |
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Differences in coat color between sexes are largely absent, though females may have redder tones. |
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Primroses also appear as a charge in heraldry, for example the coat of arms of the Earl of Rosebery. |
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Mungo's four religious miracles in Glasgow are represented in the city's coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of his family was drawn with two purple goats on a field of silver. |
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Hagfish coat themselves and any dead fish they find with noxious slime making them inedible to other species. |
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The coat of arms of Port Coquitlam has the City's floral emblem, the azalea displayed on a collar. |
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The coat of arms of Prince Edward Island displays Lady's Slippers, the floral emblem of the Island. |
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All three colours are used in Dorset County Council's coat of arms and the red and white was used in recognition of the English flag. |
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Differences in female and male coat color may indicate nutrition and hormone levels, important in mate selection. |
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The council or trustees may apply for an Order in Council or Royal Licence to use the former borough coat of arms. |
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A coat of arms dated older than the manor house also decorated the windows. |
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The new brewery was for the production of porter, and was renamed the Hind Brewery after the Whitbread family coat of arms. |
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The caribou is the official provincial animal of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, and appears on the coat of arms of Nunavut. |
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The name and coat of arms of the present state go back to the Germanic tribe of Saxons. |
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The hammer and sickle and the full Soviet coat of arms are still widely seen in Russian cities as a part of old architectural decorations. |
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The origin of Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon is the familiar coat of the Counts of Barcelona and Kings of Aragon. |
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James III of Majorca, vassal of the Kingdom of Aragon, used a coat of arms with four bars, as seen on the Leges Palatinae miniatures. |
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During the summer the coat becomes lighter in color, reflecting light as well as helping avoid sunburn. |
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The coat patterns of modern giraffes may also have coincided with these habitat changes. |
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Giraffes appear to select mates of the same coat type, which are imprinted on them as calves. |
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The coat pattern has been claimed to serve as camouflage in the light and shade patterns of savannah woodlands. |
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Stick machines are sometimes used, which coat the stick with paste and perfume, though the bulk of production is done by hand rolling at home. |
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Among the Malatestiana Library manuscripts, two separate documents depicting the coat of arms of the Noli family were also found. |
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The coat of arms of the Bahamas contains a shield with the national symbols as its focal point. |
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During this time the nutmeg shrinks away from its hard seed coat until the kernels rattle in their shells when shaken. |
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Correia later depicted King Muqrin's bleeding head on his family's coat of arms. |
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The grant specifies the iconography of the coat of arms, the central portion divided into quadrants. |
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There he was knighted, and given a personal coat of arms, becoming the first conquistador to receive these honors. |
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Some of them are plain but others have traces of a thin coat of stucco painted in yellow, red, back, brown, green, and pink. |
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It is made from a golden color silk canvas and embroidered in the center is its coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of England was impaled with Philip's to denote their joint reign. |
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The people eat their bodies, and make great account of their skins, for their king's coat was made of them. |
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The ancient flag of the Kingdom of Galicia was based mainly on its coat of arms until the 19th century. |
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Close up of Mughal riveted mail and plate coat zirah Bagtar, 17th century, alternating rows of solid rings and round riveted rings. |
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Mughal riveted mail and plate coat zirah Bagtar, 17th century, alternating rows of round riveted rings and solid rings. |
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Horses exhibit a diverse array of coat colors and distinctive markings, described by a specialized vocabulary. |
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Many genes that create horse coat colors and patterns have been identified. |
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The only horses properly called white are born with a predominantly white hair coat and pink skin, a fairly rare occurrence. |
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Another characteristic of domestication is an increase in coat color variation. |
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Regular grooming is also helpful to help the horse maintain good health of the hair coat and underlying skin. |
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For example, the arctic fox changes its fur according to the season, its coat can currently be seen transitioning from white to brown. |
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Although Pope Benedict XVI replaced the triregnum with a mitre on his personal coat of arms, it has been retained on the flag. |
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Over time, he bought several manors at Congham, Westacre and Happisburgh and was granted a coat of arms, becoming a minor member of the gentry. |
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A thin additional layer of the top coat is reapplied and cured in place, and then diecasting continues for another 1,000 shots. |
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The Earl Marshal also remains to have charge over the College of Arms and no coat of arms may be granted without his warrant. |
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On the second, a coat of wire slips was placed around a card which was then wrapped around a cylinder. |
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The Windermere coat of arms was commissioned in 1968 and designed by local schoolgirl, Sheila West. |
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Copley had previously refused to pay the royal herald for his own coat of arms and instead, made one up himself. |
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With a resourceful use of space and a fresh coat of paint, the room became a pleasant library with a comfortable seating area. |
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A very old hat, much necktie and aged coat buttoned up on his neck, humpbacked, not particularly clean looking. |
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The legend is almost certainly medieval rather than ancient, although the town's coat of arms carries an image of the saint. |
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The coat of arms of Halifax include the chequers from the original coat of arms of the Earls Warenne, who held the town during Norman times. |
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When she hears it again, she turns around and she sees a headless man in a long grey coat sitting on a grey horse. |
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Simpson's cravat is also found in Straker's hand, and the latter's coat is found draped over a furze bush. |
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The arms are now used as a badge by the Prince of Wales, and they appear below the shield in his coat of arms, along with his other badges. |
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We'll rustproof the metal with a good coat of paint and then we'll be able to leave it outdoors for years without damage. |
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Mrs. Flanders rose, slapped her coat this side and that to get the sand off, and picked up her black parasol. |
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When I went to put my coat on at snap time, what should go runnin' up my arm but a mouse. |
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See, I've put sugar-plums on his coat for fancy buttons, sugared his shirt-frill, and put on a red almond to his hat-front. |
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Add the chicken thighs, close the bag, and squish the marinade to coat the chicken. |
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He strutted down Bond Street with the best of them, decked out in in his top hat, wasp-waisted coat and silk hose. |
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When your primer coat is dry, it's on to the wet-sanding to get that paint flat and silky smooth. |
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The patients with white coat hypertension had a similar degree of cardiovascular reactivity as did the persistently hypertensive patients. |
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His coat was the true wolf-grey, and to all appearances he was a true wolf himself. |
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He tore a piece of meat off the breast and stroked her coat while she ate. |
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For example, NICE says it's unclear whether the benefits of treatment differ in people with or without white coat hypertension. |
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Soften the extra butter and, using a pastry brush, coat the inside of the ramekins with the butter then dust with the extra cocoa powder. |
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A Get an angle bead called a thin coat bead, which is a straight piece of mesh metal. |
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We covered the stains on the wall with a fresh coat of paint. |
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Her coat was a tangled mass, barbed with last year's burs, matted disgustingly with cow dung. |
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They were descended from the Earls of Halifax and Scarbrough but, as the bar sinister in the Savile coat of arms suggests, illegitimately. |
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He bastes the coat together with thick white thread almost like string, using stitches big enough to be ripped out easily later. |
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He don't look anything like the captain. This here cat has got a nice thick black coat of fur with a nice white bib and white feet. |
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He wore a great coat in midsummer, being affected with the trembling delirium, and his face was the color of carmine. |
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In the fable, the maiden had to find a catskin coat, a coat made of catskins. |
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Wipe the surface with a cloth dampened with mineral spirits in order to remove the sanding dust, then brush on a full coat of varnish. |
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If we club together, we will be able to by her the fur coat that she really wants. |
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She put her coat and her hat on the coat rack when she entered her friend's apartment. |
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He was commended for his work, and there is no suggestion that if he had eschewed all coat trailings his success would have been greater. |
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Use crosslight on the coat to show the warp and woof, and bring out texture. |
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You get the Finnish state flag by defacing the national flag with the state coat of arms placed in the middle of the cross. |
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In the morning Mr. Logan wore a doeskin box coat with pearl buttons nearly as large as alarm clocks in two rows on it. |
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The chick's downy coat of feathers formed almost immediately to keep it warm. |
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He wore a black frock coat and light trousers, his cravat a gray four-in-hand. |
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They passed through a small foyerlike room in which there were several coat trees and an old grandfather clock. |
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The Emperor also gave the family three fraises, or stalked strawberries, for their coat of arms. |
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Where didst thou steal that goodly coat of green, That thou art graithed in? |
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A young houseman wearing his white coat and name-tag walked past us towards the apartment houses beside the lake. |
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The shield or emblem of Sussex, sometimes referred to as a coat of arms, consists of six gold martlets on a blue field. |
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He argues that the hawthorn bush would not be part of Henry's coat of arms if it did not have a strong relationship to his ascendance. |
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Blue and red are the traditional colours of Paris, and they are used on the city's coat of arms. |
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The coat of the Komondor is extraordinarily profuse and generally matted into a veritable fleece of extreme density. |
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The solution to use AquataPoxy as the resurfacer and epoxy top coat would allow faster turn-around while providing a superior coating system. |
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The horn has become the symbol of the city and represents Ripon on the Harrogate borough coat of arms. |
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Many Cornish landed gentry chose mottos in the Cornish language for their coat of arms, highlighting its socially high status. |
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In 1949, St Thomas's Hospital Medical School was granted its own coat of arms. |
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Simon Argles, secretary of UMDS, said that because of the name of the medical school it was more appropriate to use the hospital's coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms includes a depiction of the city wall, and two silver strips representing the River Avon and the hot springs. |
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Uniform at this time was a velvet coat trimmed with silver gilt, worn over armour. |
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The whole symbol bears a passing resemblance to the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom, particularly with the lion supporters. |
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Another was the Brownlow Turk, who, among other attributes, is thought to be largely responsible for the gray coat color in Thoroughbreds. |
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The Master wears a scarlet coat with four brass buttons while the huntsman and other professional staff wear five. |
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The problem for the vacuum metallizer is to obtain adhesion of a base coat to the polyethylene. |
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Wigan, like most teams, originally used the towns coat of arms as their club badge until the Super League era when many clubs rebranded. |
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Eventually the club reverted to an updated design of the towns coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of the Chilean city of Coquimbo features the Union Jack, owing to its historical commercial links to Britain. |
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The HBC jack is no longer in use and replaced with a corporate flag featuring the company's coat of arms. |
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It features in the design of the British Twenty Pence coin minted between 1982 and 2008, and in the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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Many nations have a seal or emblem in addition to a national flag and a national coat of arms. |
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In the heraldic traditions of England and Scotland, an individual, rather than a family, had a coat of arms. |
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Only a few of the American states have adopted a coat of arms, which is usually designed as part of the respective state's seal. |
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A country may have both a national flag and a national coat of arms, and the two may not look alike at all. |
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The symbol appears in the island's official flag and official coat of arms, as well as its currency. |
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Each overseas territory has been granted its own flag and coat of arms by the British monarch. |
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Traditionally, the flags follow the Blue Ensign design, with the Union Flag in the canton, and the territory's coat of arms in the fly. |
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British passports are burgundy, with the coat of arms of the United Kingdom emblazoned in the centre of the front cover. |
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The wolf may be a tribute to the city's founder, Sir Arthur Chichester, and refer to his own coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of Ireland features a gold harp with silver strings on a blue background, which dates from the 13th century. |
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When the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland were united in 1603, they were integrated into the unified royal coat of arms. |
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The Union rose, shamrock and thistle are engrafted on the same stem on the coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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Always wear a laboratory coat that meets the American Standards for Testing and Materials requirements. |
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On the train ride back from Yorkshire he wore his white laboratory coat they gave him as well as his hair net and hat. |
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Explosive devices from the evacuation slides are removed, air ducts sealed, and an easily removable protective coat of paint may be applied. |
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Over time, overhead bins evolved out of what were originally overhead shelves that were used for little more than coat and briefcase storage. |
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Finally he partially unbuttoned his muchly-braided coat and drew forth a package done up neatly in white tissue paper. |
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The Mexica saw this vision on what was then a small swampy island in Lake Texcoco, a vision that is now immortalized in Mexico's coat of arms and on the Mexican flag. |
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However, the St Thomas' Hospital coat of arms has still been used. |
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That coat that you're wearing looks almost orangish in the evening sun. |
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All Nature is smiling, in fact, with one large, comprehensive smile, exactly like a first-class PRANG chromo with a fresh coat of varnish upon it. |
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We turned to see a muscular young man lounging in the door which led into the sitting-room. He wore green corduroy trousers, a duffle coat and an old school tie. |
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The collodion on a negative, or a coat of varnish, may creep in drying. |
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Trying to open my car door with a coat hanger, I froshed the mechanism. |
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Similarly, sea grass used to coat huge tracts of ocean floor, but have been damaged by trawling and dredging have diminished its habitat and prevented its return. |
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A coat of arms was attributed by medieval heralds to the Kings of Wessex. |
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For example, the Komondor has a naturally long white coat of matted hair while a Labrador Retriever has short hair that can be sand colored, black or brown. |
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The coat of arms of Bradford City council is based on that of the former City and County Borough Council, with additions to indicate the merger of eleven Yorkshire councils. |
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After the first coat of paint dried, he applied another layer. |
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There is no flag or coat of arms for the Bailiwick of Guernsey. |
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The shield depicts the royal coat of arms together with an inescutcheon of the House of Hanover, while the supporters embody King's motto of sancte et sapienter. |
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The current coat of arms was developed following the mergers with Queen Elizabeth College and Chelsea College in 1985 and incorporates aspects of their heraldry. |
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On the south side of the Ward is King Henry VIII's gateway, which bears the coat of arms of Catherine of Aragon and forms the secondary entrance to the castle. |
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