This sequence of coin tosses will not, however, trigger a design inference. |
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Political condemnation and praise in the name of art seem to be two sides of one coin representing a schoolmasterly avoidance of the issue. |
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The coin serves as a wish for wealth, and the blue wool or beads are additional protection from the evil eye. |
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The players in the group then establish a playing order by calling coin tosses, chipping toward a tee marker, or any other simple method. |
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The captain who calls correctly on the toss of a coin will decide whether it's league or union in the first half. |
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His meticulous character suited his outside interests of coin and stamp collecting, chess, genealogy, and Scottish history. |
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Teachers and students were asked to make a gold coin donation in order to sport their weird and wacky hairstyles for the day. |
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The coin was put in the slot that used to trigger the fountain and the last person shot out to the centre of the lake. |
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He also struck the largest known gold coin from the ancient world, a numismatic masterpiece weighing 20 staters. |
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When, in addition, I see a Chinese coin hanging from your watch chain, the matter becomes even more simple. |
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As they talked, one of his chickens scratched up a coin that the young Swede recognised as bearing the head of the Emperor Augustus. |
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Crazy Chomsky-reading nut that he is, he at least deserves some coin for 30 years of honky-tonk labor. |
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Everyone knows that you can twiddle and twiddle the handle, but unless you put a 20p coin in, you will not get a gobstopper. |
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He's a self-involved narcissist who cares only about whether he's on a coin or not. |
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I explained that all Euro coins have the same face but that the obverse depicts a scene of the country where the Euro coin was first issued. |
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The obverse of the coin shows His Majesty King Rama IX, Bhumibol Adulyadej. |
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The coin shows on the obverse the elephant with the date CS 1197, and on the reverse is the inscription Muang Thai. |
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While they were tossing the coin Andrew was taken to the goal where he took four penalty shots at David James scoring twice. |
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These problems become much more severe, of course, if the issue has been politicized or, to coin a word, theologized. |
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Once again it has been paralysed after vandals blocked coin slots with brown mastic. |
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Would one coin a decipherable Konkani equivalent for a medical term as simple as sinusitis? |
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He turned to a life of petty thievery when his friend managed to steal a gold coin from a weary traveler. |
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And although many of us see the little copper coin as worthless and would like to see it go, charities disagree. |
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Despite its apparent inefficiency, the current U.S. system of coin denominations has a striking advantage over many other possible systems. |
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Also on the table at Halloween are colcannon, a mixture of cabbage or kale and mashed potatoes with a lucky coin placed inside, and barmbrack. |
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But it's no more mendacious than a bunch of other tendentious uses of statistics that are the common coin of political debate today. |
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Just this week I was rushing with many bags and did not stop to give a coin to the beggar woman, and it bothered me! |
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The first coin in the series was Delaware, which chooses an image of a man riding a horse. |
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According to the newspaper, the coin belonged to an ancient civilization that flourished in Al-Jouf. |
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Tom, of course, does not take payment in coin of the realm but in pints of Ram's Blood bitter. |
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Are 250 spins enough to judge if the new Belgian one Euro coin favors heads? |
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Cut to close-up of red, corn-syrup-stained hand opening to reveal said coin as violins swell with sadness. |
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All banks and houses of shroffs were denied the right to issue promissory notes and coin mints. |
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I've never been to Tuscany, haven't floated down a canal in a Venetian gondola, nor thrown a coin into the Trevi Fountain. |
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It's by Patrice Leconte, and it is a rippingly funny, smart movie about the court of Louis XIV, where wit was the coin of the realm, so to speak. |
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Meanwhile coin tossing is in fact a predictable process following predefined physical laws of motion and isn't really random at all. |
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The policy and process for deciding on coin designs for our coins is based on the Mint's Policy on Coin Designs and Issue. |
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At Langtoft in East Yorkshire, metal detectorists found two Roman coin hoards in pottery containers by the side of a former Roman road. |
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New Zealand's iconic five cent coin with the tuatara looks to be getting the bum's rush! |
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If you have a hi-fi turntable and a record that jumps, place a one cent coin on top of the stylus arm. |
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The Central Bank expects to sell them to the manufacturers of coin blanks in Europe. |
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The country's largest stainless steel making outfit, has bagged an order to supply coin blanks to the French national mint. |
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You put the die on a coin blank and hit it with a big hammer to mould the impression into the metal. |
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I assign a probability of 0.5 to the coin falling heads on a fair toss coming to rest on one side or the other. |
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As you rightly say, it is always possible that a fair coin will turn up all heads when you toss it however many times. |
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There I spot something that resembles a public telephone box, drop a coin and make a call. |
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I told the person caring for him to make certain that coin went with him to his room. |
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Of course, there are two sides to every coin and not all bouncers are muscle-bound, impotent meatheads. |
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The design of the coin should be clear and precise with unevenness or blurring a sign of counterfeiting. |
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I have inner pockets, coin purses, money clips, a beautiful chrome change machine hanging from a leather strap around my neck. |
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Once you park, get to the machine nearest to your car, insert a five rupee coin at the slot provided and type your car registration number. |
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Well you pay for the ticket by inserting coins into a coin slot, and of course, notably the ticket machine does not take notes. |
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I had more than enough loose change in my coin purse to pay for it so it's not like I was spending real money. |
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The looks of horror I elicited from people at the bus stop as I attempted to ask them if they had any change for a two pound coin was striking. |
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Gamblers aren't shying away from them, though some dedicated coin droppers dislike the loss of the metallic sounds of money changing hands. |
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On the flip side of the coin they cost the British tax payer millions every year, and have become out of touch with the public. |
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At least the frugal Germans and their coin hoards will bring some joy to archaeologists in the fourth millennium. |
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A coin will be tossed to determine who will make the first opening statement. |
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I wondered how many of them had been granted, and momentarily debated whether or not tossing in a coin would help my situation. |
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I have juggled with the report's contents, even tossing up a coin to see if Sean was serious or had a good old belly laugh as he wrote it. |
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We first discovered it in the days when we used to drive to France and, on arrival, flip a coin to decide whether to go left or right. |
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But Alice is not quite sure about Bob and decides to leave their future to chance by flipping a coin in private. |
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He thinks that flipping a coin to decide whether to push the button would be best, because it would give each child an equal chance of surviving. |
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Even if we did not witness the coin being flipped but were only told the outcome it would not matter. |
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If James had not received an invitation, he would have flipped a coin to decide whether to go or not. |
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Before the speeches, Tom flipped a coin to decide who would speak first, and Pete won. |
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During jury selection, he flipped a coin to decide whether a potential juror should be seated on the panel. |
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Frank finally flipped a coin and decided on a spot which paid off with fish biting the lines immediately. |
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Let's assume you want to flip a coin to decide weather you go to the movies or not. |
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Under Utah law, tie votes must be decided by drawing lots, which can mean anything from flipping a coin to drawing a name out of a hat. |
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A sharp-eyed youngster has found a medieval coin dating back more than 700 years in his school playground. |
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In 1980, the government announced the withdrawal of the sixpence coin on June 30th. |
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It has the one baht coin from the Paris mint set in it, and the plaque shows the funeral pyre. |
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Our coin of Valerian II is clearly billon of the type used in the first years of the reign. |
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The belief is that chancing upon a coin in the heap would usher in good fortune for the coming year. |
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The machines are attractive to coin changers who don't like paying the fees charged by commercial coin machines. |
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He weeps on his 400-count percale sheets and cradles a gold coin his invisible pop passed along in lieu of fatherly love and support. |
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But let me turn to the other side of the coin this week and look to raising perennials from seed. |
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He drew a quick rendition of the two faces of the coin the Lujar had shown him. |
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Brian Malin, aged 30, a factory supervisor, dug up the coin while metal detecting in a field 10 miles from Oxford one evening last April. |
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A ducat weighs about 3.5 grams so this coin would be more than a 17-ducat coin. |
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Stories had long held that the captain carried such a coin as a good-luck piece after it had saved him from death by a bullet. |
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When players decide to cash out, they can receive it in coin or in the form of a ticket with the amount encoded on it. |
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These taxes were collected in coin from the burghs and fresh coin was minted 3 times a year in 60 royal mints arranged throughout the country. |
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In Fisher's day, paper money and token coin were the predominant means of payment. |
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During the Tang dynasty, for example, the ordinary people traded with low-value copper coin instead. |
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They are simply devaluing further the already debased coin of Irish politics. |
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Home care assistant Audrey Sands is using pedal power to help coin in cash for Manorlands hospice. |
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A keen coin and stamp collector as well as a dealer in rare stamps and ancient coins, he avers that philately has become a rich-man's hobby. |
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The latter, monometallic, standard has problems of coin size and of susceptibility to counterfeiting. |
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In the time of Samuel Pepys one farthing was worth roughly the same as a 10p coin would be today. |
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Almost everything councils do will be affected, from changing the coin slots at swimming baths to processing benefits. |
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One New Year's tradition is to hide a silver coin in the dough of a special bread spiced with cinnamon, nutmeg, and orange peel. |
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The system works through an electronic circuit board attached to the coin acceptor in a vending machine. |
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The flip side of the coin is that hotels located in the heart of the city cost more. |
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The catalogue price for this coin is in uncirculated condition is estimated to 10,000 baht, so I think the buyer did very well. |
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The coin is now available in an attractively illustrated presentation folder and struck to what is called brilliant uncirculated standard. |
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Fiona fastened her hair into a bun, tucked a small coin purse into her pocket, and threw her cloak over her shoulders. |
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She dug around in her purse and inserted a one-pound coin into the slot, waiting impatiently for the machine to process the menu. |
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He found a quarter with his index finger, picked it up and pushed it into the coin slot on the face of the machine. |
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Smaller coin has one square incuse and larger coin has two square incuses on obverse and rough surface on reverse. |
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Luckily for American visitors, Puerto Rico is very much a U.S. commonwealth, with English widely spoken and the dollar the coin of the realm. |
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Since it was unique and unprecedented the coin was dismissed as a modern hoax. |
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Instead of replacing the popular dime with another coin, it's also possible to see whether the addition of a fifth coin would help. |
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This one had sat in a tobacco tin for generations until it was valued at a coin fair. |
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I was imagining a full hybridized America in the 21st century and trying to coin all these neologisms to explain what America would look like. |
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She strikes a shining coin with a swift hammer blow, then holds up the glinting disc of metal. |
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The old Roman coin the solidus was considered to be wholly reliable, and a soldier was one who was paid in solidi. |
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Norway's absence from the EU means the map of Europe on the Euro coin looks a bit rude. |
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A coin may only be placed by dragging the cursor along an edge from one vertex to another. |
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Or get some fabric paints and coin a T-shirt slogan that's worthy of a bumper sticker. |
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His right arm flung out in the gesture with which one would toss a coin into a wishing well, and there appeared in that hand a butterfly knife. |
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The 1933 gold Double Eagle coin has seen its share of jeopardy in a history that could have come straight from The Maltese Falcon. |
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Sometimes, they are very generous and give the hall porter a pound coin as gratuity. |
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Each coin is of face value Dram 25 and contains 1 troy ounce of 9990 pure fine silver with diameter 38 mm. |
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He was less popular with the manual coin hammerers, who feared he might put them out of work. |
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Two of these expressed powers, or enumerated powers, are the power to coin money and the power to regulate interstate commerce. |
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Dating back 2,000 years, they are one of the first examples of Iron Age coin hoards to be seen in Britain. |
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No one was allowed to ask for or pay more than the face value of a coin in exchange for a new quarter. |
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One of the coins in the set was a 2 ore coin with the face value of about 9 satang. |
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Among them were a gold coin with the face value of 6,000 baht and a silver coin with a face value of 600 baht. |
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Her latest book, A Life On The Wolds is, to coin a phrase, an every day tale of country folk. |
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But how do you suddenly rid yourself of all your partisan opinions and become, to coin a phrase, fair and balanced? |
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The grounds of Ballybeggan Park was the venue for one of the fun events of the year and, to coin a phrase, a great night was had by all. |
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Every few months, when his piggy bank is full, we take it to a real bank, run it through the coin sorter, change the total into bills. |
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I got half way through, and never finished it, so the confidence trick, coin magic and prison entries remain unfinished to this day. |
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Sly fellows turn the notoriety acquired through public office into the real coin of the realm, plugola. |
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In order for it to be fair, they flipped a coin to decide which room to paint first. |
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As I handed my coin to the vendor, a vision of 240 of Rossi's enormous overflowing cornets flashed in front of my eyes. |
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They understood very little English, and the only coin of the realm which they recognised was the florin. |
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I'd extract the old coin and replace it with a new decimal cupro-nickel piece. |
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I bet Edward III's subjects thought that the silver groat was a fine coin too but I haven't seen many of those around recently. |
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The Railway administration also declared open a coin dispenser machine and automatic platform ticket vending machine. |
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The shopkeeper did up the parcel, handed it me across the counter, took the half-dollar coin I gave him, and I left the shop. |
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The silphium plant, a sturdy umbellifer, was a regular Cyrenaic coin type for hundreds of years. |
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The obverse of all denominations bore a harp, along with the legend Saorstat Eireann and the date the coin was struck. |
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This constant reference to the foetus as a baby has become common coin for the anti-abortion lobby. |
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The reverse of each coin has an individual design representing the country from which the coin originates. |
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It is the one baht coin with the King's portrait on the obverse and the three-headed elephant on the reverse. |
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Is there any risk that the two euro coin will be mistaken for the Thai 10 baht piece, whose face value is eight times less? |
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I near shrieked as he fell to the floor, a perfect, coin shaped hole, dotted between his eyebrows. |
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But when an entire collection came up for sale at a downtown coin shop, I couldn't resist. |
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As when a prestidigitator plucks a coin from someone's ear, two knives simply appeared in Karl's paws. |
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In the other, a much younger girl comes down to breakfast with a coin the tooth fairy left under her pillow the night before. |
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The wedding ceremony can include the gift of a coin from the groom to the bride to acknowledge this role. |
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Imagine tossing a coin until it lands heads-up, and suppose that the payoff grows exponentially according to the number of tosses you make. |
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The reason is that H and T represent heads and tails in a sequence of coin tosses. |
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Consider a person who is betting on coin tosses and the prior outcomes were Heads, Tails, Tails, Heads, Heads, Heads. |
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Participants were told either that they would be betting on two blocks of six coin tosses, or on two blocks of seven. |
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He was not saying that the probability of getting just one head from ten coin tosses is the same as that of getting five heads. |
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Like coin tosses, there may be no salient causation to be discerned in the outcomes. |
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Last year, it stamped out 7.3 billion pennies, more than half of its total coin production. |
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There are more than 700 networked machines located in casinos throughout Nevada and the jackpot grows each time a coin drops into any of them. |
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These slot machines are very well designed, with a large finger-hole at the bottom which makes it easy to straighten out coin jams. |
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When I'd buy a drink from the vending machine, they would gladly do the honors of putting the coin inside. |
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Though if anyone ever tries to do a coin-flip by spinning the coin on its edge on a table, watch out. |
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This slight bias pales when compared with that of spinning a coin on its edge. |
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The Doctrine of pre-emption becomes inoperable without unimpeachable intelligence accepted by all as the coin of the realm. |
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The hoard contains Visigothic copies of imperial coins as well as regular issues, the latest dated item is a coin of the Emperor Majorian. |
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She began digging through her cracked plastic coin purse, slapping quarters and dimes on the counter. |
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The experimenter displayed the coin, showing both sides, and informed them that the coin was a typical quarter. |
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There was the coin throwing, maybe meant as a donation to my busking I think. |
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In the simpler game, the player gambles with a coin that's been loaded to make the probability of winning less than 50 percent. |
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The search group was not privy to the coin toss and placement of the target, and the placement group was not present for the actual search. |
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Children were rewarded for their efforts at the end of the day when they were each given a chocolate coin and a gingerbread man. |
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The initial issues of the notes were fully convertible upon demand into gold coin and so were, assuredly, a blessing. |
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But Craig Barclay, keeper of numismatics at the Yorkshire Museum, said he was not surprised to see such a coin coming up for auction. |
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The coin had been earlier reported to Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, where it is being researched by keeper of coins Dr Mark Blackburn. |
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Gutenberg combined the wine press and the coin punch to create moveable type and the printing press. |
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Towards the nineteenth century, the pie was the smallest minted coin in India. |
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The game requires two 52 card decks with jokers, and either a different color poker chip for each player or a different size coin. |
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The coin landed tails, the outback was their destination and the pair set off in a T model Ford, nicknamed Henrietta. |
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The outcome, however, had no bearing on the probability of the coin landing tails before it was flipped. |
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It is reported that their record in forecasting recessions is only half as good as tossing a coin. |
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A thick paper coin with a round hole in the center, the mill was worth one-tenth of a cent. |
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Most of the scratchy lines and squiggles visible here are the green patina of oxidized bronze, not a part of the original coin as cast. |
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The researchers determined that an electric current of about 40 millivolts flows between the two alloys in each coin. |
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His long hands lay folded in his lap, and his domed head, like that on some ancient Sassanian coin, was bent forward. |
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Yes, since it can't find either small coin caches or large buried treasures, it performs equally well for each task. |
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During the match assistant referee Andrew Halliday was felled by a hurled coin and bottles were thrown. |
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You have to download the software and set up a virtual wallet to receive the mined coin. |
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The miners have a coin that has real value because from minute one, you can use it to purchase these particular services. |
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The high power envelopes combined with the high efficiency numbers should make the power supplies ideal for coin miners. |
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Customers were annoyed when the boxes ran out of papers or the coin mechanism malfunctioned, as it often did. |
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The other side of the coin is that he has had to leave out players who were once automatic choices, and it's not a task he enjoys. |
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Like yin and yang, philosophers and magicians formed two sides of the same coin. |
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The box contains tricks using die, cup and ball, a disappearing beer bottle and coin, together with a wooden magic wand. |
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And then he held on to the cab with one hand while he felt in his pocket for a coin to pay the cabby. |
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There are thus two completely different readings of the Tangut inscription on this coin, neither entirely convincing. |
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The coin mechanism was a slide device similar to the type found today on a washing machine in many Laundromats or on old pinball machines. |
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A coin trap collects any loose change which falls out of the pockets of garments being washed. |
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In the time of Christ, a Roman could buy a respectable suit of clothes for about an ounce of gold coin. |
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Meanwhile, more coin was coming to be made outside English mints, particularly in Scotland. |
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In gold, this coin was minted to commemorate the defeat of the Ashirgarh Fort. |
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In fact, a Bulgarian coin was minted in the 1930's with a picture of the relief credited to Khan Krum. |
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The answer to the question of whether or not miracles occur is bifold in nature, analogous to a coin with two faces on it. |
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Even with a mintage of fifteen million the coin became very popular among collectors and good forgeries exists. |
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This is a very small mintage for a coin, so the buyers might be happier with their coins in the future. |
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This coin is not very rare since the mintage was 1,035,691, making it very popular. |
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For a chart of mint mark locations for each type of U.S. coin, be sure to see the PicGrade Area. |
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Any coin not listed was probably only made in Philadelphia and thus lacks a mint mark. |
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Each player places a coin in the pot and then take turns spinning the teetotum following the instructions when the teetotum stops spinning. |
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As an added incentive anyone who gives a gold coin will also go in the draw to win a basket of haircare products. |
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Though it has little tangible value in the physical sense beyond the paper it is printed on or metal the coin is made from, cash has a very real value in the commercial world. |
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I've flipped a coin and it's tails, so I'm inviting Louise along tomorrow. |
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A spokeswoman said one person was arrested on suspicion of throwing a coin at a match official and another was arrested on suspicion of hurling a bottle. |
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He was the first to coin the word protoplasm fox embryologic material. |
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I'd enjoy seeing a trillion dollar coin minted purely for the deservedly righteous indignation such an overstep would create. |
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Small postholes containing iron nails, early medieval potsherds and a silver coin of Ethelred II dating to 1010 suggested that the terraces had been revetted by posts. |
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Folklore says you can test a piece of fish for ciguatera by seeing if a silver coin placed on it turns black, or if a sweet potato boiled with it changes color. |
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Rights and responsibilities are reciprocal, two sides of one coin. |
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After a few rounds of heating and pickling in acid the silver would be brought to the surface of the coin in a thin rind, and give the coin a brilliant silvery appearance. |
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Whether closed with Velcro, zippers, snaps or straps, the coin purse keeps a handy supply of coins for parking meters, the laundry, public phones and stamp machines. |
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Although the reverse sides of these coin still have only the simple incuses, the frontal sides have diversified designs which symbolize the city the coin was issued. |
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Indeed, the occasional coin and piece of pottery on sites in these areas may indicate collection of objects by locals from abandoned fort sites rather than trade. |
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The situation with share selection strategies and investment funds is more complicated than coin tosses because there are so many different factors at work. |
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In commemoration of the event a 20 Baht coin has been struck. |
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The poet's eye can see the two faces of the coin simultaneously. |
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But the other side of the coin would be, inevitably, the flowering of crime and corruption around the gambling business. |
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He banged his head on a coin slot, tore a hole in it the size of a quarter, started bleeding bad and couldn't find anything to plug the hole with but washing powder. |
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I gave them each a coin with a ripe areca nut placed in a betel leaf. |
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While some have had the displeasure of being discarded by me, the intervention of poetic justice has ensured that I get paid back in the same coin and be discarded by others. |
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On Feb. 7 of that year, the Secret Service, after examining the mule, returned the coin to Baller, accompanied by a letter from Special Agent Richard M. McDrew. |
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The doors, surrounded by a delicate architrave, are divided into six equal panels each of which bears in mezzo-relievo the obverse or reverse of some coin of ancient Greece. |
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Each coin has one side smoothed down flat and in theory this should be the tails side of the coin since it is illegal to deface an image of the monarch in England. |
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Such a graph reveals that for the spins and velocities typically encountered in coin tosses, tiny changes in initial conditions make the difference between heads and tails. |
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The popular storage service is the latest young tech firm to coin a sky-high valuation. |
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We flipped a coin to decide who had to get dressed and deal with him. |
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However, Vladimir Putin has stepped it up and is giving us the opportunity to coin a new phrase connoting residency in crazy town. |
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If you are a mother about to give birth in a village where your only help is a traditional midwife, you can die with the same likelihood as the toss of a coin showing heads. |
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I wonder what would have happened if the coin had come up heads? |
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You imagine heads coming up on a coin toss and heads comes up. |
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She opened a drawer in the restroom cabinet, moved aside a curling iron and a hairbrush, and stared with a long face at the coin nestled among the hair pens and mascara wands. |
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I'm going to toss a coin and ask you to call heads or tails. |
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Ask the other person to call the coin toss before you toss the coin. |
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Spanish piece of eight, a coin common in the American colonies during the Revolution, had eight segments marked on their reverse so that the coins could be divided. |
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This is one of those things where you drop a coin in the slot and then use a brush and a power spray, both on long lances attached to pressure hoses. |
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She likes to use naturally shaped round coin pearls, to enhance, through their imperfections, the perfectly smooth and glossy surface of polished sterling silver. |
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There'd be some coin tosses made, and probably even some arguments. |
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He went against the recommendation that the five cent coin be done away with, saying that the coin should be retained because it was the best coin for scratching scratchies. |
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High-class Roman artefacts and coin hoards north of the frontier have been interpreted as such diplomatic gifts or subsidies, but they are few in number. |
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Should a collector complete all the denominations in a coin series? |
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Cellular technology is rendering coin operated call boxes redundant. |
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So why is it so odious to some in the art world when an artist tries to make a little coin for himself? |
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Mr Barclay said the threepenny bit would have been produced at a coin mint on the site of the old St Leonard's Hospital, next to York's Museum Gardens. |
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But it took another 55 years before another Olympic coin was struck. |
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It is interesting that he introduced the silver crown of five shillings which was the first English coin to have a date written in Arabic numerals rather than Roman numerals. |
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Serious coin collectors, known as numismatists, generally tend toward currency that is no longer in circulation, said American Numismatic Association president Ed Rochette. |
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Pennies are a completely useless coin, not able to be used in vending machines, toll roads and perhaps not least importantly, Las Vegas coin counters. |
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This may suggest that during this period the pound was considered approximately equivalent in value to the pistole, a gold coin of Spanish or French origin. |
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The pleading look on his face, the rags on his body and his emaciated frame move you so much that you immediately put a coin on the outstretched hands. |
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Or is the good vicar over-egging the pudding, to coin a phrase? |
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These excesses removed so much gold and silver from circulation that the coin minters were forced to add other metals to the aureus and the denarius. |
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Two workmen building foundations for a meeting room extension at Skipton's Holy Trinity Church discovered a gold coin which experts believed dated from the Saxon period. |
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Peter Sheen, Ireland's only professional coin and medal expert, will be on hand throughout the day to value coins, postcards, photographs and many other collectable items. |
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When it was launched, 21 years ago, the pound coin received a frosty reception from a sceptical public, reluctant to give up the much-loved folding note it was to replace. |
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Under the universal name of moidore it became the most commonly traded coin in the New World and was internationally the principal gold coin of the 18th century. |
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A couple of years ago I gave a paper to the No 10 Policy Unit on choice, and how the government was, to coin a phrase, talking the talk but not walking the walk. |
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Similarly, on the obverse of each coin is its value and a mark to indicate directionality, and on the reverse is its suit and another directional marker. |
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This strikes me as basically un-Barbelithian, to coin an adjective. |
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He had already put her name and face on a Roman coin, the silver denarii. |
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Commerce has stated that it doesn't intend to make any money from the fee-free coin counters, which customers and non-customers are invited to use. |
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The Viking mercenaries were probably drawn from Dublin and paid in silver in the form of coin or hack-silver, for there were no major Scandinavian settlements in Wales. |
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It was the goldsmiths and silversmiths, wire-drawers, beaters and coin stampers who purchased these ingots, to use in making various luxury items. |
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Is the difference in value of mint marks only for coin collectors? |
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After picking up his first batch of 200 euros from a bank machine on New Year's day, Schroeder tossed a two-euro coin into an accordion player's basket. |
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And we can see this one of a lot of coin that we found in the excavation. |
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A coin of Augustus shows what is presumably a square superstructure, with arches on the two faces in view, pilasters or columns, and an entablature but no roof. |
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The numbers in the curly brackets signify that after taking the last coin the left-hand player will have no spare moves left, and likewise for the right-hand player. |
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Technically, the two sides of a coin present a dichotomous choice. |
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The metrical merits of the proposed decagram coin had been urged on the 21st of January, by Monsieur Michel Chevalier, in a general speech on the coinage of France. |
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Now in a single move a coin must slide between adjacent vertices. |
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I mean, it's a balanced coin and you're getting even money on every bet. |
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Minted AD 615-30, this is by far the oldest coin in the hoard. |
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In addition, the gold florin, the local coin minted by Florentine guilds, became the standard currency of Europe and one of the first since Roman times to be used so widely. |
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If the pans remain level, the odd coin is among the 13 set aside. |
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Only one similar sprue has been found before in Britain, at Duston, Northamptonshire, alongside early 4th century coin moulds and discarded spoil castings. |
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There is no such Euro coin but how big does he think a five cent coin is? |
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Courage in the face of senseless, self-imposed danger is the coin the realm. |
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The F4 Coin mintings data has details details about the number and value of coin mintages. |
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However, if the Romans were ever on the current castle site then they didn't leave more than a coin or two. |
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There was a hole the size of a ten-rappen coin on her right shin and a run laddering after it. |
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The coin was part of the Cardinal Collection, amassed by the collector Martin Logies. |
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The new reverses of the 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p and 50p coins feature parts of the Royal Shield, and the new pound coin depicts the whole shield. |
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A coin changer product line manufactured in Germany by National Rejectors, which is a part of Crane. |
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Cobs were usually irregularly shaped. They were a means to account for a specific amount of silver in a coin that could be used for commerce. |
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As I grabbed my donuts and turned, all the change from my coin purse flew out and landed all over the store floor, under twenty sets of feet. |
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The classy trend of kneeing a man in his coin purse once seemed fresh. Like Paul Newman kicking that baddie in the nuts in Butch Cassidy. |
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The usage of coin weights, especially glass ones, goes back to Ptolemaic and Byzantine times. |
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I can't believe how many people still fall for the coin glued to the sidewalk. |
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The presence of two fragments of Axumite inscriptions and one coin at Meroe certainly suggests that the Axumites were in the area. |
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Up until 2008, the lion symbol was depicted behind Britannia on the British fifty pence coin and on the back of the British ten pence coin. |
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Fans might not be so keen to give coin chuckers a medal, Mrs Cole, if they lose their club three points. |
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For the 2012 Olympics, the Royal Mint has produced a 50p coin showing a horse jumping a fence. |
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This coin has landed on heads ten times, so by the law of averages it must land on tails next time. |
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Boulton greatly reduced the counterfeiting problem by adding lines to the coin edges, and striking slightly concave planchets. |
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D'ailleurs, dans un coin de la scene, un portrait de Yasmina avec Matoub trone sur un chevalet. |
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If the mouse attempts to take the bait, the coin is displaced and the glass traps the mouse. |
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A mounted rider from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is featured on a 1973 Canadian quarter dollar coin. |
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At the beginning of the game, the captains and the referee toss a coin to decide which team will kick off first. |
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