Organic wheat here sells for 11.6 cents a pound, compared with about 3.3 cents a pound for conventionally grown wheat. |
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They do not need to hit the center of the target to devastate conventionally armed ground forces. |
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He is bombarded by advice from the conventionally wise who see danger on every hand. |
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He first paints a black monochrome square at the center of a large piece of raw canvas that has been conventionally stapled to a stretcher. |
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Large, zero-grazed herds in feedlots are likely to encounter more hygiene problems than conventionally housed herds. |
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The reader is compelled to include the Devil himself who conventionally appears with animalized features such as horns. |
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In conventionally ventilated rooms, bacterial counts were consistently high and were not significantly influenced by OR attire. |
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Of course, if this is not to your taste the book could simply be read conventionally as a single linear narrative. |
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Under the influence of what is conventionally called the Romantic movement, a new interest in history and the arts of the past took shape. |
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Both mainsprings are so long that winding them conventionally via the crown would be unfeasible. |
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As the first official guest ever to address the parliament, the Prime Minister is conventionally supposed to deliver a non-political speech. |
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Radially sawn timbers give better yields and more stable sections than conventionally milled timbers. |
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Goyor sarongs like many other conventionally made woven textiles, need plenty of time and patience in the making. |
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But as Keynes once remarked, failing conventionally is often less harmful to a professional reputation than succeeding unconventionally. |
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Steam is conventionally produced in small boilers operating at pressures as low as 15 psi. |
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On conventionally prepared seedbeds, brassica seed can be broadcast and incorporated with cultipacking. |
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This is one of those cars which feels that it was cut from a solid piece of metal, rather than one conventionally assembled. |
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The vitrifaction or vitrified fraction of the instant invention is made conventionally in a smelter or the like. |
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Apparent power is conventionally expressed in volt-amperes since it is the simple product of rms voltage and current. |
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The novel develops a plot fueled by a desire for a conventionally capitalistic definition of happiness. |
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Food is heated conventionally and once brought to the boil, the pot is placed in the haybox to finish cooking in its own heat. |
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The most common ceramics to be found in Indonesia are green-glazed wares, conventionally called celadon. |
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They are developing a high-performance version to rival some conventionally propelled rockets. |
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Levels of the potentially harmful saturated fat palmitic acid were also 26 percent lower than in the milk of conventionally fed cows. |
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We thought anyone who was making a living from farming was farming conventionally. |
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Many conventionally farmed soils around here barely have 1 to 2 percent organic matter. |
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I think it's fair to say that rules by their nature are inconsonant with expressivity, as that notion is conventionally understood. |
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Finished components can be conventionally plated with tin, nickel, semiprecious metals, or precious metals. |
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Sell the environmental benefits of renewable energy to customers who want to help reduce the consumption of conventionally produced power. |
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These insulated concrete houses look the same as conventionally framed houses. |
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Like more conventionally minded artists, he made work that fluctuated in quality. |
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The green and red tints chosen for the various rooms were conventionally perceived as middle tones. |
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She's a conventionally well-behaved, good girl with a touch of closet anarchism. |
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Apart from their unique headgear, they dressed conventionally in black attire, even in short skirts with high heels. |
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She demands a true response of herself, not a conventionally acceptable one. |
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This seemed to sink into him, rather than leaving him unaffected, or making him conventionally polite. |
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He's not conventionally charming here, but instead uses his charm as a way of making us overlook his serious character flaws. |
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I am not conventionally religious, but I do have a very strong faith in the essential decency of humanity. |
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These pieces are the perhaps most conventionally dramatic, although Sedayne's declamatory vocals may not be to every listener's taste. |
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The announcement of the prologue and each successive part frames it additionally as a literary text, which is conventionally partitioned. |
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Schizophrenia is conventionally distinguished from the organic psychoses dementia and delirium by the absence of intellectual compromise. |
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The armies deployed conventionally, in the centre a phalanx of pike-armed heavy infantry flanked on both sides by cavalry. |
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All of which grounds him in a conventionally moral and religiously devout realm. |
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The conventionally measured hardness of graphitic irons is influenced by the graphite, especially in gray iron. |
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The terms adaxial and abaxial are used conventionally, although there is no evidence of a shoot apex between the distichous leaves. |
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Hsiluo, conventionally seen as the dividing line between northern and southern Taiwan, has long been a hub for travelers. |
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Precambrian divisions such as the Proterozoic and the Archean were conventionally eras but are now often referred to as eons. |
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The professor had shopped for more conventionally built podiums but was intent on finding something more unusual and keeping his office decor consistent. |
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She soon escaped the conventionally respectable life of her parents. |
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Yet theories that endorse the implosion and blurring of the traditionally drawn boundaries between conventionally accepted dualisms are not necessarily postmodern. |
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More conventionally, a sharp barrier such as gravel or crushed seashells or eggshells sprinkled around plants will stop slugs and snails in their tracks. |
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First, any molecule present in the vessel lumen will have to negotiate a very thick, largely unstirred surface layer far beyond the distances conventionally assumed. |
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Steels microalloyed with both niobium and vanadium provide higher yield strength in the conventionally hot-rolled condition than that achievable with either element alone. |
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The subject in his poetry returns from its relegation to the personal and collective unconscious with less conventionally acceptable sets of concerns. |
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The Hubble Constant is highlighted in the National Geographic article, and conventionally accepted cosmogonies are presented as proof for the old age of the Universe. |
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Scott does not come off as a conventionally conceived gigglebox made of blubber. |
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The conventionally utilized enzyme for glucose measurement, glucose oxidase, inherently utilizes oxygen as its electron acceptor during the oxidation of glucose. |
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Both houses are conventionally built from a double skin of blockwork, with a cavity, and stone cladding to the exterior, plus partial weatherboarding. |
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The women Peterson photographed were offbeat, eccentric, irreverent, and not conventionally pretty. |
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Montgomery is part of a small but growing group of conventionally trained physicians disillusioned with traditional medical care. |
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Such films look different from what's conventionally called video art. |
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Photographs reveal her conventionally dressed, complete with handbag. |
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Her voice wasn't always conventionally beautiful, at least in later years, but it was consistently communicative, and dependably charming and womanly. |
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The number in the Pacific has since been halved with four of the Trident-missile-fitted submarines converted into conventionally armed cruise missile submarines. |
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Her adherence to conventionally inflexible distinctions signals her rigidity and demonstrates her failure to adapt successfully to her new surroundings. |
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And this is far more moving than a conventionally emotionalist narrative. |
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Also, conventionally, paddy remains in water throughout the season. |
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He wasn't conventionally rugged, or square shouldered, or full of muscles. |
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Eggs should be just past the runny stage but after standing for 1-2 minutes, they will be set and will look similar to conventionally cooked eggs. |
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These fairies are conventionally well-mannered and alert to humans. |
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Guerra's not afraid to actually play the guitar conventionally either, and his dolorous, hesitant chording is heard to beautiful effect on the gorgeous closing track. |
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His brother was conventionally dressed last week when, as one of many admiring headlines revealed, his ship pulled off a big cocaine bust during his first week at sea. |
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Alongside these giants were more conventionally sized invertebrates. |
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This arrangement was not received with cries of joy from my very conventionally minded parents, understandably perhaps, as I was their only daughter. |
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Economic growth is conventionally measured using indicators such as GDP and GNI that do not accurately reflect the growing disparities in wealth. |
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About 20 percent of the rain on conventionally tilled plots became direct surface runoff. |
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Immunodiagnosis conventionally is confirmed by virus isolation or a rise in PRNT titer. |
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In these languages, the word order of clauses is generally fixed in two patterns of conventionally numbered positions. |
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Currently, there are several chemicals that been conventionally and commercially used as coagulant in the water and wastewater treatment. |
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A dummy pronoun may be conventionally of a particular gender, even though there is no gendered noun for it to agree with. |
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The High Court in Sue v Hill in 1999 did not rely upon the long title or the preamble, which conventionally do not have force of law. |
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The earliest archaeological culture that is conventionally termed Celtic, the Hallstatt culture, comes from the early European Iron Age, ca. |
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Aside from the conventionally known continents, the scope and meaning of the term continent varies. |
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The Zeta product range also includes magnetic agitators for bioreactors, mixing units, conventionally sealed agitators and defoaming units. |
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After reaching the target area they sink to the sea bed and act like conventionally laid influence mines. |
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Emblematically, this passage conventionally cautions the new mayor to avoid corruption. |
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Seeding with the Chinese seed drill requires higher than normal soil moisture compared to conventionally tilled wheat. |
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The Histories was at some point divided into the nine books that appear in modern editions, conventionally named after the nine Muses. |
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The Immigrant is far from a conventionally naturalistic historical film. |
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Consumption of xenoestrogens, as found in conventionally grown foods and water from plastic containers, must be curtailed. |
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Dutch, like other Germanic languages, is conventionally divided into three phases. |
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Recorded settlement has conventionally been dated back to 874, although archaeological evidence indicates Gaelic monks had settled Iceland before that date. |
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Elections are held on Election Day, which is conventionally a Thursday. |
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Loss of supply in the lower house is conventionally considered to be an expression of the house's loss of confidence in the government resulting in the government's fall. |
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A Prime Minister who has lost the confidence of the House will conventionally either advise a dissolution of Parliament and new elections, or tender his resignation. |
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Cabbage fields surrounded by collards required 75 to 100 percent fewer sprays to control diamondback moths than fields treated conventionally with pesticides. |
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Some utility functions, such as the one employed in the current work, may not lead to a linear demand equation of the form that is conventionally estimated. |
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The circularity, cylindricity, surface roughness and hole oversize of the ultrasonically and conventionally drilled work pieces were measured and compared. |
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In foundries, this advanced oxidant water is added to the green sand system wherever water is conventionally added, such as sand coolers, blenders, and mullers. |
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The material cost for 1,000 meters of a sequentially co-extruded clamp profile total up to 336 Euros compared to 569 Euros for a conventionally manufactured profile. |
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Still more heretically but conventionally, it suggests the relatively upper class book or manuscript being read, with its central crease or fold, as an eroticized image. |
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A writing miscue was a word that was not conventionally written using either contracted or uncontracted braille or any combination of correct contractions. |
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The conference broke up with war appearing likely, but Philip and Richard launched a surprise attack immediately afterwards during what was conventionally a period of truce. |
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Instead of conventionally building the aircraft from the ground up, final assembly employed 800 to 1,200 people to join completed subassemblies and to integrate systems. |
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The Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin from around 895, and the Viking expansion from the late 8th century conventionally mark the last large movements of the period. |
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The leader of the orchestra, David Greed, toggled between this scordatura instrument and his conventionally tuned violin and made a brilliant contribution to the performance. |
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Nonetheless, this distinction is conventionally awarded to the Flemish cartographer Abraham Ortelius who in 1570 published the collection of maps Theatrum Orbis Terrarum. |
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Other angels came to be conventionally depicted in long robes, and in the later Middle Ages they often wear the vestments of a deacon, a cope over a dalmatic. |
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