Increased illumination in the night too would disorient turtles and hatchlings and prevent them from finding their way to the sea after they hatch. |
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He would be placed on a boat, and taken around the bay to disorient him, though they would never actually leave Guantánamo. |
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A good deal of work has been done on chemicals that can incapacitate, disorient, or paralyze opponents. |
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Their main effect was to disorganise and disorient the left. |
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Some studies also point to features on the coastline and at sea that might disorient whales and dolphins. |
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The work, though, retains its miasmatic whiff and its unending ability to disorient and wrong-foot viewers. |
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In all this, we must not forget that labelling must not disorient the consumer, but must be clear, distinct, and, in the final analysis, legible. |
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Sudden cuts into scenes and abrupt reorientation of the camera angle are used to startle and disorient the viewer. |
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Site lighting and lights from vehicles and heavy equipment may disorient migrating birds or attract them to the construction area. |
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But it may also inadvertently erode cultural diversity and disorient youth by obstructing the transmission of indigenous language and knowledge. |
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Slow reservoir pools disorient migrating fish and significantly increase the duration of their migration. |
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This perceptible latency-or audio lag-can disorient and distract you, making it hard to keep your name at the top of the leaderboards. |
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Once the bull leaves the bullpen, the péones make him run to make him short of breath, disorient him and tire him out. |
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For example, some birds fly into buildings because the lights disorient them. |
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Their purpose is to disorient the public and put the media establishment and the Democrats on notice that no opposition to Bush's policies will be brooked. |
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All this artful excess seems intended to disorient and disinhibit guests descending from the busy theater district above. |
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Director John Maybury wants to disorient you from the get-go, assaulting you with a barrage of loud sounds, distorted colors and shaky imagery. |
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Gary Ross, the director, clearly intends to immerse and disorient his audience, to ensure we feel rather different from the audience within the film. |
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The skill will disorient you but no damage suffered. |
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The conditions would have been conducive to a white-out situation, whereby the snow-covered lake surface would blend with a snowy, obscured ceiling to disorient the pilot by eliminating all horizon references. |
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In a strobe-lit room, with bars and obstacles swinging from the roof, designed to disorient – and mirrored walls to multiply the confusion – I got hopelessly lost. |
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They use a combination of powerful body slams and vicious bites to pummel, disorient and tear apart their enemies. |
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White Noise is used to disorient people prior to interrogating them and similarly, the White Noise LTD goggle will visually disorient your competition while you are in the starting gate or on the track. |
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Youssef Aschkar: The propaganda agencies of the neocons succeed very well in manipulating the facts and the media, and by this means they are able, unfortunately, to trick most people and to disorient even progressives. |
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They claim that the company's assessment was inadequate and that the sonar could disorient the whales, drive them from their feeding grounds and separate mothers from their calves. |
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Powerful sound pulses could disorient marine mammals. |
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In some circumstances, the false horizon created by a sloping cloud base, rising terrain, oblique lights or protruding terrain features can disorient the pilot. |
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We must, though, make it our concern that this political crisis should not disorient us and seduce us into activity for activity's sake, and so we must respond with determination and deliberation. |
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Little Cloud warns you that spiral dives can disorient the pilot. |
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Operational manoeuvre, a function of mass and mobility, is used to disrupt and disorient the adversary, generally shape the battlefield and synchronize tactical manoeuvre, a function of fire and movement. |
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Perilymph fistula, for example, may disorient persons to the degree that they cannot move about or deal with complex visual fields without acute distress. |
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