As a result, it felt like an add-on, meant to artificially moisten another otherwise dry address. |
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A constitutionalist libertarian, Rawles is strongly opposed to any federal regulations on dry ice bombs. |
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Dark and Spicy Mexican Hot Chocolate Chile ancho powder is a versatile spice derived from dry Mexican ancho chiles. |
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The dry climate of the city made Jauja a common place for tuberculosis sufferers to move to since the dry air was good for the kidneys and lungs. |
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On 25 January 1942, the ships were photographed in the harbour and two short periods in dry dock by two ships were seen. |
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The Khamaseen is a hot, dry wind that originates from the vast deserts in the south and blows in the spring or in the early summer. |
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Thus continental shelves were exposed and many islands became connected with the continents through dry land. |
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Madagascar dry deciduous forests and lowland rainforests possess a high ratio of endemism. |
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Eastern gray squirrels build a type of nest, known as a drey, in the forks of trees, consisting mainly of dry leaves and twigs. |
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However, dry areas do become important when their normal habitats become flooded. |
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The chambers are frequently lined with bedding, brought in on dry nights, which consists of grass, bracken, straw, leaves and moss. |
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Upon retiring to sleep, badgers block their sett entrances with dry leaves and earth. |
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It has several adaptations to dry areas, including a high salt tolerance and an ability to survive without water by ingesting berries. |
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Contrary to the popular notion of snakes being slimy because of possible confusion of snakes with worms, snakeskin has a smooth, dry texture. |
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It will venture into wetlands if dry ground is available nearby and thus may be found on the banks of streams, lakes, and ponds. |
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The mountains are dry and brown and so remote that not even helicopters fly overhead, spraying their poison over papaverous hillsides. |
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It also inhabits open countryside, fields, copses, parks and gardens, and often occurs in dry areas well away from standing water. |
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Beech logs are burned to dry the malt used in some German smoked beers, giving the beers their typical flavour. |
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The Norway spruce tolerates acidic soils well, but does not do well on dry or deficient soils. |
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Sycamore leaf spot, caused by the fungus Cristulariella depraedans, results in pale blotches on leaves which later dry up and fall. |
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Gorse is closely related to the brooms, and like them, has green stems and very small leaves and is adapted to dry growing conditions. |
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The dry wood of dead gorse stems provides food for the caterpillars of the concealer moth Batia lambdella. |
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Dried mint leaves should be stored in an airtight container placed in a cool, dark, dry area. |
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The caudicles may dry up if the flower has not been visited by any pollinator, and the pollinia then fall directly on the stigma. |
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Unlike simple dehydration in plants and animals, lichens may experience a complete loss of body water in dry periods. |
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The processes by which atmospheric deposition occurs include fog and dew, gaseous absorption, and dry deposition. |
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She poured paraffin on the dry floors and on the pandanus-mats, and then she set fire. |
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However, the warming and drying climate meant that by 5000 BC, the Sahara region was becoming increasingly dry and hostile. |
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Since this time, dry conditions have prevailed in Eastern Africa and, increasingly during the last 200 years, in Ethiopia. |
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In the Rocky Mountains and Andes, dry and continental climates are observed. |
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In the dry valleys, the same effect occurs over a rock base, leading to a desiccated landscape. |
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It is moist across southeast sections, and dry across much of the interior. |
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The climate is characterized by hot dry summers and rainfall in winter, in areas under the constant influence of the subtropical ridge. |
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On the leeward side of mountains, desert climates can exist due to the dry air caused by compressional heating. |
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Savanna climates and areas with monsoon regimes have wet summers and dry winters. |
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Tropical rainforests technically do not have dry or wet seasons, since their rainfall is equally distributed through the year. |
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The previous dry season leads to food shortages into the wet season, as the crops have yet to mature. |
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In areas with wet and dry seasons, soil nutrients diminish and erosion increases during the wet season. |
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Huracan was believed by the Maya to have created dry land out of the turbulent waters. |
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It was characterized by a cold and dry climate, the existence of humans in association with the reindeer, and the extinction of the mammoth. |
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They photodegrade on exposure to sunlight, although they do so only under dry conditions, as water inhibits photolysis. |
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Sulfur dioxide may also be removed by dry desulfurisation by injection limestone slurry into the flue gas before the particle filtration. |
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They will photodegrade on exposure to the sun, but they do so properly only under dry conditions, and water inhibits this process. |
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Exeter began as settlements on a dry ridge ending in a spur overlooking a navigable river teeming with fish, with fertile land nearby. |
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The preferred habitat is dry ground, including scrub and gardens, and within the Isles of Scilly can be found on shingle beaches and sand dunes. |
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Sometimes As is used in place of Aw if the dry season occurs during the time of higher sun and longer days. |
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In the tropics, the rainy season is provoked by the tropical air masses and the dry winters by subtropical high pressure. |
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The Verkhoyansk Range was extensively glaciated in the Pleistocene, but the climate was too dry for glaciation to extend to low elevations. |
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The common ostrich is a xeric animal, due to the fact that it lives in habitats that are both dry and hot. |
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Seaplanes that can also operate from dry land are a subclass called amphibian aircraft. |
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The pier had been extended again in 1812 and John Matthews opened a small dry dock in 1814, the first in the South West. |
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The goal of the salvage may be to repair the vessel at a harbour or dry dock, or to clear a channel for navigation. |
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Reception areas for new cars now fill the Eastern Docks where passengers, dry docks and trains used to be. |
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The construction has been challenging because the museum has been built over the ship in the dry dock which is a listed monument. |
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Hence, amniotes can lay eggs on dry land, while amphibians generally need to lay their eggs in water. |
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Caterpillars have evolved defenses against physical conditions such as cold, hot or dry environmental conditions. |
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Many crops such as alfalfa, timothy, oats, and clover are allowed to dry in the field after cutting before being baled into hay. |
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Producers will typically continue to milk the cow until she is two months away from parturition then they will dry her off. |
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A dry period that falls outside this time frame can result in decreased milk production in subsequent lactation. |
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In boat building lots of sanding requires using either dry sandpaper, or wet and dry paper, to achieve a reasonable paint or varnish finish. |
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Wet and dry is best used on paint finishes, while dry paper is best used on dry wood. |
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In some instances, a resin film is placed upon the lower mould and dry reinforcement is placed above. |
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Tropical forests were limited to a tight band around the equator, and in addition to dry savannahs, deserts appeared in Asia and Africa. |
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For example, a delicate dry fly hook is made of thin wire with a tapered eye because weight is the overriding factor. |
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Rope made from hemp, cotton or nylon is generally stored in a cool dry place for proper storage. |
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As a consequence, the weather tends to be sunny, dry and stable with a minimal risk of rainfall. |
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Nowhere else on Earth has air been found as dry and evaporative as in the Sahara region. |
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These rains sustain summer pastures of grasses and herbs, with dry woodlands and shrublands along seasonal watercourses. |
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Archaeological sites can also be found on the foreshore today that would have been on dry land when they were constructed. |
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Along the coast they lived on artificial mounds called terpen, built high enough to remain dry during the highest tide. |
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The south and west coasts enjoy a typical Mediterranean climate, with mild rainy winters, and warm dry summers. |
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The climate of Greece is primarily Mediterranean, featuring mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. |
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The Tanimbar Islands are dry and hilly, while the Aru Islands are flat and swampy. |
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Most areas are drained by ephemeral watercourses called wadis, which are dry except during the rainy season. |
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He set out again with a caravan in February 1352 and after 25 days arrived at the dry salt lake bed of Taghaza with its salt mines. |
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Prior texts were pilgrimage texts, which depicted travel to holy sites and were more standardized, dry and conventional. |
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Water is scarce in dry and hot environment, and this poses a challenge to the ostrich's water consumption. |
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As expected in a species inhabiting arid regions, dehydration causes a reduction in faecal water, or dry feces. |
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Common ostriches employ adaptive features to manage the dry heat and solar radiation in their habitat. |
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As ambient temperature increases, dry heat loss decreases, but evaporative heat loss increases because of increased respiration. |
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Camel urine comes out as a thick syrup, and camel feces are so dry that they do not require drying when the Bedouins use them to fuel fires. |
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Calf survival varies according to the season of birth, with calves born during the dry season having higher survival rates. |
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The burn was prevented from becoming dry by using anointments placed on the burn. |
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The humors represented fire, air, earth and water through the properties of hot, cold, dry and moist, respectively. |
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However, liquid makeups must contain preservatives and compressed makeups must contain binders, which dry mineral makeups do not. |
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The relative dryness of the wearer's skin is important, since dry skin will not hold fragrance as long as skin with more oil. |
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Consequently, infrared observatories have to be located in high, dry places on Earth or in space. |
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Traditionally, three chronometers were kept in gimbals in a dry room near the centre of the ship. |
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The dry lands of Namibia were inhabited since early times by the San, Damara, and Nama peoples. |
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The dry lands of Namibia were inhabited since early times by San, Damara, and Nama. |
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The Bahamas are often sunny and dry for long periods of time, and average more than 3,000 hours or 340 days of sunlight annually. |
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There are two clearly defined seasons, a rainy season from March to June, and a dry season for the remaining months. |
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The interior of the state is covered mostly by the dry thorny scrub vegetation called caatinga. |
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The porphyry mineralization further benefited from the dry climate that let them largely out of the disturbing actions of meteoric water. |
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As a direct opposite of the humid Andean slopes are the relatively dry Andean slopes in most of western Peru, Chile and Argentina. |
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However, winter is mostly dry due to the influence of the vast Siberian High affecting much of East Asia. |
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The forested area tends to lose leaves during the winter dry season, with evergreen pines in the highest elevations. |
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The climate has a dry season from December to April and a wet season from May to November. |
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The hot and wet season extends from May through October, while the cool and dry season extends November through April. |
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They honored this god during the onset of the dry season so that the god would fill dry streambeds and cause rain to fall on crops. |
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Jauja's dry climate was recognized, however, as being beneficial for patients with respiratory tract tuberculosis. |
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Treasured landmarks such as Huaytapallana Nevada, when compared to 30 years ago, has much less glacial ice during the peak dry season. |
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It is dry and sunny most of the year with some occasional rains during the months of June to December. |
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The Mediterranean climate is observed in the northwestern corner of the state where the summers are dry and mild and the winters cool and rainy. |
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The western third of Oregon is very wet in the winter, moderately to very wet during the spring and fall, and dry during the summer. |
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In the northeastern region of the state, particularly around Pendleton, both irrigated and dry land wheat is grown. |
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They moved camp in the morning, without breakfast except for a crumbling chunk of dry pemmican which Aaron chewed privily. |
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During the dry season, those rivers are reduced to a series of waterholes and sandy beds. |
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The peninsula is a popular tourist destination in the dry season for camping, hiking, birdwatching and fishing enthusiasts. |
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The term is also used to denote the climate encountered in regions too dry to support a forest, but not dry enough to be a desert. |
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The region is blanketed by dry and cold Arctic air masses for most of the year. |
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By the end of the growing season, the kernels dry out and become difficult to chew without cooking them tender first in boiling water. |
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The fire burns dry leaves, and chases away or kills any lurking venomous snakes, without harming the stalks and roots. |
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Sugarcane crop is able to efficiently fix solar energy, yielding some 55 tonnes of dry matter per hectare of land annually. |
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After harvest, the crop produces sugar juice and bagasse, the fibrous dry matter. |
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The large roots are peeled and then ground into flour, which is then soaked in water, squeezed dry several times, and toasted. |
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They were found in Peru, where dry climatic conditions are favorable to the preservation of organic material. |
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This allows the peanuts to dry slowly to a little less than a third of their original moisture level over a period of three to four days. |
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It is particularly important that peanuts are dried properly and stored in dry conditions. |
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On dry soils the young plants require watering every other day during the dry season for the first three years. |
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The spikes are collected and spread out to dry in the sun, then the peppercorns are stripped off the spikes. |
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These climates are subdivided into two types, one that receives less rainfall with a significant dry season and the other which is wetter. |
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Most of the territory has a cool, dry climate, although areas in the south have more moisture, with most rain falling between June and September. |
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Belize has a tropical climate with pronounced wet and dry seasons, although there are significant variations in weather patterns by region. |
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The dry season is shorter in the south, normally only lasting from February to April. |
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The principal Swazi social unit is the homestead, a traditional beehive hut thatched with dry grass. |
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Zimbabwe is unusual in Africa in that there are a number of ancient ruined cities built in a unique dry stone style. |
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Biltong, a type of jerky, is a popular snack, prepared by hanging bits of spiced raw meat to dry in the shade. |
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His powder was made by reacting chlorine with dry slaked lime and proved to be a cheap and successful product. |
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Petroleum coke has many uses besides being a fuel, such as the manufacture of dry cells and of electrolytic and welding electrodes. |
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Keep floors in work areas in a clean and, so far as possible, a dry condition. |
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Throughout the 18th century, this could only be made by dry distilling minerals in a technique similar to the original alchemical processes. |
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In addition in Egypt, naturally occurring sodium carbonate, the mineral natron, was mined from dry lakebeds. |
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Also, dry sodium carbonate may be treated directly with concentrated hydrogen peroxide solution. |
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Calcium hypochlorite is stored dry and cold, away from any organic material and metals. |
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The process involved reacting chlorine and dry slaked lime to form bleaching powder, a mixture of calcium hypochlorite and other derivatives. |
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Similarly, dry cement powder in contact with mucous membranes can cause severe eye or respiratory irritation. |
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At present, diversions of water mean that the lakes are often largely dry land. |
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Patients can be lethargic, and might have sunken eyes, dry mouth, cold clammy skin, or wrinkled hands and feet. |
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If it rains while the hay is drying, turning the windrow can also allow it to dry faster. |
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Clothing emits tetrachloroethylene, or other dry cleaning fluids, for days after dry cleaning. |
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Conversely, in some cases wind power can be used to spare water for later use in dry seasons. |
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This is assumed to be because the sun on the south side creates a dry environment. |
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Fern species live in a wide variety of habitats, from remote mountain elevations, to dry desert rock faces, to bodies of water or in open fields. |
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The bowl of Dove Crags is one of the largest glacial combs or cirques in the Lake District, yet has no tarn, but dry hollows noted as curious by. |
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From the same starting point it is possible to climb the fell up the north eastern ridge following a ruined dry stone wall. |
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In dry summers, the water supply had to be cut off at night to conserve stocks. |
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During periods of dry weather the water level drops revealing a wide band of bare exposed rock. |
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This gill contains a considerable flow of water in its rocky gorge, but it often has only a dry bed by the time it gets down to valley level. |
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The lower slopes have been planted with small areas of mixed woodland and are extensively compartmentalised by an array of dry stone walls. |
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During dry spells all water sinks very quickly on reaching the limestone, through sinkholes. |
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Some Australian species form underground corms for this purpose, which also serve to allow the plants to survive dry summers. |
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Seeds of the tuberous species require a hot, dry summer period followed by a cool, moist winter to germinate. |
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When used as field boundaries, dry stone structures often are known as dykes, particularly in Scotland. |
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In Peru in the 15th century AD, the Inca made use of otherwise unusable slopes by building dry stone walls to create terraces. |
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Whichever method is used to build a dry stone wall, considerable skill is required. |
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Although dry stone is seldom used for these purposes today, a great many are still in use and maintained. |
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Adding a dry stone wall to convert the space under a large rock into a functional building near Bignasco, Switzerland. |
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Weather during harvest need not be as fair and dry as when harvesting for drying. |
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When the silo is filled or the stack built, a layer of straw or some other dry porous substance may be spread over the surface. |
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Animal charcoal or bone black is the carbonaceous residue obtained by the dry distillation of bones. |
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Just below the tree line, one may find subalpine forests of needleleaf trees, which can withstand cold, dry conditions. |
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At lower altitudes, the landscape is characterised by pasture and meadows enclosed by dry stone walls. |
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In summer the anticyclones tend to bring dry settled conditions which can lead to drought. |
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Where there are dry sandy soils there are remnants of historic heathlands and ancient semi natural woodlands. |
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Its use in the construction of dry stone walls across the areas where it outcrops is considerable. |
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I'm Tris. Patricia.' She was back to her hair, eyes crammed to the side, snapping off dry split ends and flicking them to the floor. |
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In dry conditions the river disappears underground into the sink hole known as Manchester Hole. |
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Due to the impermeable nature of the rock, blanket bogs and mires form, and drier areas have wet and dry heaths and acid grasslands. |
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It can also be employed at times when the pothole is dry and clean with more lasting results. |
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In this procedure, waiting for any water to dry may require a second visit to place the tack coat. |
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He suggested that time could be saved by tunnelling in both directions from Redbrook pit which was being kept dry by a large steam engine. |
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At first this process operated on the dry ore, which was shovelled in and removed by hand. |
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This was a vast improvement over dry stamping because it was a continuous process that also stopped the production of unwanted very fine dust. |
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Continental and superior air masses are dry while maritime and monsoon air masses are moist. |
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Cold fronts may feature narrow bands of thunderstorms and severe weather, and may on occasion be preceded by squall lines or dry lines. |
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Only in the areas with distinct seasonal alternations between wet and dry conditions kaolinite was found. |
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The use of moorstone continued up to recent times with the extensive building of dry stone walls around farm newtakes. |
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You are not using the frosting as a glue, as in making a gingerbread house, so it is not necessary that it dry rock hard. |
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Rotisseries cook with dry heat, but the continual rotation of foods as they cook helps maintain their natural juices. |
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The dry desert of my native land, her men grey and gaunt, their spines twisted, their feet shod with rowel and spur. |
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She followed the dry runlet to where a jutting shoulder formed a nook matted with briars. |
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She tried to do things for him, get his slippers, fetch his saafa, button his kurta, dry his wet hair after a bath. |
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Secco painting, or painting in secco, is painting on dry plaster, as distinguished from fresco painting, on wet or fresh plaster. |
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There was no linen, no pillow, and when she touched the mattress it gave forth the faint dry whisper of shucks. |
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In the hearth at the north wall a large fire cracked and lisped, flushing the room with a dry sirocco that caused frozen skin to tingle. |
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The authors have recently analyzed a PMMA lens explanted because of snowflake degeneration in the dry and hydrated states. |
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Juice extraction remained constant for sorgo stalks kept wet, but it decreased gradually for dry stalks during 2 weeks storage. |
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I was just about spitting feathers. My throat was so dry and sore that I could barely feel my own tongue. |
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The exceedingly dry joke is that it is not a small table but a small amount of what might be called tableness. |
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In the browning corn fields here, the light breeze makes a tindery noise as it rustles the dry stalks. |
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Kids raced and shrieked, toasted anything toastable on sticks, and upset the clean-up by showering each other with dry leaves. |
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How have we seen Churches and States, like a dry unliquored coach, set themselves on fire with their own motion! |
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The two extracted portions were combined and placed in a vacucentrifuge to speed dry for 45 min. |
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Wet sanding is a dustfree alternative to dry sanding. Use a high-density, small-cell polyurethane sponge made for wet sanding. |
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Cruciferae, an Asiatic plant which curls up in a dry wickerlike ball when dry and opens out when moistened. |
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The climate is dry and at the time the chukars hatch that Is In their favor. |
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The eastern two thirds of Oregon have cold, snowy winters and very dry summers. |
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In the closets or almeries on each side of the Frater-house door in the Cloisters, Towels were kept white and clean to dry their Hands upon. |
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Lassiter ended there with dry humor, yet behind that was meaning. Jane blushed and made arch eyes at him. |
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The sound track tingles with cool jazz, the dry atonal music of the asphalt jungle. |
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But the hands of them that beat him became dry and the hands of the provost also, in such wise that they might not bewield them. |
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The bettongs live in moderately dry country and with the exception of the Boodie, which digs burrows, all make nests of grass on the ground. |
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Use the 'pulse' button to turn these ingredients into a coarse sort of breadcrumby, dry mixture. |
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Garments made of certain new materials breathe well and keep the skin relatively dry during exercise. |
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On top it's a dry cactused area inhabited by typical upper desert creatures such as kangaroo rats and collared lizards. |
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Caissons were enclosed dry chambers built on river beds to facilitate the construction of bridge piers. |
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The Kotsoteka Comanche lived mostly along the Canadian River, where the Llano ended and the dry plains turned into grassy canyonlands. |
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There had been dry seasons, accumulations of dust, wind-blown seeds, and cedars rose wonderfully out of solid rock. |
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The river continuously flows to the sea, it will never pause to let us cross on dry land. |
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If it be winter, or settled wet weather, the hen must, if possible, be kept indoors, or else be cooped under a dry shed or outhouse. |
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Soon, the incessant wind would dry the stenchy wallow to corduroyed cement. |
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Chickens cannot digest coarse or dry grass, and it is likely to cause them to become cropbound. |
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This is a perfect dog-day. The atmosphere thick, mildewy, cloudy. It is difficult to dry anything. The sun is obscured, yet we expect no rain. |
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In very dry seasons some drinkwater is brought from wells dug in the bed of the river, about half-an hour from the village. |
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When you fellers was his age, you wa'n't dry behind the ears yet. He never was no kid. He was born a full-grown man. |
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There wasn't a dry eye in the audience after her heart-wrenching performance. |
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Rob finished cleaning his empty gun then pointed it at an imaginary target and dry fired. |
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But, there are a few fungi that transport water to dry wood and cause decay called dry-rot or water-conducting fungi. |
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The first type is of course the dry spell when you can't think of any ideas. The second type is when kids just have a dry spell in writing. |
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No-one wants to donate a large sum of hard-earned money to an agency that may dry up and blow away next year. |
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Out under the trees, some rangers had found enough duff and dry wood to start a fire beneath a slanting ridge of slate. |
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The text, a series of encyclopedialike Star Wars trivia blurbs, is generally as dull and dry as the Tatooine desert. |
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Chopping and hauling wood was exhaustive work. Scraping the flesh off the heavy hides and hanging them to dry also taxed her physical strength. |
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Titus moved his dry tongue across his lips and sat down on the flagged floor, but a sense of terror jerked him to his feet again. |
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She had a whole floor of everlasting flowers spread to dry in her front room. |
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The bulbs contain a mucilaginous carbohydrate called glucomannan, which the orchids use to retain water during dry periods. |
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Weeds are also very prevalent on dry upland grasslands, where such hay as is produced is necessarily thin and haulmy. |
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At that time sea levels were much lower than today, and the shallower parts of what is now the North Sea were dry land. |
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The Channel is of geologically recent origins, having been dry land for most of the Pleistocene period. |
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During the year, valleys typically experience 20 days with snow falling, a further 200 wet days, and 145 dry days. |
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Features such as dry stone walls, for example, are there as a result of sheep farming. |
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In modern use, a ploughed field is typically left to dry out, and is then harrowed before planting. |
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He also invested in dockyards, and commissioned the oldest surviving dry dock in 1495 at Portsmouth. |
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The pieces of stagnant water may be divided into jeels which contain water throughout the year, and chaongre which dry up in the cold season. |
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Take time to look around at the dawning light that casts lovely shadows on the rock and the gnarly kiawe trees that line the dry canyon walls. |
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At the end of the last Ice Age the Bristol Channel was dry land, but subsequently the sea level rose, resulting in major coastal changes. |
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The Somerset Levels were flooded, but the dry points such as Glastonbury and Brent Knoll are known to have been occupied by Mesolithic hunters. |
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The eastern part of the estuary is much affected by silting, and part of it is marked on modern maps as dry land rather than tidal. |
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If heather and other vegetation is left for too long, a large volume of dry and combustible material builds up. |
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It typically lacks a dry season, as precipitation is more evenly dispersed throughout the year. |
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Construction was carried out in a specially adapted dry dock in Bristol, England. |
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Iron's advantages included being much cheaper than wood, not being subject to dry rot or woodworm, and its much greater structural strength. |
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They commonly can accommodate both wet and dry soilage, a useful feature in industrial plants and manufacturing facilities. |
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A dry type cooling tower is similar to an automobile radiator and is used in locations where water is costly. |
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There is a monsoon season with frequent flooding due to heavy rainfall, and a dry season with significantly less rainfall or none at all. |
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After dialysis, the enzyme can be obtained as a dry powder by lyophilization. |
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The majority of Southeast Asia has a wet and dry season caused by seasonal shift in winds or monsoon. |
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Sparks from paper or burned rubbish can ignite dry thatch on the surface around a chimney. |
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A moat was a defensive ditch with steep sides, and could be either dry or filled with water. |
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Until the late 19th century, roasting by dry heat in an oven was called baking. |
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It is first cured using large quantities of salt, either a brine or a dry packing, and the result is fresh bacon or green bacon. |
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Bacon is distinguished from salt pork and ham by differences in the brine or dry packing. |
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Kun chiang is a dry and sweet Chinese sausage which has also been incorporated into the Thai culinary culture. |
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Hence the curries in Rajasthan are usually made using dry spices and herbs and other dry items like gram flour. |
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One popular dish, rendang from West Sumatran cuisine, is often described as caramelised beef dry curry. |
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For most of his life he was a vegetarian, and often lived for days on dry biscuits and white wine. |
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Another hot dry year was recorded in 1999, much to the relief of organisers and festival goers. |
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Alice and the other animals convene on the bank and the question among them is how to get dry again. |
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Players often use sweat bands on their wrists to keep their hands dry and head bands or bandanas to keep the sweat out of their eyes as well. |
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Three dry tyre compounds, with different durability and adhesion characteristics, are available to drivers. |
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If rain tyres are used, drivers are no longer obliged to use both types of dry tyres. |
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Just before the race began a rain shower hit and Hamilton ran in fourth place before dropping down to sixth to put on dry weather tyres. |
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However, the rain did not come, and the other drivers had to pit again for dry tyres. |
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By the early 2000s, the condition of Gipsy Moth IV, even though it continued to rest in a Greenwich dry dock hoist, had seriously deteriorated. |
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Also, the climate of the West is quite unstable, as areas that are normally wet can be very dry for years and vice versa. |
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Although the White Nile runs through the country, water is scarce during the dry season in areas that are not located on the river. |
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Most ancient and early medieval stone buildings were of dry stone construction. |
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It's a lang, laigh, mirk chalmer, perishin' cauld in winter, an' no very dry even in the tap o' the simmer, for the manse stands near the burn. |
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Some of these were river islands in their time, or dry land surrounded by marsh. |
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The different types of molasseses are similar in feeding value per pound of dry matter. |
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These small lagoons off of the main lagoon are filled with seawater at high tide and dry at low tide. |
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Sun come, Moon come, Seed time, dry time, fog and rain, Sowing, growing, reaping, resting, Sun come, Moon come, etc. |
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It is also extremely dry at cruising altitude, and this causes sore eyes, dry skin and mucosa on long flights. |
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Tierra del Fuego is extremely wet in the west, relatively damp in the south, and dry in the north and east. |
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In 1832, 1833, 1834, and 1836, dry rot and curl caused serious losses, and in 1835 the potato failed in Ulster. |
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Like the button key accordion, a new playing style has emerged with a dry tuning, lighter style of playing and a more rhythmically varied bass. |
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The Ski Club of Ireland is the national snowsports centre for Ireland, and consists of four outdoor dry slopes in Kilternan, Dublin. |
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In some cases a river flows into the ground and becomes dry at the end of its course without reaching another body of water. |
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After that, it consists of swamps and dry reaches before finally disappearing in the desert terrain east of Jilib, near the Jubba River. |
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Although the coastal regions are hot and humid throughout the year, the hinterland is typically dry and hot. |
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The first stone walls were constructed by farmers and primitive people by piling loose field stones into a dry stone wall. |
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Plant life in the dry climate of the lower Sonoran zone contains a diversity of native cactus, mesquite, and paloverde. |
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There is no real dry season, but there are some variations in the period of the year when most rain falls. |
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Different types of cairns exist from rough piles of stones to interlocking dry stone round cylinders. |
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For most of Indonesia, the dry season falls between April and October with the wet season between November and March. |
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It contains the last remaining tropical dry forested area within the country. |
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They usually ran downhill so that they included both wet and dry land, helping to offset some of the problems of extreme weather conditions. |
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He newspapered his way through the South on the sports beat, avoiding dry towms. |
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Over a hundred basins, now dry or nearly so, were overflowing in the North American west. |
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Most of the continents were probably dry and rocky due to a lack of vegetation. |
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In the dry Southwestern United States, golden eagles tend to move to higher elevations once the breeding season is complete. |
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Wild boar rest in shelters, which contain insulating material like spruce branches and dry hay. |
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Within this range, it was only absent in extremely dry deserts and alpine zones. |
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This strategy is not without risks, as the flowers can be damaged by frost or, in dry season regions, result in water stress on the plant. |
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During prolonged dry periods the foliage is dropped to conserve water and prevent death from drought. |
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The stomata are in lines or patches on the leaves, and can be closed when it is very dry or cold. |
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Most of Antarctica is too cold and dry to support vegetation, and most of the continent is covered by ice fields. |
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Over the years, five different submarine tenders and one floating dry dock served in the loch. |
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So if you dry the squid compulsively, at least by my noncompulsive standards, and you cook it in small batches, you solve the problem. |
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