Increasing cardiorespiratory endurance, or stamina, in your participants will have a positive effect on their everyday lives. |
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Fat not only abates hunger and satiates, but also is an important endurance exercise fuel. |
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The abdominals have the same capacity to improve muscular strength and endurance as any other muscle group in the body. |
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With a gruelling fitness regime to get through, the pressure is on as the eight stretch their physical and mental endurance levels to the limit. |
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It won't be the first time the keen sportsman has pushed the boundaries of human endurance to the limit in the name of charity. |
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That means stretching your mind and emotions and endurance to the limit and therefore getting stronger and stronger day by day. |
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We have had two hard days on the water and I have come nearly to the limit of my endurance. |
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The Queensland Heeler is a tough herding dog known for his endurance, intelligence, and independence. |
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She can also smoke, drink and indulge way beyond the limits of human endurance. |
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As well as skill and luck, players will need fitness and endurance to be in the race for these prizes. |
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He has spent the winter in a strength program in an effort to add muscle and increase his endurance. |
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The Adventure Show focuses on fanatics who get their kicks out of non-traditional sports with an emphasis on extremes and endurance. |
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He is wiry, bearded, a life-long mountaineer, skier and runner and one of Scotland's leading endurance riders. |
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The kinesiologists found that the sprinters increased their endurance by an average of 26 minutes. |
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They need to do running for endurance, sprints for anaerobic endurance and some weight training too. |
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Dog sled and snowshoe races were also held when the Arctic winter night drew to an end, enhancing the endurance of a resilient people. |
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I adore, admire and revere their faith, their endurance, their agonizing love for God. |
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Harrison displayed flashes of strength and determination, but it was his endurance that saw him remain champion. |
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This arrangement presents few problems in technique, tessitura, rhythm, ensemble or endurance. |
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It will be a rigorous course used to increase your endurance, speed, agility, and muscle mass. |
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For those unfamiliar with the sport of rogaining, it is a gruelling physical endurance event. |
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The most common presenting symptoms were vocal roughness, vocal fatigue, and decreased vocal endurance. |
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Speed endurance and good recovery in between intense periods of exercise are vital for referees and assistant referees. |
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Lt Gen. Bradshaw paid tribute to the troops and the achievements they were making thanks to their skill, patience, courage and great endurance. |
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Their endurance in battle soon became as legendary as their involvement in a number of war crimes and atrocities. |
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Sumo is considered sacred to the Shinto religion and wrestlers are seen as the embodiment of strength, endurance and honesty. |
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With his stringy gray braided ponytail and ample gut, he was more like an aging hippie than an endurance athlete. |
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Many endurance athletes need to consume salty foods and salt to replace sodium losses. |
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The outer edges of these Audi floor mats are coil-stitched and are not banded to provide endurance. |
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These three branched chain amino acids are immediately processed by skeletal muscle into glucose for energy during endurance exercise. |
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It was an unequalled test of courage, strength and endurance, technique being less important than character. |
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In fact, he usually finished last in training camp endurance and strength tests. |
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It was called Man Vs Beast, and involved humans taking part in tests of speed, strength and endurance against animals. |
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Since the beast was invincible by arrow or club the contest was a test of physical strength and endurance. |
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The good Dr. Gupta tests his own driving skills and physical endurance on the racetrack. |
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Martina ran strongly to finish with silver and Sinead displayed great endurance as she battled to finish in sixth position. |
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After a couple of years, adults become strong and have enough endurance to be ready to practice the more vigorous judo throws and pins. |
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A natural endurance athlete, he spends a lot of time meditating, doing yoga, and simply focusing on breathing. |
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They were saying the game is a lot faster than they thought it would be and you need a lot more endurance and speed. |
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Displaying remarkable endurance in the field of TMI, Duvall went on in this vein for quite some time. |
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Physical boosts in endurance, muscle tone, body composition and blood flow can all improve sexual functioning. |
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His meterage was maybe a bit higher than mine now, but the actual training wasn't massively different to mine, being very endurance based. |
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A holiday in Peru turns into an endurance test, as a whole sequence of health problems besiege me throughout, and for several weeks thereafter. |
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He got his nickname from the brutal way in which he battled his foes, often winning through sheer might and endurance. |
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For the men who work the fishing trawlers, it is a life of hardship and endurance. |
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Whangamomona also sees endurance riding, dog trialling, and the Great New Zealand Horse Trek which was held last year. |
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In addition to his endurance and overall toughness, he's hard to hit, and knows every trick in the book. |
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It takes much more physical skill, strength and endurance than you give it credit for. |
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They also fared better in sit-ups and press-ups tests, displaying better abdominal and upper-body endurance. |
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This was a mongrel breed incorporating strains of Labrador, Greyhound, anything that could advance the genes of endurance and pulling power. |
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A football match is not a sprint and is, more often than not, a test of endurance. |
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Ultimate Frisbee combines the nonstop movement and athletic endurance of soccer with the aerial passing skills of football. |
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She graduated to the 50-mile Nifty 50 Ultra in Coventry, R.I., and in 1997 did a 100-mile endurance run along mountainous trails in Vermont. |
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The quintessential ultramarathoner, Karnazes takes exquisite joy from the fundamental act of the sport he describes as the zenith of endurance. |
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Twenty minutes of skipping is hard work, so I like to intersperse skipping with endurance exercises. |
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Most were young, hardy, physically fit, courageous, fearless, bold, endowed with fortitude and endurance, and ever ready for a fight. |
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The British War Office prized this horse for war use because of its strength, endurance, hardiness, disposition, tractability and unflappability. |
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His body was slimmed down for endurance, but he still had the muscles that bespoke several trips to the gym each week. |
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He was unlike other, bigger sluggers since he had more endurance and appeared to be more elusive. |
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You lose a large amount of fluid from the body as sweat during endurance events. |
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Thiamine can help improve your memory and recall, increase muscle control, and increase muscle endurance during short bouts of intense activity. |
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To avoid severe chaffing, endurance athletes should look for bras that are seamless. |
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Adoption offers a real alternative so that childhood, for many abused and neglected children, will become more than a test of endurance. |
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Tom turns in another bravura performance in this movie, even if his role for the most part calls for more endurance than acting. |
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The cattle were bred for endurance, the method deemed best for inducing marbling. |
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She could try to outrun them, but their horses were bred for endurance in this desert land. |
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Even those who enjoyed the light breeziness of the first movie will likely find this too much of an endurance contest. |
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His cunning, speed, condition, and endurance can tax the physique and patience of his pursuers to the utmost. |
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It's been a wonderful summer even if the hottest part did try my endurance and my optimism, too, rather more than somewhat. |
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Annabelle isn't one to make a song and dance about what she's doing, and she would go off doing all sorts of treks and endurance trails. |
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Of all the creatures on the Carrizo, the endurance champion of the underworld is the spadefoot toad. |
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They were already veterans, selected for special missions because of their bravery and endurance. |
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He knows his experience is not comparable to Shackleton's feat of endurance. |
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Athletes use them as shortcuts to bulk up, build endurance and recover better from training. |
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He is being put through a vigorous physical fitness programme which includes stamina, gym work, endurance running and weight training. |
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Junk foods decrease total body vitality in both immediate strength and endurance. |
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Not requiring long grass or thick bush for cover, their methods are those of a courser, relying on speed and dogged endurance in the chase. |
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The rally will be a real test of endurance, stamina and navigational skills. |
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Each session includes a warm up followed by timed jogs and runs to boost stamina and endurance levels. |
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Free-testosterone concentrations did not correlate with handgrip or quadriceps muscle strength or endurance. |
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Strength and endurance of handgrip were tested in 9 hypogonadal and 10 eugonadal patients. |
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The basic question posed by war is about the powers of endurance and capacity for sacrifice of the two sides. |
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This is a Tour de France type of drug, this is endurance marathoners, 3,000 metres steeplechase runners type of drug. |
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None of the Tablet PCs on the stocks fall into that category, not even the Crusoe prototype, which claims dismal endurance of four hours. |
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She hasn't gotten carsick since she was five, but she wasn't so sure about her stomach's endurance anymore. |
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Concerning women's stoical endurance of pain during childbirth, she found that the expectation was not restricted to just the hospital situation. |
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The British public, and particularly those in London, have been rightly praised for drawing on reserves of stoicism and endurance. |
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What remained was sheer endurance and hard slog, frequently impeded by strong headwinds and driving rain. |
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It strengthens muscles and increases endurance, which is very important during labour. |
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It's a daily struggle for not only physical survival, but mental endurance and a lingering hope that their story will be heard. |
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However, it takes more than endurance for a British guitar band to survive 15 years, eight studio albums and many infamous hindrances. |
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The importance of power, strength, endurance, and other factors cannot be overstressed. |
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A high-potassium diet is especially important in endurance athletes, who may tend to be hypokalemic. |
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We are harnessing the giant electricity and his powers of endurance, resource and adaptability, seen at present illimitable. |
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A fitness fanatic smashed a world record for endurance running on a treadmill yesterday, by clocking up almost 150 miles in just 48 hours. |
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She admits that there is always room for improvement in areas such as her technique and endurance. |
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A benign endurance, a sort of affable inattention, settles like snow upon the landscape. |
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Also called fartlek training, intervals are used by competitive endurance athletes for improving speed and conditioning. |
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The physical training had to be focused on cardiorespiratory and muscular endurance. |
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The weather conditions were quite abysmal with the piercing cold and rain testing the stamina and endurance of all players and panel members. |
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The biggest misconception in endurance racing, says Knight, is the eve-of-the-race, carbo pig-out. |
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To complement your regular gym workout, try yoga or Pilates to improve your flexibility and endurance. |
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He had been so used to his old boots that the new ones he had bought had pinched his feet beyond endurance. |
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The owner complained Digger had no energy and lacked the endurance to complete a field trial competition without becoming exhausted. |
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I can see the intellectual appeal of it as an exploration of endurance, but three things get in the way of full appreciation. |
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The rest of us observe the endurance of the human spirit from the sidelines as they race towards the finish. |
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That very internationalism goes some way towards explaining the endurance of this genre of avant-garde art. |
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The long endurance of these, still important to the present day, contrasts with developments in many continental areas. |
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On a long endurance mission the aircraft has a crew of 34, with 6 flight crew and 28 system operators. |
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It was just a matter of working with his body, strengthening his core and his legs to build up his endurance and improve his balance. |
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He showed plenty of endurance and came back into the fight until he was floored by a powerful punch to the ribs at the end of round eight. |
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He also has been successful in international endurance riding competitions. |
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Yet, for all their courage and endurance, they are hopelessly divided in their aims. |
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I'm never going to have hips or chunky thighs, but I've no waist and a pot belly, which apparently makes me ideal for endurance sports. |
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What is thrust in the foreground are family values, political ideology, and the endurance of the human spirit. |
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And, at times when crank calls keep pouring in beyond endurance, the staff simply pick up the phone and bang it down without answering. |
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The product is specifically formulated to maximize muscle mass, definition, strength and endurance. |
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The landscape around the centre provides 13 km of endurance tracks and tracks for cross-country riding. |
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She needs to cross-train by consistently including both endurance and power activities in her training programme. |
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Long legs are also vital for endurance running, because speed is gained by increasing the length, not rate, of strides. |
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Test your endurance and skill as you power round tracks for up to 24 hours. |
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However, for those of us for whom it also is work, it is a stamina and endurance challenge of gargantuan proportions. |
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The range and endurance time are also extended by in-flight refuelling, using a probe and drogue inflight refuelling system. |
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On the other hand, you are pushing your luck if you try to pull off heroic endurance feats every day. |
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The first one went in to test his endurance and he did and came out better than his expectations. |
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Each step down the metal staircase, each turn at each landing, was an agonizing test of endurance. |
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Such activities are tests of endurance, to see how much pain and misery you can withstand. |
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For most people, running a marathon would be the realisation of a lifetime ambition and the ultimate test of endurance. |
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We've seen ordinary men testing their endurance under the rigours of SAS training. |
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Pulling out a stopwatch and trying your skills is fun but will also test your endurance and physical fitness. |
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The six of us that are left are looking around at the empty beds and realizing that this is becoming a test of endurance. |
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Like a stage of a bike race, it is a test of endurance and, ultimately, speed. |
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The pair have been in training for the marathon endurance test since October. |
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A Swindon doctor and marathon runner looks set to finish the ultimate endurance test in the Sahara Desert. |
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This cross-border event is a rigorous and testing challenge of endurance and skill. |
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It is the ultimate test of skill and endurance of both the rider and his steed. |
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His spirit of endurance and his determination carried him through those difficult times. |
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The commonly traveled path to improved cardiovascular function and increased muscular endurance is continuous, submaximal, steady state training. |
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And to the greatest race of all time, were the endurance of the machine is as important as the skill of the driver. |
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We're still improving a lot but we have a long way to go with the endurance of the tyre. |
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The practice of consuming carbohydrate sports drinks is now deeply embedded in the culture of endurance sports. |
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Mike is looking to coach other endurance athletes and encourage those who fancy following in his ironman wake. |
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He is being put through a vigorous physical fitness programme which includes stamina, endurance running, and weight training. |
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The night's lengthy endurance challenge involved seven teams racing against the clock. |
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Then there will be a real state funeral, familiar nostalgia, more eulogies to praise duty and endurance. |
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The riders all are life-long equestrians with from 12-30 years in endurance competitions. |
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The breed is also noted for its endurance ability, and its exceptional disposition. |
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The first stage of the training sessions was continuous endurance training on a bicycle ergometer. |
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Then it was rather a trial of strength and endurance than an exhibition of skill. |
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The endurance of the generation of 1914 was one of the wonders of human fortitude down the ages. |
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As I have insisted throughout this study, the endurance of our bestial traces often leads us to mistake their longevity. |
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Cardiorespiratory endurance has been recognized as a key component of physical fitness throughout the history of the field. |
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Dancers need to improve their cardiorespiratory endurance and anaerobic capacity in order to be able to meet such demands and perform optimally. |
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In order to improve cardiorespiratory endurance, you need to work hard enough and regularly enough for positive changes to occur. |
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It was a while before the children realized that these two marines, laden with arms to the limit of physical endurance, were not going to hurt them. |
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As an 18-year-old, they take you to the limit of your endurance. |
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Muscle endurance testing can be performed with sustained upward gaze, neck extension while in the prone position, and arm abduction against resistance or gravity. |
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Kumble displayed endurance, skill and enthusiasm in equal measure to pick up seven wickets on a day where he had to bowl 35.3 overs in torrid conditions. |
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The corvette carries water, stores and fuel for an endurance of 14 days. |
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The Dakar Rally is a serious test of endurance and adaptability. |
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Outpatient physical therapy will help build up strength and endurance. |
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The marathon race is the big test of endurance in the Olympics. |
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Opponents of endurance training explain that it increases stress hormones, inflammation, and often leads to over-training. |
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His cold water endurance swims are made possible by his ability to elevate his core body temperature while psyching himself up before he enters the water. |
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They critically reviewed 12 randomised trials, five of which reported benefits from strength and balance training, endurance training, or t'ai chi. |
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Beth now competes in endurance competition rides of up to 44 kilometres. |
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The Toledo Motorcycle Club held a rousing reception today for the team of motorcyclists of this city that scored such a remarkable victory in the annual endurance run. |
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Rapidly expanding erythrocytic volume increases blood viscosity and, especially in endurance races, might predispose the athlete to blood clots or other complications. |
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You could hear the sombreness of the vast Finnish forests, the determination and endurance of her people, and the ingenuity of its composer in striking degree here. |
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Some athletes take steroids in the hopes that they will improve their ability to run faster, hit farther, lift heavier weights, jump higher, or have more endurance. |
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Apparently scientists are baffled by the endurance of one man who has the rare talent of staring at the sun for hours at a time without injuring his eyes. |
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I found the show very entertaining, a great combination of physical strength, endurance, slapstick, and witty repartee between the lumberjacks and the emcee. |
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In the resurrection of Newt Gingrich, endurance and shamelessness played equally important roles. |
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A Swindon man who used to be a couch potato is now preparing to take on eight of the UK's most gruelling endurance races to raise money for charity. |
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As our power of resistance has got exhausted, we have shun our frustration, and learnt the enviable and saintly art of satisfaction, stoicism and endurance. |
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Ironically, I think it not only led to Inge's world records in the sprint freestyles, but in the 50 and 100 fly as well because it helped her endurance for fly. |
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Then he does an obstacle course to limber up, or some endurance work on the treadmill. |
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As to the micro-damage, this is often marked enough to see in electron micrographs of endurance runners' leg muscles, and might prove even more severe after strenuous climbs. |
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The boy seeks out the spirit and asks it how he can become a real bear, to which the spirit replies that he must pass three tests of great strength, endurance and solitude. |
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More impressive, though, than any fanatical power of endurance was his ability to see he was on the wrong track, admit he was mistaken and try a different course of action. |
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For a man who's all about speed and endurance, he is distinctly non-streamlined, with a moon-shaped face and a pronounced paunch set over thick, powerful legs. |
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The cypress, as an evergreen, represents longevity and endurance. |
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This dissociation between the strength of the regional identity and its expression on the ideological plane is the locus of the flexibility and endurance of the movement. |
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Others have used the endurance of fish swimming steadily at a given speed in a flume or a gantry tank to measure maximum sustainable swimming performance. |
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Should he clinch victory today, he would leapfrog the Belgian as the most successful driver in the world's most famous endurance race with seven wins. |
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The winners of the 14-hour endurance race get around all of the Magic Kingdom's attractions in a single day and take home several armloads of valuable Disney merchandise. |
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Numerous products claim to bolster strength or endurance in sports. |
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Soon new records will be set and new tests of endurance undergone. |
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This was Weber's fourth in a series of public readings that fall within the category of ordeal or endurance art, a performance genre derived from body art. |
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For a man like him, Antarctica represents the ultimate endurance test. |
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For years, Mooney has trained with a rowing coach to enhance his physical endurance for the potentially yearlong journey. |
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The smallest version is backpack-able, the largest can carry a small radar, and all have endurance unlimited by fuel. |
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Unlike free running and other kinds of endurance sports, zorbing does not require any level of skill or fitness, only the ability to keep down your food! |
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He proved to everyone there that motocrossers have endurance. |
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Another issue is that alcohol is a diuretic and being dehydrated will certainly interfere with your speed and endurance. |
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A study by O'Donnell et al examined the changes in isometric muscle strength and endurance of the quadriceps muscle and handgrip after a 6-week endurance training program. |
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It'll take a while but any difficulty will be in testing our endurance. |
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With the emergence of the first decent wind of the week, this was links golf at its best, challenging the mental and physical endurance of all concerned. |
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Many human societies have tested young people coming of age with a quest or trial that tests the candidate's physical and mental skills and endurance. |
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Long runs are not advised, as these require more endurance than stamina. |
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But, if anything, the endurance made the desire for comfort food even greater. |
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Do you want to feel what it's like to be one of your racing driver heroes, experiencing an intense endurance test like no other driving challenge? |
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I always say that race walking takes the strength and agility of a gymnast, the technique of a ballet dancer and the endurance of a marathon runner. |
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The testing occurs in two stages, the first stage consisting of a progressive exertion test to measure endurance and a vertical leap test to measure explosive leg power. |
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The CD pushes the listener to the limit of endurance, virtually begs you dismiss it as a depressing case of style over substance, then suddenly reveals hidden depths. |
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Although weight training provides some cardiovascular benefits, the kind of physical activity most beneficial to the health of the heart is cardiorespiratory endurance training. |
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I have suffered to the limit of my endurance, but I will never in my sane senses surrender to the evil power that has fixed its roots like a cancer on the world. |
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In muscles, young blood revived strength and endurance in old mice. |
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A MUSCLEMAN smashed four records to notch up more than 300 world records in fitness and endurance. |
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Uncrewed lighter-than-air vehicles exploit the drone's freedom from the constraints of human endurance. |
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The exercise program is designed to increase both strength and endurance. |
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Moore's sense of England emerging undefeated from siege led to his focus on pieces characterised by endurance and continuity. |
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Throughout this period many of Wordsworth's poems revolved around themes of death, endurance, separation and grief. |
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Oftentimes they place focus on training on their upper body instead of their entire body, to increase power and endurance. |
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Founded in 1972, the American Endurance Ride Conference was the United States' first national endurance riding association. |
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Thoroughbreds can travel medium distances at fast paces, requiring a balance between speed and endurance. |
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The Arabian is primarily used today in endurance racing, but is also raced over traditional race tracks in many countries. |
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The Quarter Horse has much larger hind limb muscles than the Arabian, which make it less suitable for endurance racing. |
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They allow muscles to work for longer periods of time resulting in greater endurance. |
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He teamed with Dan Shorey to win the Thruxton 500 endurance race and finished well in four classes of TT race with one podium. |
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The oak is a common symbol of strength and endurance and has been chosen as the national tree of many countries. |
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The commando courses are a series of physical and mental endurance tests that highlight their military professionalism. |
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The sport requires strong core balance, physical strength, flexibility, and cardiovascular endurance. |
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It is generally considered the most complete examination of teams' playing ability and endurance. |
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The conflict has become a test of endurance for both the government and the narcos. |
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Using the 3D rotation task, Hotting and coworkers observed no difference in spatial reasoning between endurance and nonendurance training. |
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The Dutchman, taking the 16th stage of the Tour de France after a solo effort which nonsensified all known laws of human endurance, smiled. |
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Furthermore, many physical games are used to develop strength, coordination and endurance of the players. |
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A more practical method of increasing combat endurance was the external torpedo tube, loaded only in port. |
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He writes open-heartedly of his admiration of the local villagers' endurance. |
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Motorsports was important in the evolution of the grand touring concept, and grand touring entries are important in endurance sports car racing. |
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The German plan had been delayed, causing further problems for their submarines, which had reached the limit of their endurance at sea. |
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Submerged speed and endurance was limited and not suited for overhauling many ships. |
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This body bending prevents significant respiration during movement, limiting their endurance, in a mechanism called Carrier's constraint. |
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Several of the New Testament writings mention persecutions and stress endurance through them. |
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Greater weekly training mileages can offer greater results in terms of distance and endurance, but also carry a greater risk of training injury. |
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This is a benefit in endurance applications and for cruising sails where durability is key. |
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Typical of many phasianid birds, guinea fowl are capable runners that have strong burst-flight capacities but little endurance in flight. |
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Because of its qualities of endurance and speed, the dromedary is the favourite animal used by nomads. |
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Beauty and endurance both rank high among the plantly virtues, and it is a rare individual that has them both. |
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The 24 Hours of Daytona is one of the world's most prestigious endurance auto races. |
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The exception is in endurance riding, where the minimum age to compete is based on the animal's actual calendar age. |
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There is a plaque on the wall of the Old Bailey to this effect, praising the courage and endurance of Bushel and the other jurymen. |
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Climbers tend to have a lot of endurance and specifically developed muscles for long hard climbs. |
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However, their lower endurance is a disadvantage in stage races where the climbs are usually longer, albeit at lower gradients. |
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But habit had made the endurance of this load of panoply a second nature, both to the knight and his gallant charger. |
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She said the only airbrushing was on a bruise she got while filming reality endurance show 71 Degrees North. |
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The AOA indicator also can be used to establish maximum-range and endurance airspeeds, and speeds for other flight operations. |
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Postural faults and related muscular endurance are common deficits observed upon physical therapy examination for lower back pain. |
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The cryogenic liquid is stored in a lightweight tank, allowing more hydrogen to be carried onboard to increase flight endurance. |
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With experience in orienteering and success as an endurance mountain biker, SMBO was an obvious choice for him. |
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This is essential for prolonging the time your body relies on lipolysis during an endurance event, which cannot be overemphasized. |
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For runners, expect improvements in range of motion, hip flexibility, leg turnover, strength, endurance and form. |
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Replacing the Aurora Australis, the new icebreaker will be faster, larger, stronger and offer increased endurance. |
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He also was an accomplished endurance racer, having finished second overall and first in class in the 1994 24 Hours of LeMans. |
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Since the rotators are endurance muscles, they require more repetitions to build strength. |
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Tier II UAS include heavier, larger and longer endurance systems with longer range, such as CybAero's VTOL offering. |
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Mark Loren Designs is calling for entries of soon-to-be betrothed couples with compelling love stories and exceptional endurance. |
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One of the main virtues that Golgo and salarymen share is that both are capable of great endurance. |
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In 1977 cosmonauts on the Russian spacecraft Salyut 6 broke the endurance record set by which American spacecraft? |
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Comparingblood values before athletic training in an endurance athlete, a drop of one gram per deciliter of hemoglobin is probably dilutional. |
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Ekso Bionics makes robotic exoskeletons, or wearable robots, to augment human strength, endurance and mobility. |
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Many runners fear that such a move would deplete maximal aerobic capacity because of the lower overall volume of endurance training conducted. |
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In this study we investigate the effect of endurance training on cyclists' blood immunoglobulin levels in racing conditions and in the road. |
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Effect of endurance training upon lipid metabolism in the liver of cachectic tumour-bearing rats. |
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Aortic distensibility and left ventricular diastolic functions in endurance athletes. |
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The main use of the airships was in reconnaissance over the North Sea and the Baltic, where the endurance of the craft led German warships to a number of Allied vessels. |
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She said lessons like rock climbing teaches a person how to strategise in order to achieve his or her target, consolidates belief on will power and capacitates on endurance. |
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They allow the muscles to generate both speed and endurance. |
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Competitive endurance riding commenced in Australia in 1966, when the Tom Quilty Gold Cup was first held in the Hawkesbury district, near Sydney, New South Wales. |
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In all endurance events there are rigorous vet checks, conducted before, during and after the competition, in which the horses' welfare is of the utmost concern. |
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Early signs of Duchenne muscular dystrophy may include pseudohypertrophy, low endurance, and difficulties in standing unaided or inability to ascend staircases. |
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The UV endurance is inferior to PET and PEN, but the degradation levels off after roughly 400 hours of exposure, while the Aramids and Spectra continue to degrade. |
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This was most likely due to low body fat, infanticide, women regularly engaging in intense endurance exercise, late weaning of infants, and a nomadic lifestyle. |
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Tse et al focused their research on rowers and to assess their core stability endurance used MacGill protocol and also assess subjects performance. |
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The sport also improves cardiovascular endurance and muscular strength. |
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In man plasma and skeletal muscle glutamine levels are lowered by sepsis, injury, burns, surgery and endurance exercise and in the overtrained athlete. |
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Take Olomouc, a stunning, small but perfectly formed city boasting architecture to die for without the crushing crowds that can make exploring Prague a test of endurance. |
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Yes, the camel was the main form of transportation in the desert, but the Arabian horse was bred for endurance and speed to carry someone swiftly across the harsh desert. |
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The terms endurance and perdurance are commonly thought to denote distinct ways for an object to persist, but it is surprisingly hard to say what these are. |
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France is famous for its 24 Hours of Le Mans sports car endurance race. |
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The hydrogen fueler system also provides the flexibility to be easily transported to promotional events, or for remote endurance testing of hydrogen-fueled vehicles. |
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Unlike any other energy system developed, the EAS Energy System is based on our heritage of sports nutrition science applied to the endurance athlete. |
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Wolves are difficult to hunt because of their elusiveness, sharp senses, high endurance, and ability to quickly incapacitate and kill hunting dogs. |
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Then there are von Trier's more incendiary ideas, such as the endurance of a slavelike mind set among the technically free, that call our most cherished beliefs into question. |
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Many multinationals often employed children because that they can be recruited for less pay, and have more endurance to utilise in factory environments. |
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These new vessels proved especially susceptible to rough seas and to have limited utility in scouting due to their short endurance and low bridges. |
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The endurance games included the knuckle hop, running race, airplane, back push, and muskox push, and were to help increase and promote crucial survival health and abilities. |
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Their endurance also makes them good stage race specialists. |
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Chhattisgarh has a Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare School at Kanker, but the sources said it provides only a sixweek orientation course for increasing endurance. |
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Superpressure balloons offer flight endurance of months, rather than days. |
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The annual Southport 24 Hour Race, organised by the West Lancashire Yacht Club, is an endurance race of national standing, with an average turnout of 60 to 80 boats. |
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A varying percentage of our combat soldiers reach the limit of their endurance and must leave their foxholes, not for physical wounds but because of emotional decompensation. |
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The oak tree is a symbol of England, representing strength and endurance. |
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Its significance is perhaps best reflected in its endurance and influence, as is seen in the longevity and lasting importance of the works of Virgil and Ovid. |
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At the opposite pole, Hemingway proposed a brutal male ethos of endurance, nonconformism and individualism, and an epos of sheer physical force and adventure. |
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The Trislander has exceptional low speed handling characteristics, extended endurance, increased payload, low noise signature and economical operating costs. |
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David, used to taking along seasoned cavers and speleologists from across the globe, thought it would be a wonderful idea to expose us sisters to similar levels of endurance. |
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American red foxes tend to be larger than European forms, but according to foxhunters' accounts, they have less cunning, vigour and endurance in the chase than European foxes. |
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Contestants in River Deep, Mountain High had to take part in a gruelling 36-hour endurance test which involved everything from hiking and biking to absailing and canoeing. |
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