Exactness and neatness in moderation is a virtue, but carried to extremes narrows the mind. |
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There is something about Moscow's untempered extremes, its perverse anarchy and its extreme beauty that appeals to him. |
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They like when I push them to the extremes of their body and they are always eager to please. |
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During a space mission, astronauts and their spacecraft are exposed to temperature extremes on both ends of the scale. |
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Priced between these two extremes is Jubilee Court at the heart of Cheltenham, which resembles at first sight a small terrace of Georgian houses. |
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I work long days, and then tend to vegetate when I'm not working, so I'm always at one of extremes, activity-wise. |
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One could consider four assumptions as existing on a continuum with extremes at either end. |
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Thus, most Americans are members of a congregation that falls somewhere between these two extremes. |
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Was it medically ethical for a doctor to go to these extremes to test a patient's grasp on reality? |
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Orthal views of each pair of elements at the extremes of possible motion were recorded by photography or with a flatbed scanner. |
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The proportions of the distal limb bones in theropods were generally intermediate between the extremes of cheetah and elephant. |
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The results presented below show that these two extremes produce very different patterns of polymorphism. |
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Gendered conceptions of parental belonging and place identity represent two extremes on the continuum of possible identifications. |
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And at the extremes, there are certainly correlations between advanced age and debility that increase the risk of complications. |
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Two very different models lie at the opposite extremes of a spectrum of rate variation among lineages. |
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Between the two extremes described every possible transition can easily be found at any place in the tissue. |
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The two emotions generally did the same thing to you, but to different extremes. |
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As with so many other issues in social research, a steady course needs to be steered between possible extremes. |
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This effect is most noticeable with a gas and least noticeable with a solid, with a liquid being intermediate between the two extremes. |
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Suddenly everything is confined to exposed planters, removed from the usual moisture and nutrient sources, and subject to climatic extremes. |
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The product is produced at temperature extremes exceeding 300 degrees below zero. |
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He is a very caring, thoughtful, generous man, so I get confused by the extremes. |
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Canada is a country of extremes in terms of its size, climate, and geography. |
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So I said a little bit about how there are different extremes of feminism, and that no, I'm not at the end that hates men. |
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The exposed site is subject to weather extremes, therefore diving in this area is a special treat. |
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And it's a good job too, because we just can't cope, even with minor extremes of weather. |
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The simulation was run using these groupings representing extremes of possible variation caused through modeling population dynamics. |
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In Strangers to Ourselves, Timothy Wilson offers an assessment of the human unconscious that is very different from these extremes. |
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Mankind has always been under threat from the extremes of nature and from extreme ideology in pursuit of power. |
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This large area south of Russia and bordering China is subject to great extremes of climate. |
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The two of them were closer than anything, they rarely fought recently and they would go to the extremes for each other. |
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Most notably, the Pueblo Indians in the Southwest used adobe masonry to moderate weather extremes and keep their homes comfortable. |
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I assume the extremes of the different genres represented here can be reflected in what goes on in the mind of the madman in the film. |
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One can only deplore of course the barbarous extremes that some of this antipathy has taken. |
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Instead, it has said players are not willing to go to the extremes proposed by owners. |
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These three plays are just a few examples of the different extremes he was capable of. |
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Variable camshaft timing on both the intake and exhaust cams rotate the cams between the adjustment extremes in a stepless fashion. |
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There will be calls for a compromise, a halfway house between these two extremes. |
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One of modern art's most fascinating figures, Salvador Dali was a self-confessed genius who took surrealism to startling extremes. |
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This efficiency wage argument has merit, but taken to extremes it could cause major problems. |
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For a country, encouraging export sales to create jobs when taken to extremes could seriously lower regional productivity and real income. |
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If you are the sort of person who tends to take things to extremes, then Christmas can be a time of chronic over-indulgence. |
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Bodybuilders often have the mistaken belief that they must take their diets to extremes to take their physiques to extremes. |
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Both events, one dreadfully sad, one wonderfully happy, illustrate the extremes to which we can be tested in our lives. |
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Adhesive-backed, foam pipe insulating tape keeps temperature extremes inside the pipe and eliminates the formation of condensation. |
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Much of Inuit life was adapted to the extremes of summer and winter night lengths. |
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The workable compromise between these extremes involves balancing competing goals. |
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For extremes of temperature and conditions the summer drought of 1976 and the winter freeze of 1978 will go down as two of the worst on record. |
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Together, the two extremes define the boundaries of a highly eccentric orbit. |
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The mortality appears high when this condition occurs at the extremes of age. |
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These are the extremes associated with bipolar disorder, which can be a serious and disabling mental illness. |
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There may be occasion at work and reason at home, for you to lose your cool or balance but that's not helpful so avoid extremes of any kind. |
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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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The Alliance was a soft sensible centre, a safe haven between extremes of monetarism and unilateral disarmament. |
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Older people are more susceptible to extremes of heat and cold because of impaired thermoregulation. |
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The movement went to extremes in its use of buffoonery and provocative behaviour to shock and disrupt public complacency. |
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If Churchill is so violently attacked by both extremes of the political spectrum, we can assume that he cannot have been that bad. |
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And when taken to extremes, such as at these schools in Kirkland and Puyallup, political correctness sinks to the realm of rank stupidity. |
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If he wanted to really challenge assimilationism, he should not have chosen as his target the furthest extremes of the movement. |
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All of Cohen's characters are absurd, and they push people towards extremes on a regular basis. |
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My characters and I share a similar esteem for the middle-ground, between indulgence and obligation, and any extremes of the spectrum. |
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The climate is cool temperate oceanic and is characterised by its lack of extremes. |
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But on the odd occasion they venture outside these extremes, the country descends into chaos. |
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Between these extremes we collected in low-mid elevation riparian areas and vernally moist meadows. |
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Both standard fermentations at mesophyllic and extremophyllic cultures at extremes of temperature and pH are conducted routinely. |
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By deliberately steering between the extremes of prevailing Whig and Tory philosophies he incurred the complaints of both sides. |
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The three types of fibrils chosen for investigation represent extremes of precursor proteins that self-assemble into amyloid. |
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Yesterday, they fully demonstrated the frustrations of resting in between these two extremes. |
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But both extremes, rugged individualism and ruthless collectivism, are unbalanced and destructive. |
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You see, citizens had been pushed to such extremes of cynicism that this latest transparent assault on their credulity was enough to break them. |
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However, the new Assembly bill is a compromise between these two extremes and offers an opportunity for real progress. |
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Between the extremes of naturalism and overt artifice there are transitional pieces that combine both modes. |
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His slogans and programs appeared to offer a middle way between the extremes of communism and a discredited liberal capitalism. |
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These form a thermal mass that moderates the extremes in temperature fluctuations. |
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He believed that one's guiding principle should be moderation for in the extremes resided the vices of excess and deficiency. |
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This is a stereotype that is taken to often hilarious extremes in this bitterly black comedy. |
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Importantly, these are the kinds of extremes that matter most to human wellbeing. |
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A more accurate map shows a wash of differing hues of indigo and violet, with some smatterings of infrared and ultraviolet at the extremes. |
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What percentage of blogposts are denunciations of some blowhard on the political extremes? |
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During climate extremes, whether droughts or flooding rains, those on the land feel it most. |
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He had now experienced both the extremes of a life of ease and comfort and the life of extreme austerity and asceticism. |
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The choice of elm, gorse and mimosa reflects these extremes and reinforces the vegetation already present. |
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To raise the best crop, growers have to find that delicate balance between the two extremes. |
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The surreal, anarchic and monstrous extremes of yesterday are not so sensational anymore. |
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Some people fall closer to the extremes while others, known as ambiverts, settle in the middle. |
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Normally, an extended period of milder weather which delays the onset of winter's extremes would be seen as a cause for heartfelt celebration. |
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This means my kit has supplies and equipment to handle local emergencies as well as the extremes found in the mountains and desert. |
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Between the two extremes of dogmatic adherence and blithe indifference to the text of the Constitution lies a reasonable and legal resolution. |
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He does so in the outlandishness of his extremes and the marvellous and continual flow of sometimes absurd paradoxes. |
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An earlier pair of works convey the operatic extremes of Brooks's passion for Rubinstein. |
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In liquid crystals, the degree of order is intermediate between these extremes. |
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Before Hitler's atrocities exposed the barbarous extremes of social engineering, eugenic views were regarded as radical visions of social reform. |
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Between these extremes are a myriad of topics that might work if properly presented. |
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The two most stable species of phosphates are the two extremes of hydrates, the anhydrous salt and the fully hydrated salt. |
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The nuclear warhead must survive exit from and re-entry to the earth's atmosphere at massive speed, accompanied by extremes of temperature. |
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The world's weather extremes have reignited the debate about global warming. |
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A month or two back one of the Sunday papers had an article about a countrywoman who went to extremes to pay for her daughter's riding lessons. |
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Those are the two extremes of human sexuality, and there are all gradations of chastity and sensuality in between. |
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But both works are disciplined demonstrations of film-making's array of formal correlatives for extremes of human experience and perception. |
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Surveying a nation's press during the four weeks of World Cup-induced madness is an exercise in extremes. |
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In terms of simple military success, Achilles is 'the best of the Achaeans', or Greeks, but he takes the heroic code of honour to extremes. |
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Social constructions of gender and sexual orientation are marked by two extremes separated by a vast gulf. |
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Most of the world exists between the extremes of abstinence and the dipsomania of a Slovenia or a South Korea. |
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Between these two extremes the mountains are fairly barren with only little pockets of fertile soil. |
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Menus that offer succulent, corn-fed baby chicken, drizzled with a tingling lemon sauce probably take this principle to extremes. |
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He compares the preoccupation with the extremes of the Jacobeans to the extremes of recent playwrights. |
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In between both extremes, there is a range of models of degressive proportionality. |
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The fabric of the building must have suffered greatly from the recent extremes of weather. |
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The book is aptly titled as he has indeed experienced a life of extremes, both personally and professionally. |
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In addition, this study also quantifies the power law in the interval between these extremes. |
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He never goes to extremes and has no vices, except for the inability to pass up a bargain. |
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Unbending he deflects rage, loves her extremes, highs, lows, and in-betweens. |
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Such were the extremes of temperature that hot spots in the building were still smoking more than 24 hours after the fire broke out. |
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Wing loading in the paradise tree snake falls between those two extremes, but it's closer to that of the swift. |
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As a morality play examining the extremes of good and evil in all of us, the film sports unquestionable potential. |
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It's also a trusted arbiter of extremes, deciding who, officially, is the most wack. |
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Climate extremes like flood, fire, cyclones and drought cause major impacts that can be minimised more effectively with climate forecasting. |
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A parsimony of spirit haunts education policy, exacerbated by fear of the extremes. |
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One or two statements appear to take Calvinism to unbiblical extremes, but these do not compromise the overall exposition. |
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We saw magnificent sites, endured bouts of car claustrophobia, and encountered extremes of weather. |
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It is not hard to find evidence of wholesale climate change in these meteorological extremes. |
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It is my understanding that work is going on to put the results within bands, rather than having the extremes of variability that have occurred. |
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You can see how the pendulum between these two extremes has swung by looking at e-mail. |
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Those are the days when the cycling mental pendulum is at its polar extremes. |
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At the statistical extremes of thinness and fatness, there's no question that weight has some relevance. |
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The narcissistic involvement with the self and the inability to connect with others are lovingly portrayed in comically caricatured extremes. |
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Miserliness and wastefulness are equally deplored in Buddhism as two degenerate extremes. |
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This collection reflects the full gamut of its dedicatee's research interests in cryptogamic physiology and ecology at the extremes. |
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The extremes of heaven's height and earth's depth are used to illustrate the unsearchableness of a king's heart. |
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Minimize noise, light, and temperature extremes during sleep with ear plugs, window blinds, or an electric blanket or air conditioner. |
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Through extremes of weather and disease, these scientists dutifully triangulate distances and gather botanical specimens throughout the Peruvian wilderness. |
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Precise discriminations may be impossible, but consider the extremes. |
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There are the two extremes of legalism and antinomianism to avoid. |
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Goldberg set out to make a middle way between these polarized extremes. |
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She pushed herself to new extremes as the emotionally stunted prostitute paying for her sick mother's care by whoring herself unsmilingly around New York. |
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You can be moody and swing to extremes, be aware and remain balanced. |
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The only way he thought he could make jockey weight was to go to extremes. |
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A typology should have a bimodal distribution, but the evidence shows that most people fall between the two extremes of introversion and extraversion. |
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Most polyploids are intermediate between these two extremes. |
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The key to convincing selfhood seems to be to rely neither completely on the self nor completely on an other, but to tease out options in-between the two extremes. |
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Species with leathery leaves such as agaves, aloes, echeverias and sanseverias are the obvious choice because they can tolerate extremes of heat, cold and drought. |
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The two extremes of the spectrum, canalicular adenoma and myoepithelioma, are represented by exclusive luminal cell and myoepithelial cell differentiation, respectively. |
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Just what is it that makes the stingiest people in Britain pinch the pennies to such extremes that they have won the unenviable moniker of tightwad? |
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He was not a redistributionist and he was not unduly concerned about disparities of income, although he acknowledged that it was disturbing to see extremes of wealth. |
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Wild goats are tolerant of considerable extremes of temperature and would most likely have been a source of food for most of the post-glacial period. |
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Perhaps unsurprisingly, his mettle in polar extremes far outstrips his writing ability. |
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But how are we to know whether matriarchy did not have similar extremes? |
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This may provide a way beyond the generalised extremes of homogeneity and heterogeneity in analysing the necessity and contingency in organisational forms of capital. |
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A democratic culture permits the rejection of extremist ideas and actions, without having to resort to other extremes to suppress such ideas and actions. |
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Our strategy was to use thermal mass to moderate temperature extremes. |
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The two extremes of molecular bonding are ionic bonds and covalent bonds. |
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True, the colonies lacked the extremes of wealth and poverty to be seen in the mother country. |
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Between these extremes of latitude, tropical dry forests and montane cloud forests grow in climatic zones that favor unique combinations of species from both north and south. |
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That style isn't too popular among some players, but it is the right way to go, even though the coordinator can take it to maddening extremes at times. |
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Of course, neither school specifically sets out to accept or reject gradualistic or punctuational change but they do emphasise different extremes of patterns of evolution. |
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Most antique furniture can suffer as a result of extremes in temperature, especially painted and lacquered examples and those inlaid with marquetry, brass or ivory decoration. |
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Kent herself has said the movie is about parenting, the unsayable extremes of what mothers can feel. |
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Resist the temptation to overcompensate for the extremes of one parent. |
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The absence of non-bingers, who'll now be quaffing wine in their small, continental caffs, will hardly lessen the desire of those who take their tippling to extremes. |
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The mesokurtic distribution for Section C falls in-between these two extremes, showing both a moderate tendency to cluster and a moderate tendency to disperse. |
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Because of the shade and buffering from seasonal weather extremes, the microclimate in the woods may also support more and better forage growth during seasonal extremes. |
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What will happen if bioengineering, cloning, global epidemics such as SARS and splitting of society into haves and have nots are taken to extremes? |
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Critics who are truly cinephiles, I believe, often champion extremes. |
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Pizarro manages to combine these romantic emotional extremes with unusual clarity, bringing out lines that can often be marred and mushed by foggy sustain pedalling. |
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He even spent a couple of weeks at a military boot camp to prepare, braving extremes of weather from blistering heat to thunderstorms and a tornado. |
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In the early 1990s, demagogues took multiculturalism to terrible extremes, killing hundreds of thousands of people in the name of ethnic solidarity. |
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The waters of the North Atlantic gyre provide a favorable, food-rich environment for young turtles, but straying beyond the latitudinal extremes of the gyre is often fatal. |
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In performing the physical act of turning from one vast panel to the next, the viewer felt the moment of pause between the two antithetical extremes represented. |
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These are the two opposite extremes in a continuum of scenarios that differ with regard to the relative contributions of horizontal and vertical transmission. |
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But we must not pose legality and expediency as opposite extremes. |
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Her moods were becoming all extremes, with no middle ground. |
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And from that, we're going to move onto extremes of a different kind. |
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Both Harvey and Sarah were daring each other into the extremes. |
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This is a place of ambivalence, a place where extremes meet. |
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Genovese is, it should be said, an illuminating example of the way in which left-wing and right-wing extremes meet in a love of tyranny and a hatred of freedom. |
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Other potential ethical conflicts could take this issue to extremes. |
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We are trustworthily informed that the word for all this is mamihlapinatapai, and at first sight we may well feel that a language which goes to such extremes as this must be rich beyond the dreams of a Shakespeare or a Newton. |
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Don Pedro's arc moves him from proud hidalgo to magnificent obsessive, an all-macho embodiment of the extremes of empowerment, totally devoid of any self-doubt. |
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It does not have the centralisation of religious authority which can both unify people around a coherent set of values and prevent the emergence of extremes. |
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The resulting mix avoids the wilder extremes of both free jazz and abstract electronica, and instead takes a more moderate scoop from the middle of each. |
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The band also got a rush whenever Nicholls kicked into his primal scream therapy, which he took to ridiculous extremes during some of the slower moments. |
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Churchill's essay goes to extremes, but like the man in power here, the way to get public opinion aroused is to make inflated statements that hold only a grain of truth. |
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The 32 measures included sleep and sensory deprivation, the use of military dogs to terrify prisoners, temperature extremes and diets of bread and water. |
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The series spans extremes of smoldering darks and luminous brights. |
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Irritant contact dermatitis is a nonallergic reaction resulting from sensitivity to soap, hand cream, powder, disinfectants, and temperature and pH extremes. |
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The result has been a debate dominated by the extremes, with little patience for nuance, calibration, or balancing. |
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The mountain passes are high and demanding, the climate gives extremes of weather conditions, the infrastructure is primitive and the hidden wastelands are boundless. |
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The rival personae can contradict each other, so that the poetry is pulled one way and the other, between the extremes of sterile formalism and sloganeering. |
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How, if Christie wrote such rubbish, can we explain the fact that her works have resonated even at the farthest extremes of geography and history? |
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Experts say the mild summer, with no extremes of heat or rain, has helped spiders and other creep-crawlies such as craneflies to thrive. |
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Modern historiography on the period has reached a consensus between the two extremes of innovation and crisis. |
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While his oeuvre as a whole demonstrates a great love for Britain, he is, in the end, a meliorist, standing firm between two extremes. |
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When two animals mate, they both share an interest in the success of the offspring, though often to different extremes. |
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Proximity to the Gulf Stream and other maritime mediations of temperature extremes can extend the season. |
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North of the Vaal River, the Highveld becomes better watered and does not experience subtropical extremes of heat. |
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The Prince Edward Islands have colder average annual temperatures, but Sutherland has colder extremes. |
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Although both extremes are considered German, they are not mutually intelligible. |
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Our earlier calls for AUDUSD pullbacks were clearly premature and highlight the difficulty in timing trades on sentiment extremes. |
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Between these two extremes, New Zealand declared that as Britain was or would be at war, so it was too. |
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Between these two extremes we have the great majority of social actions which partake partly of the one sphere and partly of the other. |
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The climate in Fiji is tropical marine and warm year round with minimal extremes. |
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Sakha is known for its climate extremes, with the Verkhoyansk Range being the coldest area in the Northern Hemisphere. |
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While monopoly and perfect competition mark the extremes of market structures there is some similarity. |
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The two extremes of tasteless extravagance and of slatternness are to be carefully avoided. |
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The subject and predicate of a proposition are, after Aristotle, together called its terms or extremes. |
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However, the dependence is nonlinear at extremes of low and high values of absorptivity, and signal saturation occurs at high signal levels. |
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At the extremes, there can be both nociceptor activation without pain or pain without receptor activation. |
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However, it's still a crap-shoot to some extent because we experience fairly wide extremes from year-to-year. |
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Karim's bad check bonanaza's sometimes went to extremes, with one check being in the sum of 2 million Egyptian pounds. |
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It offers broad-spectrum sun protection with an SPF of 25 and guards against windburn and temperature extremes. |
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Linguistic ascesis and the uncontrollably exuberant text can be considered opposite but ultimately coinciding extremes of the same ultimate aim. |
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Bradley, as he brings his honest and snarkily wise views of the world to his poetry, discussing many subjects of varying extremes and maturity. |
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Its unsettledness and the extremes of its social style paralleled Mary's personality. |
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Don't go to extremes It is known in fact that Prophet Muhammad always resisted any tendency toward religious excessiveness. |
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And the truth is that both extremes of narcissism and echolalia seem to coexist today, at the expense of a balanced sense of self. |
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Agriculture varies depending on rainfall, irrigation, soil, elevation, and temperature extremes. |
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Under the opposite extremes, he found dilutions of 100,000 to 1 were possible. |
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Somewhere between the two extremes is likely to lie the historical truth about Galilee and its Galileans. |
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Between these two extremes you have the 11 other Incoterms including the most widely used one, CIF, short for cost, insurance and freight. |
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The words were not without emotion, and retained their level tone as if by a careful equipoise between imminent extremes. |
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The island has lush vegetation, a product of its mild but changeable climate which avoids extremes in temperature. |
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Overall, Ireland has a mild but changeable oceanic climate with few extremes. |
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The climate is typically insular and is temperate avoiding the extremes in temperature of many other areas in the world at similar latitudes. |
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Trends in modern and recent scholarship attempted to balance the extremes of previous scholarship. |
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On the other hand, the assembly of Pangaea created huge arid inland areas subject to temperature extremes. |
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Overall temperature characteristics of the oceanic climates feature cool temperatures and infrequent extremes of temperature. |
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There are a great number of variations between the extremes of free and decurrent, collectively called attached gills. |
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The city's proximity to the sea mitigates any large variations in temperature or extremes of climate. |
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Temperature extremes here have slightly more variability due to the more inland location. |
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The climate of Ireland is mild, moist and changeable with abundant rainfall and a lack of temperature extremes. |
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Disruptive selection favors individuals with either of the opposite extremes of a trait and discourages moderation. |
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The winter and summer temperature extremes of the continental climate are moderated by the ocean. |
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It has also had a history of media controversy, which it has actively courted, and has earned extremes of critical reaction. |
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Mosses are known to survive environmental extremes in the short-term with previous evidence confirming up to a 20 year timescale for survival. |
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This nicy-nicy business about food isn't smart. Carry it to extremes and it becomes very foolish indeed. |
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Trends in modern and recent scholarship have attempted to balance the extremes of previous scholarship. |
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The need to attract second preferences tends to promote consensus and disadvantage extremes. |
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The climate of Cork, like the rest of Ireland, is mild oceanic and changeable with abundant rainfall and a lack of temperature extremes. |
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At the extremes, for any form of life, consideration of pollution is superseded by that of survival. |
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They are insulated from extremes in ambient temperature, they are shielded from ultraviolet rays, and they are less exposed to photodegradation. |
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Some and plant cover accommodated to various extremes and became resilient with regard to various patterns of human activity. |
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Goodman became something of an urban legend for her extremes of devotion to the art form. |
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In addition, brown rats eat a wider variety of foods, and are more resistant to weather extremes. |
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This assumes willingness to take utilitarian or consequentialist ethics to psychopathic extremes. |
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This suggests that the earliest migrants into the northern extremes of North America and Greenland derived from later migrant populations. |
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The climate is consistently mild, with no temperature or rainfall extremes. |
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But if you want some tips on how to really slash your living costs, then this documentary profiles the people who have taken penny-pinching to new extremes. |
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But until recently, they've been plagued by the vanadium redox battery's limited storage capacity and inability to operate effectively in any temperature extremes. |
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The county has a mild, but changeable, oceanic climate with few extremes. |
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England has a temperate oceanic climate in most areas, lacking extremes of cold or heat, but does have a few small areas of subarctic and warmer areas in the South West. |
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One obvious issue for humanely housing cattle is temperature extremes. |
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Much of her work dwells upon the black comedy, emotional extremes and deformed outcasts favored by her German Expressionist predecessors, and it is, in fact, genuinely new. |
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When chilled to extremes, liquid helium behaves according to the rules of quantum mechanics that apply to matter at the smallest scales and defy the laws of classical physics. |
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Never have such opposite extremes been combined in the same human being. |
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Land of mystery and enchantment, continent of contrast and extremes, where adventure awaits those who dare to defy convention and choose to trod the unfamiliar path. |
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Far Cry 4, meanwhile, took everything great about its surprise hit predecessor and amplified it to ridiculous extremes, as typified by the rideable weaponised elephants. |
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Subpolar oceanic climates are less prone to temperature extremes than subarctic climates or continental climates, featuring milder winters than these climates. |
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Do we respond to the poor Lazaruses in our midst with charity, or do we seek to change the economic conditions that set up these extremes of rich and poor? |
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It was a part of Buddha's first sermon, where he presented the Noble Eightfold Path that was a 'middle way' between the extremes of asceticism and hedonistic sense pleasures. |
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Public buildings generally varied between the extremes of plain boxes with grid windows and Italian Late Renaissance palaces, depending on budget. |
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They also put more effort into the psychological development of their characters, and the main characters typically displayed extremes of sensitivity and excitement. |
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No stranger to extremes, whitebarks inhabit high-altitude environments near timberline, where other tree species find it difficult to establish a roothold. |
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You need to find the middle ground between the two extremes. |
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The whole history of the Hapsburg state was an attempt to balance the unbalanceable while being squeezed somewhere between the two extremes of East-Central Europe. |
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It so avoids the two extremes of mock delicacy and pandersome detail with such good sense, that we could wish it put into the hands of every American girl and woman. |
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His brother Oswiu was chased to the northern extremes of his kingdom. |
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In this cryptobiotic state, lichens can survive wider extremes of temperature, radiation and drought in the harsh environments they often inhabit. |
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Seasonal variations are pronounced, but extremes in temperature are rare. |
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In America, they take this to what some might say were extremes, with children hothoused and groomed for spelling stardom with the annual national Spelling Bee competition. |
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The true figure is likely to lie between the two extremes of half and one and a half million, and the most widely accepted estimate is one million. |
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Few of us are extremes, but more are on the extroverted side. |
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But those of us who were young at heart were ready to go to extremes with not so impossible schemes but it soon appeared our dreams would fall apart at the seams. |
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Just a few miles inland, summer temperature extremes are significantly higher, with downtown Los Angeles being several degrees warmer than at the coast. |
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Northwestern California has a temperate climate, and the Central Valley has a Mediterranean climate but with greater temperature extremes than the coast. |
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First, it was feared that right-wing conservatism could go to extremes by elevating racism to government offices, threatening with a scenario of Weimarisation. |
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