Hiccups, heartburn, colds and warts are often treated with remedies passed down from one generation to another. |
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Christabelle Naw, 14, is from one of Burma's ethnic tribes called the Karens. |
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Suddenly dozens of eggs fell from the basket and smashed into a puddle of yolks and whites as he shifted the pole from one shoulder to the other. |
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Regularly, I was wound, polished and looked at but never moved except from one silk pocket to another. |
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Certainly the curtains moved when the wind blew from one direction or the other. |
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Academics usually plough a narrow disciplinary patch, whereas intellectuals of his kind roam ambitiously from one discipline to another. |
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Basketball players from one North Yorkshire school have been wiping the floor with the opposition after completing an unbeaten run of two years. |
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So this is many, many times smaller than is needed just for one year's worth of pollution from one power station. |
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As the banks vary these extras from one year to the next, it is worth checking that cover is in place for driving on the continent. |
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It's inevitable that as one moves from one place to another, it is easy to lose touch with friends and acquaintances. |
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Who really imagines it's possible to tell from one frame whether or a tape is genuine? |
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In plants, large genomic DNA clones from one species were mapped by FISH on chromosomes from related species. |
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Key to the whole setup is the ability to produce laser pulses with exactly the same waveform from one pulse to the next, Krausz says. |
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There can surely be no better way to eat caramel than freshly cut from one of the great wodges sitting on these tables. |
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The first message was from one of my roommate's kooky friends, so I turned up the volume. |
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His enthusiasm was as legendary as his quicksilver movement from one scientific interest to another. |
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Pouring water from one of those little plastic houseplant watering cans would be helpful for keeping water in track when rinsing. |
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In terms of the topology scores, the five most accurate methods were not significantly different from one another. |
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The dreadful Middle Passage could last from one to three months and epitomized the role of violence in the trade. |
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But there we are, at my morning coffee shop, creating and recreating community from one day to the next. |
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The fine print is fascinating, explaining the criteria used by government panels to reclassify people from one racial group to another. |
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It was whispered that they spent all their time locked up at the Business School, frantically running from one lecture or work group to the next. |
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If you trailer your boat to inland waters, you can unknowingly transport invasive species from one waterbody to another. |
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For years, nobody would go there, as warnings were passed down from one generation of Oxford cavers to another. |
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Occasionally, the text makes jarring jumps from one subject to another without smooth transitions. |
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The lava from the Undara volcano travelled 164 km to create the longest lava flow from one single vent in modern geological time. |
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In addition to the vandalism, some stolen property was recovered from one of the three men. |
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Without tipping at the shoulders, concentrate on shifting your weight from one skate to the other between each waddle. |
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In pre-railway racing, horses had to walk from one race to another, which sometimes took weeks. |
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He hopped around from one foot to the other, then spied a big wallchart with a picture of a skeleton on it. |
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Rather it's the incoherent screenplay, direction which jerks from one improbable setting to another and lets itself wander off into teen romance. |
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Rather than address these questions from the realm of critical abstraction, however, Brown, like Bishop, addresses them from one of particulars. |
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They basically cut out an entire scene from one episode in a really jarring manner. |
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Electrons move from one orbital into another by absorbing or emitting a quantum of energy, just as Bohr explained. |
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They are supplied with marble slabs of African alabaster that were probably excavated from one of the many ancient sites in and around Rome. |
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Such corridors allow links between ecologically protected areas, so that plants and animals can spread from one to another and form a network. |
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Quantum teleportation is the transferring of tiny units of computer information, called quantum bits or qubits, from one location to another. |
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In taking care of the royal feet, M Sitts showed such skill that his Majesty one day asked him to remove an agnail from one of his fingers. |
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Mr Michael Gleeson, prosecuting, said two large withdrawals were made from one particular account. |
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The colorful, long-lasting blossoms of this wide variety of mums range from one to six inches across. |
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The city rose from one man's vision, under the aegis of patient backing and supporters. |
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Known as the “middle passage,” this sea voyage could range from one to six months, depending on the weather. |
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He added two scroll handles to a footed beaker so that the cup could be passed easily from one communicant to the next. |
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Aside from one of us getting a little airsick, the flight to the Grand Canyon went smoothly. |
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Most have moved tremendous numbers of cattle from one ranch to another rather than selling off herds for slaughter. |
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The series was also notable for the wonderfully adroit way it visually mixed the father's past and present, and segued from one to the other. |
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The wind was playing tricks, lifting heaps of dried leaves, whizzing them round, and shifting them from one end of the garden to the other. |
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Of course, I flew from London to Istanbul, so it was a sudden jump from one culture to another, rather than a gradual shift. |
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This is one of my favourite arias from one of my favourite oratorios, and a piece I have known since I was knee-high to a grasshopper. |
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He was talking really fast, jumping from one subject to the next, probably hoping that he would not have to listen to what I had to say. |
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For that you need to seek help from one of the many aftermarket tuners catering to the market. |
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Now Hooke was never a person who did one thing at a time, indeed he seemed at his best when his mind was jumping from one idea to another. |
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As Cross puts it, modern humans can transfer insights from one domain to another, often to a domain that is metaphoric or symbolic. |
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My mom shifts her weight from one foot to the other, crossing her arms and putting one hand at her chin, staring intently at the creature. |
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So it would seem switching service from one address to another is likely a pretty routine, fairly common occurrence. |
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The sheep know their patch, fortunately, and follow well-established paths from one high point to another. |
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Aside from one transgression last summer, he has handled himself in a manner that has made him a role model for many people. |
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She ripped out a piece of paper from one of her notebooks and jotted it down. |
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Like for a woodcut, hardly more than 2000 or 3000 impressions could be obtained from one plate. |
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Just pretend you're dukes or counts from one of the northern countries and you can get anywhere in that castle. |
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However, I remember her chiefly for the stage play The Woman in Black, which was adapted from one of her books. |
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Besides, because of the harder wood, more impressions were possible from one block. |
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These range from one bed room flats to five bedroom houses, with 44 affordable homes and 30 low cost starter homes. |
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It's a lot to get from one little book but that's my experience, for what it is worth. |
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The redactor openly indicates, not only that we are given two visions, but also that they are very different from one another. |
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How are mitosis and meiosis similar and how are they different from one another? Both mitosis and meiosis are associated with cytokinesis. |
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Iris was brought up to speak Welsh as her first language and was able to switch from one language to the other with great ease. |
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Everyone seemed to be the apple of her eye as she tripped from one festoon corner to another to relish the savoury dish. |
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Forests of oaks, pines and weeping willows are different from one another, but at least they are all forests. |
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On the other hand, Sephardic versions of Kol Nidre vary both in melody and performance practice from one community to the next. |
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The primary unit consists of four to seven primary rods radiating from one perpendicular primary spine. |
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This guy probably popped up from one of the little grass airfields in the area. |
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This means that the user has constantly to refocus the lenses when moving from one close object to another. |
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The film is composed of selections from one family's collection of 25 reels of home movies, shot on 8mm. |
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Wooley constantly runs from one end of the stage to the other, madly working the washboards, milking the audience's applause. |
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Most weeks, at least one round trip to the cold storage plant is made, with from one to four reefers. |
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As the light shone, its radiance blazed from one end of the universe to the other. |
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If the defense is active and moves from one side of the offense to the other quickly, it can be confusing to the offensive players teammates. |
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The script for the performance was in Hindi, Kashmiri and English, flowing from one language to the other smoothly and with ease. |
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His father jumped down from one of the branches hidden by the whip-like vines. |
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Even if codes could be completely debugged, million-cell memories could never be counted upon, digitally, to behave consistently from one kilocycle to the next. |
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Hawks hurriedly flew off to protect Paris but Paris was soon occupied and the Hawk pilots attempted to fight a rearguard action as they retreated from one base to another. |
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He captures all the different issues a president deals with and moves from one to the next. |
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Head lice are small wingless flat insects which move from one person to another by direct head-to-head contact and live off human blood in the scalp. |
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The application of estimates of test performance from one population to another depends on the relation between the range of abnormality in the two groups. |
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We have no secrets from one another, and know that we can tell each other anything in the sure and certain knowledge that the other will respond in a loving fashion. |
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This article was adapted from one originally written by Aida Qajar for IranWire. |
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The mother of five frantically jumps from one argument to the next as if playing a high stakes game of catchphrase. |
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We walk from one to the next on goat trails beneath a gleamy Aegean sky. |
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But on the plus side, my bed was so wide that you could barely see from one side to the other, due to the natural curvature of the Earth's surface. |
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This porting effort could be as simple as a recompile, link and run, or it could require changing some assembler code from one platform to another. |
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Even better, by becoming a 'rate tart' and surfing your debt from one deal to the next, you could effectively create a long-term interest-free loan. |
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Data's streaming when it's moving quickly from one piece of hardware to another and doesn't have to be all in one place for the destination device to do something with it. |
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She glared and him from one step down, her back ramrod straight. |
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I was fine, wrapped in my weatherproof anorak with the hood up, and found the walk from one end of the precinct to the other a bracing and refreshing experience. |
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Each of these phases originates from one primary step in the cross-bridge cycle that is linked by different degrees to upstream and downstream steps in the cycle. |
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A programmer can find new ways for data from one of these devices to be manipulated and then played, used, edited, redisplayed etc etc on any of these devices. |
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I hear that the mechanisms for transferring you from one provider to another are incredibly flaky and the whole thing is held together on a wing and a prayer. |
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Speed ramps along College Road, put in to try and dissuade boy racers who use the road to cut from one side of the town to the other, have been branded useless. |
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Some of the youngsters kicked a football at the tiled roof, while others ran along the flat part of the roof jumping from one building to the next. |
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Long gone are the tooled finishes from hand-held chisels that could render differences in texture across the face of a stone block, or from one stone to the next. |
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How far has Congress really evolved on race when in 50 years it has gone from one black senator to two? |
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Mail often took weeks to get from one coast to the other, chugging along on rail lines. |
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The fact that this is all true turns the story from one of intrigue and odyssey into one of anthropological significance as well. |
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The first half flew by in a flash and at the interval cars, vans and almost anything that was roadworthy and rainproof brought some fans from one viewing point to another. |
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And it is the galaxies, not individual stars, that are receding from one another, being carried farther apart as the space in which they are embedded expands. |
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A judder like an electrical pulse sped through Ferdinand's veins from his finger to his heart like a capsule being podded from one floor of a shop to another. |
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The waiter greeted her in a perky voice and gestured to a sign with the menu written on it hanging from one of the slender stone pillars that held the cloth roof up. |
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First, laws that treat people differently from one another without a rational justification are unconstitutional. |
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He pulled a bone china teacup printed with white floral bells, Lily of the Valley, from one of the cabinets. |
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The whole family was put in quarantine for a month but soon after she had recovered from one disease Julia was struck down with another, namely rheumatic fever. |
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I moved him from one shoulder to the other, trying to get rid of the ache in the muscles. |
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The soil variations are acute enough that they can differ radically from one side of a road to another. |
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They grew close enough together so that reaching from one to the next was never a problem, and the bark was just rough enough to offer a good grip without being abrasive. |
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I don't know how many times a strap has slipped off my shoulder or a handle cut into my hand during a mad dash from one gate to another at some airport. |
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A gifted raconteur, he was born to talk, to entertain, to lose the plot, to start again, to regale you with tales from one of the fullest lives a human being could ever live. |
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As I waited to speak to Manning, a cleaning woman poked her head out from one of the adjacent rooms to peer at me. |
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Most human biological variation is clinally distributed and blends gradually from one area to the next. |
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While the details of the story differ from one author to another, the overall plot structure remains much the same. |
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Estimates of the death rate caused by this epidemic range from one third to as much as sixty percent. |
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One example is a site in Inner Mongolia that has yielded the remains of over 20 Sinornithomimus, from one to seven years old. |
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Fossils vary in size from one micrometer bacteria to dinosaurs and trees, many meters long and weighing many tons. |
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Since it has no physical mass it is capable of transporting itself from one end of the world to the other. |
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Painted totems, wood carving, and show programs often accumulate as a sacred object that passes from one group to the next. |
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Leo Tolstoy identified art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person to another. |
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Pastoralists live a nomadic life, moving their herds from one pasture to another. |
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The passing on of property from one generation to another helps to centralize wealth and power. |
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Going from one epoch to the next is a Singularity in its own right, and a period of speeding up precedes it. |
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The transportation of fish from one location to another can break the law and cause the introduction of fish alien to the ecosystem. |
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Throughout this period the Lombard princes swung in allegiance from one party to another. |
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In the end, the inhabited parts of the cities were separated from one another by stretches of pasture even within the city walls. |
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They categorized them as one of the nations of Germanic tribes descended from one of the sons of Mannus, a Germanic ancestor. |
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So, migrating from one part of Italy to next could be seen as though they were indeed migrating to another country or even continent. |
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This is how the F plasmid, which forms the basis of a lot of classical E. coli genetics, is transferred from one cell to another. |
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Beyond this the precise division of power varies from one nation to another. |
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Mercantilist theory varies in sophistication from one writer to another and has evolved over time. |
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Techniques like hand washing, wearing gowns, and wearing face masks can help prevent infections from being passed from one person to another. |
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When he was young he was from one of Yesugis orphaned and deserted families, he rose very rapidly by working with Toghrul Khan of the Kerait. |
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An EdT from one house may have a higher concentration of aromatic compounds than an EdP from another. |
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Cabotage rights are the right of a company from one country to trade in another country. |
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Senegal experienced its second peaceful transition of power, and its first from one political party to another. |
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Haiti has two main highways that run from one end of the country to the other. |
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There can also be a marked difference in temperature and rainfall from one side of the island to the other. |
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However, a number of cruise ships routinely round the Horn when traveling from one ocean to the other. |
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The inherent aspect describes the purpose of a verb and what separates verbs from one another. |
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However, the various noun classes are not totally distinct from one another, and there is a great deal of overlap between them. |
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The diphthong system in Northern Sami varies considerably from one dialect to another. |
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However, colloquial language is less settled than poetic language, and the rhythm may vary from one region to another or with time. |
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The final S or T is silent, and the other three forms sound differently from one another and from the singular forms. |
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Most if not all languages have some means of forming the comparative, although these means can vary significantly from one language to the next. |
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Some speakers code switch clearly from one to the other while others style shift in a less predictable and more fluctuating manner. |
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There are differences in the names of beer glasses from one area to another. |
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Since they could never be sure that the killing was actually necessary from one minute to the next, the defence was denied. |
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It is also possible for property to pass from one person to another independently of the consent of the property owner. |
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Divorce from one conjugal relationship must occur before another conjugal relationship may occur in family law. |
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Tradition changes slowly, with changes from one generation to the next being seen as significant. |
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In archaeology, the term tradition is a set of cultures or industries which appear to develop on from one another over a period of time. |
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Portions of the transportation system are intermodal, allowing travelers to switch easily from one mode of transportation to another. |
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A train approached, and in the darkness an object protruding from one of the cars suddenly struck Tompkins knocking him to the ground. |
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Finally, the Arthashastra text numbers it 180 topics consecutively, and does not restart from one when a new chapter or a new book starts. |
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Trade involves the transfer of goods or services from one person or entity to another, often in exchange for money. |
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Bodies which are absolutely hard, or so soft as to be void of elasticity, will not rebound from one another. |
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The different paths the atoms take to get from one spot to another are the sintering mechanisms. |
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To make matters worse, her retardy son, Toney, was running back and forth, from one end of the house to the other. |
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The group comprises a succession of sandstones, mudstones and siltstones, the specifics of the sequence varying from one area to another. |
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Prices vary considerably from one town to another with no apparent rhyme or reason. |
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Apart from one Edwardian building, Clough View, all buildings in the hamlet are older, or are renovations of older properties. |
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The cables run down both sides of the tunnel attached to metal framework from one end to the other. |
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Small hands flailed, the downy head turned from one side to another and suddenly the rosepetal mouth opened and Emily let out a wail. |
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Unofficial results instead traveled through the rumor mill, passed along on mobile phones from one part of the country to another. |
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The practice of the game in this country is to keep the shuttlecock in the air by striking it from one person to another. |
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Rays which differ in refrangibility may be parted and sorted from one another. |
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Wise words from one of advertising's elder statesmen, who has seen the industry evolve from TV, radio, and print to today's splinternet. |
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This article was adapted from one originally published by IranWire. |
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Such patterns, or systemicities, are usually considered from one of two complementary and mutually informing perspectives. |
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The site of their transformation is the forest in which they dwell as thresholders in transition from one state of existence to another. |
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Tosol was the day Opportunity shook the miniature thermal emission spectrometer in an effort to remove dust from one of its mirrors. |
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A backlink is simply a hyperlink connection from one web page back to another web page. |
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Famoro Dioubate is a balafon master from one of the most prestigious griot families in Guinea. |
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American soprano Merrycarol Yumi Wada is from one of New England's treasured musical families. |
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The accounting period for the overseas units was changed from one ending Dec. |
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The length of day and night during the winter solstice varies from one country to another. |
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Ruby's vision has had to be transformed from one that has been blind to supernatural significance to one that is able to see anagogically. |
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The canopy zipline tour involved traversing from one platform to another 30 metres above the forest floor. |
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The canopy zipline tour involved the canopy zipline tour involved traversing from one platform to another 30 metres above the forest floor. |
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In 1957 a message in a bottle from one of the seamen of the HMS Caledonia was washed ashore between Babbacombe and Peppercombe in Devon. |
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The price sometimes changes dramatically from one month to the next. |
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A man in a fit of anger, is actuated in a very different manner from one who only thinks of that emotion. |
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The infection does not spread from one to another among the troops, and barcoo rot affects men living in solitude. |
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Not far from the city of Candia, where the king of Ceylon generally resides, is a river which flows down from one of the mountains. |
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Chimeric embryos are made by injecting cells or genetic material from one species into the embryo of another. |
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These sites have enormous hard drives and bandwidth for couriers to distribute the software from one site to the next. |
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A worm finds what it searches after only by feeling, as it crawls from one thing to another. |
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A domain wall corresponds to the rotation of the magnetization vector from one magnetic domain to another. |
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Then he created a modified dueling tree, featuring six steel targets that swung from one side of a central column to the other when shot. |
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Brendan had the dumb job of moving boxes from one conveyor belt to another. |
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The lead seals confining the liquefying body of the former king were not secure and foulsome black ooze seeped from one edge. |
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The quality of automobile gasolines varies considerably from one country and producer to another. |
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Men are led on from one stage of life to another in a condition of the utmost hazard. |
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The expelled nations take heart, and when they fly from one country invade another. |
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The MAR is a barrier for bottom water, but at these two transform faults deep water currents can pass from one side to the other. |
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Scholars travelled from one monastery to another in search of the texts they wished to study. |
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A field homomorphism is a map from one field to another one which is additive, multiplicative, zero-preserving, and unit-preserving. |
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Though distinct, the three persons cannot be divided from one another in being or in operation. |
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They don't use a vehicle for commuting and always commute barefoot from one place to another, irrespective of the distance. |
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The woman on the other hand is in her cups swigging from one wine glass while another stands at her elbow. |
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The number of international players in the National Basketball Association has increased 10 percent from one year ago, the league said on Monday. |
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According to legend, Richard III drank from one of the several springs in the region on the day of the battle. |
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The concentrations of different volcanic gases can vary considerably from one volcano to the next. |
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During the battle, Cromwell switched his reserves from one side of the river Severn to the other and back again. |
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Benches were arranged using the configuration of the chapel's choir stalls whereby they were facing across from one another. |
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This originates from the city's dialect name, Brummagem, which may in turn have been derived from one of the city's earlier names, Bromwicham. |
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Independence is often difficult to achieve without the encouragement and practical support from one or more external parties. |
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Flights from one point to another within the same country are called domestic flights. |
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London is divided into 73 Parliamentary borough constituencies, formed from the combined area of several wards from one or more boroughs. |
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Frictional unemployment is the time period between jobs when a worker is searching for, or transitioning from one job to another. |
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His life history shows that he frequently moves from town to town, moving from one job to the next. |
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The processes by which the changes occur, from one generation to another, are called evolutionary processes or mechanisms. |
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Heritable traits are passed from one generation to the next via DNA, a molecule that encodes genetic information. |
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Genetic drift is the change in allele frequency from one generation to the next that occurs because alleles are subject to sampling error. |
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Its thickness is the distance from the inner circle to the outer circle, and its width is the distance from one edge to the other. |
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The seeds may not be sown to the right depth nor the proper distance from one another. |
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This was necessary as at points the two tracks are several miles apart and some destinations can only be accessed from one of the lines. |
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The language includes different dialects that can vary greatly from one town to another or from one island to another. |
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Numerous lyric based musical traditions exist including Gombhira, Bhatiali and Bhawaiya, varying from one region to the next. |
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Bishoprics, canonries, and parochial benefices passed from one to another member of the same family, and frequently from father to son. |
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The details of the title, doctor of the church, vary from one autonomous ritual church to another. |
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Tuition is charged at different rates from one type of institution to the next. |
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For this reason a comprehensive architectural chronology must jump backwards and forwards from one building to another. |
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His followers, however, liberated him when he was being transferred from one castle to another. |
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Yam stood for manliness, and he who could feed his family on yams from one harvest to another was a very great man indeed. |
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The reported location and extent of Martuthunira territory also differs from one description to another. |
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Although procedures vary from one field of inquiry to another, identifiable features are frequently shared in common between them. |
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But, the habit once formed, nothing is easier than to transfer it from one object to another. |
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Eve is the second human created by God, taken from one of Adam's ribs and shaped into a female form of Adam. |
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Sailors often took a song from one category and, with necessary alterations to the rhythm, tempo, or form, used it for a different task. |
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It is possible that the rhyme was acquired from one of these sources and then adapted to fit the most famous bridge in England. |
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One designated member of the fielding team, called the bowler, bowls the ball from one end of the pitch to the striking batsman at the other end. |
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There are generally only minor variations in the overall pattern from one year to the next. |
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Both combatants showed enormous grit and determination, landing and taking huge shots from one another without even flinching. |
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But for these soldiers, it is all the more so because of the length of their deployment, which was extended midtour from one year to 15 months. |
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These results can vary greatly from one year to another based on fluctuations in the exchange rates of each country's currency. |
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This was a large group of related people supposedly descended from one progenitor through male forebears. |
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Firstly, the cession of territory from one state to another state has to be by international agreement between the UK and Irish governments. |
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The Hebrides can be divided into two main groups, separated from one another by the Minch to the north and the Sea of the Hebrides to the south. |
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Several companies offer trips by mokoro, lasting from one to three days, although almost all these trips are run by the same community trust. |
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Until 2006, this species was known only from one book about the vegetation of Montserrat. |
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However, the extent of such powers varies from one country to another and is often a matter of controversy. |
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For carrier companies shipping goods from one nation to another, exchange rates can often impact them severely. |
|
In market practice, a significant bond issuance generally has a rating from one or two of the Big Three agencies. |
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He fell from one state of anxiety to the next and worried himself almost to death with hypochondriacal mopings. |
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Capitalism did not create all the distinctions of ethnicity and race that function to set off categories of workers from one another. |
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This pattern of variation, known as clinal variation, is also observed for many alleles that vary from one human group to another. |
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Another observation is that traits or alleles that vary from one group to another do not vary at the same rate. |
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Precipitation changes dramatically from one spot to the other, and diminishes very quickly eastward. |
|
Crop loss in 1845 has been estimated at anywhere from one third to as high as one half of cultivated acreage. |
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Additionally, cultural ideas may transfer from one society to another, through diffusion or acculturation. |
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Nothing else is known of him, apart from one peculiar incident discovered by William Matthews. |
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This was perhaps reinforced by his brisk tempi early in his career, and by a story about his racing from one recording session to another. |
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When animals are imported from one country to another, there is the possibility that diseases and parasites can move with them. |
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Bus, taxi and calafia lines and routes are distinguished from one another by their vehicles colors. |
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In other regions, people with a heritage from one of the Celtic nations also associate with the Celtic identity. |
|
Data vary considerably from culture to culture, region to region, and even from one system of reckoning dates to another. |
|
Some apology, I feel, is due from one who has never been in Japan for venturing to write about netsukes. |
|
The colonies were very different from one another but they were still a part of the British Empire in more than just name. |
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It is similar to other supposed lake monsters in Scotland and elsewhere, though its description varies from one account to the next. |
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The wildcat will pursue prey atop trees, even jumping from one branch to another. |
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Populations of the rare groundcover, Linnaea borealis, may be too isolated from one another to produce viable seed. |
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The range of varying values for these banknotes was perhaps from one string of cash to one hundred at the most. |
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It has a range from one whole tone lower than the tonic to one octave above it. |
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The setts painted all differ from one another and very few of those painted show any resemblance to today's clan tartans. |
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The outflow from one wheel became the input to the next one down in the sequence. |
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Party magnitude is the number of candidates elected from one party in one district. |
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The authority of appellate courts to review the decisions of lower courts varies widely from one jurisdiction to another. |
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The relative percentages of the elements have also been shown to differ from one geographic location to another. |
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Generally trains run from one line to another, joining at Cardiff Central eliminating the need for changing trains there. |
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There are no clear boundaries between the dialects because they form a dialect continuum, varying only slightly from one village to the next. |
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In Trecynon, Evan would walk from one packed church to another all within a few yards of each other. |
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Even on the mainland the patterns of church life would vary considerably from one place to another, and from one age to another. |
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Instead these traditions are passed along informally from one individual to another either through verbal instruction or demonstration. |
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Bale further developed his reputation as a free kick specialist when he struck the post from one against West Bromwich Albion. |
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In 1948 the organisation was registered as a limited company, and the Cardiff season was extended from one week to two. |
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These dunes form under winds that blow consistently from one direction, and they also are known as barchans, or transverse dunes. |
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Around 453 MYA, animals began diversifying, and many of the important groups of invertebrates diverged from one another. |
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Over the course of time, rocks can transform from one type into another, as described by the geological model called the rock cycle. |
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This is especially common in some waterfowl, which shift from one flyway to another. |
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Typical interbirth interval ranges from one year for the Black Sea population to three years for eastern Pacific Ocean populations. |
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However, sometimes it is necessary to exit onto a surface road to transfer from one freeway to another. |
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The expressways of Singapore are special roads that allow motorists to travel quickly from one urban area to another. |
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The alliance plans to allow tickets to be booked from one end of Europe to the other on a single website. |
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Thus, a displacement of the fleet from one locality to another will generally have little effect if the same quota is taken. |
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The use of the term also varies from one part of the world to another, and between different disciplines. |
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He was a real out-worlder, a wild man from one of the rough-and-tumble planets of the Zardalu Communion. |
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As the number of coupled harmonic oscillators grows, the time it takes to transfer energy from one to the next becomes significant. |
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The vibrations in them begin to travel through the coupled harmonic oscillators in waves, from one oscillator to the next. |
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Though foxes are largely monogamous, DNA evidence from one population indicated large levels of polygyny, incest and mixed paternity litters. |
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Recent research has shown that all European rabbits carry common genetic markers and descend from one of two maternal lines. |
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Clutches usually comprise four or five eggs, though numbers from one to 10 have been recorded. |
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The second reading is from the New Testament, typically from one of the Pauline epistles. |
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He was a striking figure of great stature and powerful build, with a loud, melodious voice which could be heard from one hilltop to another. |
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