Further down the field the finishing line was marked by a group of people-shaped grey blobs. |
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The front's passage may be marked by thunderstorms or, if rainfall has been very low for a prolonged period, a wall of dust. |
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She says the programme involved properly supported unit standards marked by trained teachers and assessed to the standard. |
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She suffered a series of literary knockbacks until her work was marked by an external examiner during a creative writing course. |
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Each wall contains a walk-through arch marked by massive keystones that were hand worked onsite. |
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In Trinidad and Tobago, most wedding receptions are community events, marked by large quantities of food and rum. |
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The Filipinos were restive under the Spanish, and this long period was marked by numerous uprisings. |
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Organisers are anticipating with great interest the results of the last exhibition day which was marked by deep winterly weather conditions. |
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After watching the recital, marked by an austere alaap and complex rhythmic patterns, students asked several questions. |
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The existence of a bourgeoisie was marked by recognizable forms of behavior and of ideas. |
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His reign was marked by continuous military campaigns to reconsolidate the Seleucid empire. |
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Thousands of pages are marked by redactions, blacked out information like the names of people who attended meetings. |
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Almost exactly three klicks after that, Howard found the second intersection, marked by a sign, and turned north onto a rutted, unpaved road. |
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The artist's reemergence is also marked by recent gallery shows on both coasts. |
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On the contrary, the world economy as a whole is marked by slow growth and outright stagnation. |
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The immediate aftermath of the war was marked by a nostalgic return by many artists to the springs of Mediterranean culture. |
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The connection with the SuIa Sgeir Fan is clearly marked by a re-entrant at the shelf edge, shown by the landward deviation of the 150 m isobath. |
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Many local accents are marked by a rhythm that tends to lengthen stressed vowels and to reduce or eliminate unstressed short vowels. |
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In contrast to his early years, his later life was marked by financial worries, frustration and disappointment. |
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To be a Nawab is to be heir to a lifestyle marked by refinement in speech and behaviour. |
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The last phase is marked by rapid reintegration of the personality and is often accompanied by amnesia. |
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Referendums and elections should be held with plain old paper ballots, marked by voters with a sturdy pencil. |
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The late King's grave is marked by an inscription in the floor and by a plaque, in the wall above, showing his head. |
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Angie woke up to dried tears in her eyes and her face marked by the carpet since she remained there all night without moving to her actual bed. |
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He takes no thought for style, and his work is marked by frequent pleonasm, anacoluthon, etc. |
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Since he would be closely marked by the opponents, other strikers would get more open space to play. |
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The spotted textures are marked by the growth of biotite, cordierite and andalusite on the metamorphic foliation. |
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They are marked by eruptions of cooler, stickier lavas such as andesite, dacite and rhyolite. |
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It is outfitted with andirons and matching tongs and shovel marked by David Phillips, a New York City brass founder. |
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The anniversary has been marked by a memorial service in central London, addressed by a UK government minister. |
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Culture was also looked towards to counter the alienating experience of industrial society, which was marked by impoverishment and anomie. |
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The first half was marked by total lethargy and an almost complete lack of chances. |
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The Dong Song is a chanted rhymed poem, marked by an abundance of striking metaphors. |
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The poetry in this period is marked by the use of appellative and patriotic themes. |
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It is marked by sloping, carved gullies, quiet meadows and ponds, and narrow trails that wind between century-old linden and oak trees. |
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Under his tenure its political line has been marked by a further shift to the right. |
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The sculpture is directly constructed from patched-together steel sheets and extrusions, the material marked by occasional rivets and holes. |
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Exams in Scotland are supervised by non-teachers but the papers are marked by teachers. |
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The evolution of rock music has been marked by an intermittent but generally expanding interest in the display of traditional music competencies. |
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The area is marked by many ritual baths, in which every Jew entering the Temple area had to immerse. |
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Asturian culture, however, is more marked by its building programmes than by its surviving literature. |
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The year since the invasion has been marked by further war crimes and atrocities. |
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Both rider and vet would have been conscious of the risks they were taking so close to a games that was marked by a hunt for drug cheats. |
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This century has been marked by some of the most horrific events in the history of mankind. |
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His victory was not marked by a surrender but by a change of enemy tactics. |
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In any event, state decision-makers will have to be moved by expressions of popular sentiment tangibly marked by active demonstration. |
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Their period was marked by tremendous economic expansion whose material fruit remained grossly maldistributed. |
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Second, the scale marked on the rule is nonlinear and had to be marked by hand from a master pattern. |
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The art of woodblock printing in the Meiji period is marked by the industrialization and swift westernization which Japan underwent in this era. |
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Her delicate white shoulder and back were marked by several large, puffy, technicolor bruises. |
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Bear signs are everywhere in Bradwell Bay, from fresh footprints to scat to mauled trees, marked by hears to show territorial boundaries. |
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If she turns around, she'll see the silver fob and chain, marked by their daughter's teething. |
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The exam papers were marked by teachers and then sent to external moderators. |
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I'd have to say that my experience at the Annual General Meeting of our student society was marked by mumblers of the most extraordinary kind. |
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Work has been set for him and as far as I'm concerned it's being marked by teachers. |
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The line shows the spectral boundary which is obtained by connecting the loci of spectral lights, marked by the dots in steps of 10 nm. |
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Identical amino acids are denoted by asterisks, and conservative changes are marked by dots. |
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It's a very good point, which is why more and more academic work is marked by continuous assessment. |
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It also says the initial measurement for seven-year-olds is unreliable as it is marked by teachers rather than external examiners. |
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Already from the very beginning his poetry has been marked by a kind of Oriental peace and meditativeness. |
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A quarterback's first season with a team is almost always marked by struggles fitting in with his new offense. |
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The foundational anniversary marked by Republic Day is categorised as a celebration, a moment for self-congratulation. |
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The end of the twentieth century was marked by a boom of astrology, mysticism, and occultism in many countries. |
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But apart from a few minor concessions, her term in office has been marked by close collaboration with business. |
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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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In Amsterdam, vehicle access is colour coded, with bikeways being marked by red bricks. |
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The media had under-rated his dad, Barry felt, and his career has been marked by a ruthless determination to correct that historical injustice. |
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Seemingly interminable rallies are marked by players pounding the ball at one another in games that go hours at a time. |
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The Polish deal was marked by mud-slinging, with accusation and counter-accusation from both sides, although none has yet stuck. |
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He visited most of the capitals of the continental countries and blazed a trail that was marked by some wild adventures. |
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The grass and tree-covered landscape is still indelibly marked by massive craters, the result of the total war of the 1914-18 Western Front. |
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Even worse for John, his tenure as PM had been marked by treachery and sleaze. |
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Small firms are choking to death in a planning process increasingly marked by bureaucratic muddle and delay. |
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For it came into a world previously marked by despotism, by tyranny, by totalitarian control. |
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Above all, he prepared mounts that were marked by meticulous attention to detail and precise labeling. |
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Sienna's year has been marked by violent or overwhelming turbulence or upheaval. |
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Which card is more likely to be marked by nicks and scratches on its edges? |
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In every case his works are marked by a high level of technical skill and surfaces of great animation. |
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The new environmentalism is marked by a passion for making a true difference in the real world. |
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The voice on the phone from New York is tremulous, unfailingly polite, marked by hesitations and bursts of nervous laughter. |
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Abera is now a worthy successor to his great predecessor, whose premature death in 1973 is marked by a monumental tomb in Addis Ababa. |
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This is a refreshing development, given that modern theatre is all too often marked by self-indulgence and mawkish sentimentality. |
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We are not prone to second-guess police work, but the sniper investigation seems to have been marked by confusion and worse. |
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But her progress through the tournament has been marked by the absence of the usual mind-boggling array of nervous ticks. |
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Clough's early works are marked by a subdued palette of largely browns, greys and greens. |
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So what does 2000 offer the mid-market fashion retail sector after another bleak Christmas marked by early sales notices? |
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The low mountain front sinuosity suggests that the entire length of the northern front is marked by a major fault. |
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Through ways of dancing, ways of looking, modes and topics of speech, the body is marked by the boundary and signifies boundary violation. |
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Sargent's work is marked by its exceptional lucidity, its exactness of expression and by the decisiveness of her results. |
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Dwelling as they did in clusters of local self-sufficiency, marked by a low standard of living, the people were ever threatened by famine. |
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If your childhood was like mine, it was marked by days spent tromping aimlessly in the mud, wading in creeks, and building forts in the forest. |
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Thessaly in the 360s was marked by internal wrangling and outside intervention by the Thebans. |
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The place where the terrorists executed the men on the first day is still marked by trails of dry blood. |
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The area is marked by many mikvehs, or ritual baths, in which every Jew entering the Temple area had to immerse. |
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Martinism was marked by highly respected men, whose teaching is always to be situated in the particular context and time of personal history. |
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The end of the working day in the tea garden is marked by the wail of an air-raid siren. |
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The first reaction to khat is unpleasant and marked by feeling of dizziness an intense thirst. |
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Together, the Pleistocene and Holocene make up the Quaternary period, marked by waxing and waning of polar glaciers. |
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Naturalization rates increased during the 1920s, but the next decade was marked by a political watershed. |
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Navratri, the much-awaited nine day celebration marked by dandiya raas and garba will see the latest fashion trends on display, as every year. |
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The highest point along a wide volcano crater is marked by a weather-beaten cross. |
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We skirted up the valley side towards a stile that entered into the wood, marked by a painted yellow arrow for the benefit of country ramblers. |
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Stages of entry into the cult may be marked by transformations of the body or its adornment. |
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They were faded, some stained by water from rain and a few marked by mud or beer. |
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This is an album marked by artful explosions of white noise and moments of utter chaos and collapse. |
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It has a distinct fold of flesh, marked by a line of hair that runs like a keel along its belly. |
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We're talking times marked by whitewall tires, gals with bouffants up-to-there, and music heavily steeped in soul. |
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His childhood is mainly marked by the fact that he suffered from very bad asthma, which still affects him, and so was kept off school a lot. |
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In Splendor on the Bench, a realistically rendered vacuum-tube stereo amplifier sits alone in a paneled room, the painting's surface marked by a delicate tracery. |
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The New Year eve celebrations may be marked by glitzy electric displays and noisy parties at one end and silent prayers for peace and harmony at the other. |
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Throughout each term homework was set by the subject teacher to a timetable and at the end of term an exam was also set and marked by the same teacher. |
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The serpentine quality of the Nile, as it endlessly meanders from one end of the manuscript to another, marked by small tributaries, is remarkable. |
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With a chassis marked by smooth lines and streamlined contours, the vehicle presented an appealing sight with its cladding, grille and wrap-around lamps. |
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Here we must be talking about revolution, marked by joyous restlessness, a harmonization of ends, and a desire that pushes a vision of the human potential into realization. |
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Paddle is largely a doubles game, marked by rapid volleying at the net. |
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Her career had been marked by close defeats and valiant efforts. |
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The pre-Andean and Andean orogenies are separated by a Mesozoic transitional period, which is marked by a very different style of tectonism and magmatism. |
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He had a deer's qualities, all right, the speed, the sure feet and most of all an indefinable sense of fragility that set him apart in a game otherwise marked by violence. |
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All sides are motivated by fear and marked by a lack of conviction. |
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In the nineteenth century, the Caucasus and Central Asia were places of untrammeled brigandage and intermittent rebellion, marked by the rule of unpredictable kings and khans. |
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Minefields flank the road edge, marked by red-painted rocks, and any driver unlucky enough to misjudge one of the treacherous bends will find themself in the middle of one. |
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Her writing is marked by an utter lack of the extraneous, and bristles with a sense of the uncanny. |
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The most posterior point of the skull is the junction of the interparietal and supraoccipitals which is marked by a poorly developed lambdoidal ridge. |
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Pope John Paul's papacy has been marked by his attempt to maintain the traditionalist wing of the Church while rejecting more liberal interpretations. |
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Laya Kavya was marked by vigorous footwork providing a rousing finale. |
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The Via Dolorosa ends at the church of the Holy Sepulchre, and is marked by nine stations of the cross. |
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At such moments, he is on Greenhow Hill, reliving that painful time, and his narrative is marked by a melancholy tone that serves to underscore his present sadness. |
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The May Day bank holiday is due to be marked by protests in London. |
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The Championships were marked by the determination of the judges to reward good training, good riding and the cooperation and obedience of the horses. |
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Some of these fights, like that in the Tijuana barrio of Maclovio Rojas, go back ten years, and have also been marked by the imprisonment of community leaders. |
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The fracture zones appear to extend beneath the Caribbean plate and act as asperities marked by the higher-than-average of incidence of earthquakes. |
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The week beginning July 8 would be marked by a flag ceremony. |
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The entrance to the ecstatic Dionysiac world in the Villa of the Mysteries is marked by Silenus playing a cithara at the edge of a rocky landscape. |
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The last years of Franco's life were marked by the political strivings of the working class to settle accounts with the dictatorship and student rebellions. |
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Several of her poems are marked by pain, a sense of loss and nostalgia. |
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It is an ordinary place marked by its striking simplicity and quietness. |
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His early career was marked by an astonishing range of achievement. |
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Some critics discerned a falling away of powers in his later work, marked by a tendency towards inflated rhetoric, but to others he remained a commanding figure to the end. |
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To the ancient Celts, spring signified fertility and growth, as marked by Beltane, or May Day, one of the four pagan fire festivals to mark the seasons. |
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From lack of talent to utter indiscipline, the team has suffered on many fronts and the slide has been marked by a shocking indifference among the players. |
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One sweater, in particular, a short-sleeve, shrunken crewneck, was charmingly marked by teardrop-shaped dollops of teal blue. |
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The surface is marked by concentric lines and low radial ridges. |
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The foliation is marked by chloritc, white mica and minute quartz grains. |
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Degrees of difference within the caste hierarchy were also marked by forms of address, seating arrangements, and other practices of deference and superiority. |
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This descent was marked by the gift of tongues, and St. Peter is recorded in Acts as seeing in this the new dispensation that had been prophesied by Joel. |
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Adding to the fun is a bit of inspired genre-hopping marked by the entrance of Frank's neighbours, a trio of misfits that form a kind of ragtag support group for him. |
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Every good rivalry is marked by begrudgery, is almost defined by it. |
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Even after we had become used to the fascinating jumble of treasures piled throughout the house our visits were marked by an anticipatory, nervous excitement. |
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The first 45 years since Independence were marked by terror and tyranny. |
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The end of the Atlantic period was marked by the decline of the elm. |
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Chiefdoms are marked by a motley of villages dotted around them. |
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This is consistent with parental practice which, as noted earlier, is marked by rapidly declining resort to physical punishment of children older than four. |
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The first morphological difference that arises between the lemma primordia of awned and calcaroides genotypes is marked by a change in the overall length of the organ. |
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The canteen seems to have been popular enough to warrant two phases of expansion, marked by surviving lynchets and wall foundations outlining the original and later buildings. |
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The first scene opens with the people of Thebes lying down on the stage as if almost dead and singing a monotonous murmur marked by the arhythmical beat of a drum. |
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Among matrilineal societies, respect for one's mother's brother is marked by the use of polite language and physical avoidance on formal occasions. |
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As graves rarely overlap, they may have been marked by wooden posts or stones. |
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Bracketed by two roiling group passages, smaller dances slink by, marked by much creaturely creeping and carnivorous eroticism. |
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The interwar years were marked by economic stagnation in rural and urban areas, and high unemployment. |
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Active and inactive spreading systems in this area are marked by the interaction with the Iceland hotspot. |
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The northern and western edges of the Cotswolds are marked by steep escarpments down to the Severn valley and the Warwickshire Avon. |
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The first year of his reign was marked by the executions of a number of English noblemen whom he considered suspect. |
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William's grave is currently marked by a marble slab with a Latin inscription dating from the early 19th century. |
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Edward's later years, however, were marked by international failure and domestic strife, largely as a result of his inactivity and poor health. |
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While Edward's early reign had been energetic and successful, his later years were marked by inertia, military failure and political strife. |
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The ceremony was marked by a terrible snowstorm, but the common people were undecided as to whether it was a good or bad omen. |
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The last phase of Valois rule in France was marked by the French Wars of Religion. |
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Richard II's reign was marked by increasing dissension between the King and several of the most powerful nobles. |
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Intellectual life was marked by scholasticism, a philosophy that emphasised joining faith to reason, and by the founding of universities. |
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Legal studies were marked by the steady advance of Roman law into areas of jurisprudence previously governed by customary law. |
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John's reign was marked by conflict with the barons, particularly over the limits of royal power. |
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Edward's reign was also marked by the further development of Parliament, which came to be divided into two Houses. |
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The reigns of both Robert II and his successor, Robert III, were marked by a general decline in royal power. |
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Charles II's reign was marked by the development of the first modern political parties in England. |
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The boundaries are marked by black bollards bearing the City's emblem, and by dragon boundary marks at major entrances, such as Holborn. |
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The border is marked by signposts welcoming travellers both into Scotland and into England. |
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Domitian ruled for fifteen years, and his reign was marked by his attempts to compare himself to the gods. |
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The 18th and 19th centuries were marked by mass education in Standard German in schools. |
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Additional festivals are also marked by Heathen practice throughout the year. |
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The importance of the city and its Tower is marked by the speed at which he secured London. |
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He arrived in London in around 1641, which was marked by the death of Anthony van Dyck in December. |
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Italian Renaissance painting and sculpture are marked by their renewal of classical forms, motifs and subjects. |
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The last years of Charles VII were marked by conflicts with his turbulent son, the future Louis XI of France. |
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It was founded in 1764 and met in a suite of rooms on the first floor of the Turks Head at 9 Gerrard Street, now marked by a plaque. |
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Old English poetry, like other Old Germanic alliterative verse, is also commonly marked by the caesura or pause. |
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His early career was marked by poetry that bore immense knowledge of English society and he met that knowledge with sharp criticism. |
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Jonson's other work for the theatre in the last years of Elizabeth I's reign was marked by fighting and controversy. |
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Although his time there was marked by variable health from asthma attacks, he nevertheless became an intellectual hero of the Whigs. |
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The site is marked by a small headstone and burial plaque even though his remains were said to have been removed to England years later. |
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His work is marked by lucid prose, awareness of social injustice, opposition to totalitarianism, and outspoken support of democratic socialism. |
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Internationally, the anniversary was marked by performances of the War Requiem, Peter Grimes and other works in four continents. |
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In comparison to other sporting events, the 2002 games were marked by financial discipline. |
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The 1850s were marked by political battles over the expansion of slavery into the western territories, issues leading to the Civil War. |
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Unlike most other borders in the EU, the Irish border is not officially marked by either government. |
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The rising was marked by widespread assaults on the British Protestant communities in Ireland, sometimes culminating in massacres. |
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Walpole's first year as Prime Minister was also marked by the discovery of a plot formed by Francis Atterbury, the Bishop of Rochester. |
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The year leading up to the ceasefires was a particularly tense one, marked by atrocities. |
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The western and eastern boundaries of the city are marked by two burns that are tributaries of the River Tay. |
|
Although the settlers survived by farming and fishing, the initial period of settlement was marked by serious tensions among them. |
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This stage was marked by increased violence as different cartels fought for control of export markets. |
|
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His school record was undistinguished, marked by absenteeism and lacklustre grades. |
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Medieval Hindi literature is marked by the influence of Bhakti movement and the composition of long, epic poems. |
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This period was marked by the work of the first named female Scottish poets. |
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His career was marked by reinvention and visual presentation, his music and stagecraft significantly influencing popular music. |
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The early 20th century in Ethiopia was marked by the reign of Emperor Haile Selassie I, who came to power after Iyasu V was deposed. |
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This has created a national cuisine marked by the preservation of regional differences. |
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Today's legion of neopunk bands play music marked by three chords and simple melodies. They have taken the genre into the mainstream. |
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The first Roman frontier in the north and west of the island was marked by watchtowers and military camps, or castra, along the Fosse Way. |
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Charles' later years were marked by hostile relations with his heir, Louis, who demanded real power to accompany his position as the Dauphin. |
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The last half of the 19th century was marked by the Puerto Rican struggle for sovereignty. |
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Pleistocene climate was marked by repeated glacial cycles in which continental glaciers pushed to the 40th parallel in some places. |
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The months leading up to the partition of India in 1947 were marked by conflict in the Punjab between Sikhs and Muslims. |
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James VII claimed that he was reviving an earlier Order, but this issue is marked by widely varying claims. |
|
National 1 to National 4 will be awarded on the basis of coursework and tests generated and marked by the school. |
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It is marked by a sudden abundance of hard substrate trace fossils such as Trypanites, Palaeosabella, Petroxestes and Osprioneides. |
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Roy's birthplace near Carluke in South Lanarkshire is today marked by a memorial in the form of a large OS trig point. |
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The transition point between the floral tube and the corona is marked by the insertion of the free tepals on the fused perianth. |
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The season was marked by increased awareness of the impact financial pressures were having on the team since the move to Cardiff City Stadium. |
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The whale's skin is often marked by pits or wounds, which after healing become white scars. |
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However, his case was marked by controversy about whether and how to intervene, and in 2006, Luna was killed by a boat propeller. |
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Both the start and end of the period are marked by major extinction events. |
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The top of the Coal Measures may be marked by an unconformity, the overlying rocks being Permian or later in age. |
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It is marked by social and cultural events connected to the tradition of whale hunting. |
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Humans were then confronted by a harsh and variable climate, marked by several glacial eras. |
|
Protected rocky shorelines usually show a narrow almost homogenous eulittoral strip, often marked by the presence of barnacles. |
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The islands are marked by dunes and wide, sandy beaches towards the North Sea and a low, tidal coast towards the Wadden Sea. |
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The months of June and July are marked by some thunderstorms on average 2 days per month. |
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In the south, its entrance is marked by lighthouses at Barra Head, Ushenish and Hyskeir. |
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Trafalgar ushered in the Pax Britannica of the 19th century, marked by general peace in the world's oceans, under the ensigns of the Royal Navy. |
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Pytheas reported that the pole was an empty space at the corner of a quadrangle, the other three sides of which were marked by stars. |
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Eadwig was not a popular king, and his reign was marked by conflict with nobles and the Church, primarily St Dunstan and Archbishop Oda. |
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This dramatic rise in diversity was marked by periodic, massive losses of diversity classified as mass extinction events. |
|
The bathymetry of the ocean bottom is marked by fault block ridges, abyssal plains, ocean deeps, and basins. |
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During this period, the Empire was marked by a highly centralized administration connecting the different regions. |
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Around the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century, the Meiji era was marked by the reign of the Meiji Emperor. |
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The last days of the Qing Dynasty were marked by civil unrest and foreign invasions. |
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This period was marked by turmoil in much of the world, as Europe struggled to recover from the devastation of the First World War. |
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The spirit of the Roaring Twenties was marked by a general feeling of discontinuity associated with modernity, a break with traditions. |
|
A passive margin forms by sedimentation above an ancient rift, now marked by transitional lithosphere. |
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These are often marked by uplift and volcanic mountain belts on the continental plate. |
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The subsided continental crust is marked by normal faults that dip seaward. |
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Volcanic passive margins they also are marked by numerous dykes and igneous intrusions within the subsided continental crust. |
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His pastorage had been marked by several changes in church policy with regards to community outreach. |
|
The Civil War was a contest marked by the ferocity and frequency of battle. |
|
These boundaries can even be visible, but usually their presence is marked by rapid changes in salinity, temperature and turbidity. |
|
The passage was marked by extremely bad weather and constant squalls and gales. |
|
However, Kenyon's controllership was marked by several highly distinguished programming successes. |
|
Eastern Australia is marked by the Great Dividing Range, which runs parallel to the coast of Queensland, New South Wales and much of Victoria. |
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The North Island is the 14th largest island in the world and is less mountainous but is marked by volcanism. |
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Capitalism is marked by open competition in a free market, in which the means of production are privately owned. |
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A humid continental climate is marked by variable weather patterns and a large seasonal temperature variance. |
|
Alsatian cuisine, somewhat based on Germanic culinary traditions, is marked by the use of pork in various forms. |
|
Multiple war memorials, marked by a great restrained solemnity, were built throughout the country. |
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It begins around 1750 with European industrialization and is marked by several political revolutions. |
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This period was marked by extensive ethnic violence and human rights abuses. |
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The final years of the Yuan dynasty were marked by struggle, famine, and bitterness among the populace. |
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The reigns of the later Yuan emperors were short and marked by intrigues and rivalries. |
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The latter part of Denis' generally peaceful reign was nevertheless marked by internal conflicts. |
|
The rhea's body is marked by the four main stars of Crux, while its head is Gamma Centauri and its feet are the bright stars of Musca. |
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The era from independence until 1904 was marked by regular military conflicts and civil wars between the Blanco and Colorado Parties. |
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Paraguay was modernized to some extent under Stroessner's regime, although his rule was marked by extensive civil right abuses. |
|
The 18th century was marked by increasing centralization of royal power throughout the Portuguese empire. |
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The Postclassic Period was marked by changes from the preceding Classic Period. |
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Arias Madrid was declared the winner of elections that were marked by violence and accusations of fraud against Alianza del Pueblo. |
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The exploration of the territories of Nueva Toledo, which lasted 2 years, was marked by a complete failure for De Almagro. |
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The Spring and Autumn period is marked by a falling apart of the central Zhou power. |
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The Middle subperiod was marked by the Sui unification and their supplementation by the Tang, the Second Split, and the Song unification. |
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The subjunctive in Old Rapa is marked by kia and can also be used in expressions of desire. |
|
Languages having cases often exhibit free word order, because thematic roles are not required to be marked by position in the sentence. |
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Cases in Korean are marked by particles placed after the nouns, similar to Japanese. |
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In some languages the nominative case is unmarked, it may be said to be marked by a zero morpheme. |
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For example, in English definiteness is usually marked by the selection of determiner. |
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Belize's social structure is marked by enduring differences in the distribution of wealth, power, and prestige. |
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Creation of new autonomous and autocephalous jurisdictions was also marked by tendencies of internal centralization. |
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His tenure was marked by a number of original rulings, in tort and contract law in particular. |
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Each Martial Law was marked by the quell of civil liberties or human rights. |
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The special significance of ritual was marked by always placing its discussion at the start of the work. |
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Benefiting from favourable international conditions, he presided over an age of affluence, marked by low unemployment and high if uneven growth. |
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The completion of this process is marked by the institution of the office of Justice of the Peace. |
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Davy's first preserved poem entitled The Sons of Genius is dated 1795 and marked by the usual immaturity of youth. |
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The final pandemic originated in 1961 in Indonesia and is marked by the emergence of a new strain, nicknamed El Tor, which still persists today. |
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It specifically recognises its rapidly changing role in society, marked by the emergence of the digital cooperative. |
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Chafee's tenure as Secretary was marked by a willingness to make bold decisions and stand by them. |
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The entry of Buddhism into China was marked by significant interaction and syncretism with Taoism. |
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A wall follows the ridge over the flat summit, the highest point marked by an Ordnance Survey triangulation column which has been painted white. |
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The boundaries of coppice coups were sometimes marked by cutting certain trees as pollards or stubs. |
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The highest point is directly above the Hallsfell spur, marked by a trig point, in the form of a concrete ring. |
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The summit is marked by a cairn standing on the brink of the northern face. |
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The top of the fell lies toward the western end of the summit plateau, marked by a huge sprawling cairn. |
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The top of Lord's Seat is a smooth grassy dome, the summit being marked by the meeting point of ruined fences and a small cairn. |
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The highest point lies a little way out onto the northern spur at the top of Grey Crag, marked by a cairn. |
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The summit of Great Gable is strewn with boulders and the highest point marked by a rock outcrop set with a cairn. |
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Its curving summit ridge contains three small tops, each of which is marked by a cairn. |
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The summit is marked by an Ordnance Survey triangulation column and a wind shelter. |
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Northward is a saddle, marked by a large cross of stones and then the bouldery climb to Symonds Knott, the north top. |
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The summit of Swirl How is marked by a fine cairn on a stony top, built close to the Greenburn edge of the ridge. |
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The limits of the city as marked by the ramparts built in 1592 are now marked by the Garden Ring. |
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The southern limit was marked by the Barnsley Bed losing its coking qualities. |
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The early history of Carlisle is marked by its status as a Roman settlement, established to serve the forts on Hadrian's Wall. |
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It is also marked by a Moto Hospitality service station built in 1980 with an attached Travelodge motel. |
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