Spotlights move in a track that's mounted diagonally, following the angle of the stairs overhead. |
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If you tell your assault team to fall in as you move in on a suppressed enemy, they'll do just that. |
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He was all about lovingness, openness, communication, let's move in together, etc. |
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A sweet fragrance spritzed on your pulse points will make him move in a little closer. |
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Laurits saw a fish move in the river just under the water and directed Fleming where he should cast his spinner. |
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Some currency pairs move in tandem with each other, while others may be polar opposites. |
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Some students move in and then realise the nearest bus stop is three miles away. |
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Regulations requiring that the houses be deemed fit for habitation have been waived so that they can move in. |
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The message we're trying to get to the politicians is don't move in baby steps. |
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The carriers have heard the message and are attempting to move in that direction. |
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Actually he made just one bad move in the whole tournament and this wasn't exactly a short tourney. |
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The new laws will allow the police to move in on people who are causing anti-social behaviour. |
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Carp, tench and bream have really started to move in the last couple of days. |
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The shoulder, a ball-and-socket joint, can move in almost any direction, says certified trainer Jennifer Zerling. |
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Two years later, J. J. Thomson modified Kelvin's model, having the electrons move in concentric circle within a positively charged spheric space. |
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Hasselbeck isn't a great scrambler, but he can move in the pocket and throw on the run with accuracy. |
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The hamstring muscles at the back of the thigh are often very tight, forcing the knees to move in ways they were not designed to do. |
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He took hostages at an old people's home before police managed to move in and arrest him. |
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He believes that there's currently a move in British music towards better melody and lyrics. |
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If an object is moving in one direction without a force acting on it, then it continues to move in that direction with a constant velocity. |
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Police were slow to move in, allowing media cameramen to capture much of the destruction on film. |
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These generally move in a south-easterly direction, and each one typically has a life span of several days. |
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Characters somnambulistically move in and out of frames, ghosts of feeling and thinking human beings. |
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Grandparents hit by pension shortfalls will move in with their grown-up children to save on residential care charges. |
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You are fortunate enough to have someone to move in with who loves you and can provide shelter. |
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Lizards, tortoises, salamanders and many other animals all move in this way, but it has disadvantages. |
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Legend tells us that after her head was finally severed from her body, Mary's lips continued to move in prayer. |
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If I do end up getting it, before I move in I'm hiring people to go in and scrub the place top to bottom. |
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By understanding how dolphins move in the water, perhaps they could improve torpedo, ship and submarine designs. |
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Traditionally, the young man is expected to pay a bride price and move in with the wife's family on marriage. |
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Carp, tench and bream have really started to move in the last couple of days with forthcoming mating sharpening the appetite. |
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Negotiations could be broken off at any stage if they failed to move in the right direction. |
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Due to not having studied law, I move in the wrong circles and only meet artsy ne'er-do-wells rather than successful go-getting men. |
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The place is accessible from the Intracoastal, so they can move in and out during the night if need be. |
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The area behind my building faces an industrial and unincorporated area of the town, and homeless folks have begun to move in across the way. |
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But when I came to move in, the underlay had been taken up, and there were four tiles missing from the hall and more from the living room. |
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But I suggest you move in slowly, rather than just diving in like you're bobbing for apples. |
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You couldn't move in London for women in tall brown boots, worn over their navy blue jeans. |
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Gold-bearing rock is blown apart by high explosives and small groups of miners then move in to drill at the face. |
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You could see the heat rising in waves off the highway and everything seemed to move in slower motion. |
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Your feet move in a forward circular motion, allowing you to land evenly on your foot. |
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By opening ourselves to the presence of the Spirit, we can receive the sinews of divine strength, enabling us to move in his power. |
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The High Street will be closed again from 10 am tomorrow when the fair ground rides move in again for the second mop fair. |
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The screen would move in waves in front of my bleary eyes so I'd give up trying to make sense of the dancing letters after a few minutes. |
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It describes a world in which electrons, quarks and the like are point particles that move in a manner dictated by the wavefunction. |
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People who easily tumble on land can become quickly disoriented trying to do the same move in the water. |
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Thus it necessarily follows that if the private sector moves into deficit, the sum of the other two balances must move in the same way. |
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The area is closely monitored by the police so there is no chance for dealers, pimps and protection racketeers to move in. |
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It's also possible to have your group move in formations such as columns and wedges. |
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He's completely changed his plans and will have to move in a week on Wednesday, when the influenza will have gone. |
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But there's something terrifically right and incisive about her every move in the first few scenes. |
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The story's piquancy, after all, depends on the fact that, though they move in criminal circles, the characters are just folks, like you or me. |
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Donegal put together another incisive move in the 19th minute, Hegarty netting with aplomb. |
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The camera seems to move in and out of the body in bursts of kaleidoscopic color. |
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All of our family is busy with children and can't afford the time or the patience to temporarily move in with him. |
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But all is not what it seems I'm afraid and she now feels she may have made the move in haste. |
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It has yet to make up its mind as to whom to talk, what to talk and how to move in this matter. |
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They had been going out for about eighteen months and were about to move in together. |
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General manager Danny Ferry made a shrewd move in signing the 32-year-old power forward. |
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I was the one who didn't want to get too serious, so I was surprised when he asked me to move in with him. |
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Remember most of the dance and aerobics videos will require a clear space for you to move in. |
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Right after I got in front of the truck, there was another gap to allow me to move in front of the car ahead of me. |
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Once volatilized, a pesticide can move in air currents away from the treated surface. |
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But the final move in this introductory immersion in epistemology is to notice what happens when we go beyond the apple. |
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The site for the bus station and car park has been levelled and contractors will move in early in May and finish next summer. |
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No cognisance has been taken of the fact that construction traffic also needs to move in the area. |
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It's really fascinating to watch these trains move in opposite directions at very high speed. |
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This action then causes the valve move in the opposite direction and shut down the channel for the water to flow. |
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So what's happening now is a move in the opposite direction to the one you would want? |
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The players' checkers move in opposite directions on a board with 24 spaces. |
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One move in the right direction is the training course on the detection of traditional remedies held in Hong Kong in March of this year. |
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The speaker of the house is suggesting that he wants to see all of this move in regular order. |
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Fearing a public crisis of confidence in the industry, regulators were quick to move in. |
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Adam reckons I'm not allowed to eat in bed when I move in with him, but we'll see about that. |
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So if squatters happen to move in before he can resell his investment, he simply shows them the door with a baseball bat. |
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In the short term, it may be late to take advantage of the move in copper, aluminum and oil. |
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Whereas the synodic period is 29.53 days, it takes 27.5 days for the moon to move in its elliptical orbit from perigee to perigee. |
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Before they move in the property is completely renovated, including a new bathroom, kitchen and central heating. |
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As he is spotted by the police troopers they move in, apparently intent on forceful arrest, but a fleet-footed dash carries him safely away. |
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The idea is to try and drive back the guerrillas and move in to spray the coca and poppies. |
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I like the way trees move in the wind, the sound their branches make as they clack together in the leafless winter. |
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I'm worried that she doesn't have a direction she wants to move in, job-wise. |
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However a move in South Australia to change or anglicise New Australians' names was strongly resisted. |
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This made it difficult if not impossible to move in any other direction than towards ever more draconian treatment of prisoners. |
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The authors found that certain triggering events can cause families to move in and out of poverty. |
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As Coventry swelter in the heat, Mikkel Bischoff still maintains he made the right move in switching to the Ricoh Arena. |
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From my third floor vantage point, I could see a young would-be car thief trying to hot-wire an old van that I had not seen move in over a year. |
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Squad cars with flashing lights move in slow arcs through the clinic parking lot. |
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Aristotle famously proposed that as the heavens revolve about the Earth, the planets move in circles. |
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Think tanks can provide a revolving door for individuals to move in and out of government. |
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However, in practice, as you have said, the money tends to be hot money, to move in and out quite rapidly. |
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I love the hospitality industry, there's so much opportunity to move in your job and every day's different. |
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Ted has sublet his apartment for the trip he didn't take, so Michael suggests he move in with him. |
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When objects move in circles of any size and at any speed, they create a new force that pushes outward, away from the center of rotation. |
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Before the current intifada began in 2000, shoals of tourists made it difficult to move in these lanes. |
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Located at the headend, the CTMS controls the way digital data streams move in and out of a cable network. |
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I suspect that if the rental agencies see car sharing taking off, they'll move in and establish neighborhood-based rental outlets. |
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So world markets tend to move in tandem, and foreign investment, especially index investing, offsets domestic risk less than it once did. |
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The truth of the matter is that as a community, we end up being more burdened financially when these big box stores move in. |
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They disrupted an opposition move in midfield, and then hacked the ball on. |
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Brave campaigners occupy beautiful wildlife sites along imminent road routes, tunnelling deep before the bulldozers move in. |
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All employees were notified of the move in the second half of last year, it said. |
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The hard perturbations in this study caused the trajectory to move in a direction that was normal to the limit cycle. |
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The aim is to catch local and travelling criminals as they move in and out of York. |
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Returning from injury, the loose head set the move in motion then reappeared on the wing to take a scoring pass and dive over for a fine score. |
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I didn't dare make a move in case she got upset and I lost my free transport. |
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It is also important that you do not move in before the house is finished. |
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I try to buy clothes that are well-made, durable, and that I can move in. |
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I normally start off with a full body shot, but then I move in and start interacting and conversing with the person. |
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Adduction of the scapulae takes place in the shoulder girdle where the scapulae move in toward the spine together with the rearward movement of the arms. |
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The king can move in any direction, but only one square at a time. |
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Undoubtedly the band made the right move in redoing the album. |
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Within days she agreed to move in with Mr Turner and they married in a Sheffield register office in February 1999, just days after Mr Turner's third divorce came through. |
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Places bereft of major retailers are generally in decline and it's independents and charity shops that move in like weeds rather than chain stores. |
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To move in the opposite direction would be to further erode the position of Irish elected representatives, increasing that of an unelected judiciary. |
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Thus, for a quantitative characterization it seems reasonable to assume that vesicles are anchored at certain positions and can only move in a restricted space. |
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The maze was assembled in such a way so as to encourage fish to move in an anticlockwise direction, particularly if the fish stay close to the walls. |
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At the same time, another heavy goods vehicle driver was reversing his cab to hook up another container, which caused it to move in Mr Grills' direction. |
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Political tensions are underlying every move in Nigeria, where, in February, the next presidential candidates will be nominated. |
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In Donetsk it is presumed to have been off-loaded from the flatbed and started to move in a convoy on its own. |
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After ordering a drink, I move in the same direction as most of the other patrons, toward a foldout table with an empty chair. |
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The differentials make it profitable for arbitrageurs to move in. |
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The class waited, all attention, pretending to be helpful, ready for the slightest weakness, a lisp, a twitch, wariness, ready to move in for the kill. |
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All the pieces move in straight lines like the rook or castle in chess, and a piece may be moved any number of squares providing no other piece is standing in the way. |
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The research on gait may also be used to make robots move in a more natural way. |
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Officers move in brutally rousting the boys as the recorder plays on. |
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At the Abbey, members of the Royal Family, foreign royals, members of the Bowes Lyon family and other blood relatives move in procession to their seats. |
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I think he took an opportunistic political move in the area. |
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Whether people are on the move in their own countries or across borders, they gravitate toward big cities. |
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There has been a move in this area to vote tactically for the Tories. |
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He and I are both looking at getting somewhere in London, and it would be far better to rent with someone you know than move in with anonymous axe murderers. |
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This ball-and-socket joint allows your arms to move in practically any direction you want, be it overhead, sideways, forward, back, or any direction in between. |
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One of the town's biggest retail merchants wants Wal-Mart to move in. |
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With the expanded efforts expiring, there was no move in Congress to continue the largesse. |
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A lateral move in the offing provides opportunity to trailblaze new frontiers under existing career auspice. |
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This uses a hybrid propulsion system, consisting of ducted fans, to move in microgravity and a differential traction system to move in normal gravity. |
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Chief Carlos R. Maldonado has police move in low-profile ways because Zetas study their tactics. |
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Welcome though this urban regeneration will be, now is probably your last chance to spot a kingfisher down by Bow Bridge, before the property sharks move in. |
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He views the new beit din as a substantial move in the right direction. |
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So why were they betraying his memory and helping the new family move in? |
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When Marston wanted Byrne to move in with him and Holloway, they came to a polyamorous agreement. |
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After it finally opened up, the rider allowed the chestnut colored horse to move in a slow trot, the gait giving the horse time to relax, though not really needing it. |
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Most sinister of all is Pablo's ultimatum to you signifying his intention to move in and help the revisionist minority overthrow the majority in your party. |
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Things, of course, begin to heat up when two girls move in next door. |
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For example, the first of Newton's famous laws of motion states that a moving body will continue to move in a straight line, at constant speed, until a force acts on it. |
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Muscles move in response to impulses from nearby motor neurons. |
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But unlike parasitic slave-maker ants, which raid and virtually destroy the colonies of unsuspecting hosts, L. minutissimus appears to move in and live amiably with its host. |
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By shifting storylines from week to week, Homicide gave African American actors, writers, and guest directors freedom to move in and out of the spotlight. |
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The company is expected to announce its next move in the next few days. |
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In 1979, taking a different tack, Plain English Campaign publicly destroyed government forms as the opening move in a crusade against officialese and obfuscation. |
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Even if you can't talk to your mom or stepsisters about the challenges of stepfamilies, nixing the name-calling would be a move in the right direction. |
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With Washington's latest move in regard to Libya, it would be understandable if many Bulgarians believed that the relationship is somewhat one-way. |
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These disruptions have allowed opportunistic creatures to move in. |
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Letting out an impatient sigh, Jackie felt the world move in slow motion. |
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The trios move in alternation as light from above picks them out, the grounded people waving their limbs like neophyte swimmers or fledglings learning to fly. |
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There has been a move in media to just sell newspapers or news programmes with sensationalistic reporting. |
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Frank never seemed to move in the whole 90 minutes and yet he was the best player on the pitch by a country mile. |
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Cyril Billot as General Manager and has opened its first office in London as part of the company's latest move in its global expansion plans. |
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Generally, players who are fighting will stop when the time is right and the linesmen move in. |
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Already, Liveris is seeing things move in the right direction. |
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This ties to his broader concept of rationalisation by suggesting the inevitability of a move in this direction. |
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Skilled mineworkers were recruited from other regions to the Ruhr's mines and steel mills and unskilled people started to move in. |
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Disney Imagineers are offering us fantasy as real life. We can buy it and move in permanently. |
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One important change in farming methods was the move in crop rotation to turnips and clover in place of fallow. |
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However, the trend has been for the church to move in a more liberal direction. |
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Coriolis effects are therefore present, and make the atoms move in a direction perpendicular to the original oscillations. |
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Mature ponderosa pines don't tumble over and die just because the Dougs move in, but the young ponderosas, which need direct sunshine, do. |
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When the sun is visible in the polar sky, it appears to move in a horizontal circle above the horizon. |
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The situation in which coastlines move in the direction of the continent is called transgression. |
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In the video game Call of Duty 3, the player is involved in a series of missions as the Allies move in the Falaise Gap toward Chambois. |
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Zakouma is the last place on Earth where you can see more than a thousand elephants on the move in a single, compact herd. |
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The rebels made the first move in the war, seizing the strategic Rochester Castle, owned by Langton but left almost unguarded by the archbishop. |
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This is entirely absent in sea urchins, which are unable to move in this way. |
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He reasoned that the trade winds of the Pacific might move in a gyre as the Atlantic winds did. |
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After exterminators handled the problem, the family was finally able to move in. |
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Low salinity surface coastal waters move offshore, and deeper, denser high salinity waters move in shore. |
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Thus, as he dressed, the thoughts and the rage of yesterday began to stir and move in his mind again. |
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Your relationship planet Venus takes off her bush jacket and gets into something a little tweedier as she starts to move in on your working life. |
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Herring often move in large schools around fishing banks and near the coast. |
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Light grey calves are virtually blubberless when expelled from the womb, but still weigh a ton. Mothers move in close to land for nursing. |
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Sally asks Brad to move in, while Martha begins a new job at The Rocket Club but is shocked to find it's a strip joint. |
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When the chords first appear, they are clusters that move in contrary motion sliding chromatically inwards. |
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In April we move in with the grandstands and a couple of months later we start to erect all the tentage. |
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Galaxies have a tendency to cluster up and then move in large network called superclusters. |
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Next the tanks would attack and finally the infantry would move in to secure any ground that had been taken. |
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As Latin was losing its case system, prepositions started to move in to fill the void. |
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Wasps made another move in 2002, playing their home games at Wycombe Wanderers' ground, Adams Park, in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. |
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Sevilla maintain Fabiano is not fully fit, but he disagrees and will push for a move in January if he is not playing regularly by then. |
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I thought about just asking Rosalyn to move in with me, but I decided it was time to make an honest woman out of her. |
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Urge to Merge. How life changes when two girls move in together is discussed. |
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Thus neither man nor maid mates for thonself, but both love and move in the tribal interests and along the lines laid down by the tribal leaders. |
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But the offer was rescinded just before ahern was due to move in. |
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It sat by mutely while Jack Abramoff, the superlobbyist, spun schemes that eroded public trust, until prosecutors had to move in. |
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Another shed is now externally complete but the inside is now being fitted out in time for September when Amazon will move in. |
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For example, Triphyophyllum is a passive flypaper that secretes mucilage, but whose leaves do not grow or move in response to prey capture. |
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The money made from his translation of Homer allowed Pope to move in 1719 to a villa at Twickenham, where he created his now famous grotto and gardens. |
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Kitty-corner to the site of what will be a new Baptist Health hospital along Interstate 40, Lewis Crossing has already lined up several tenants to move in. |
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Electrically neutral and no longer deflected by the accelerator's magnetic fields, this antiatom would move in a straight line before plowing into a silicon target. |
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Surface and deep water currents may move in different directions. |
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The ball and socket joints in your shoulders allow your arms to move in many different directions.When it comes to twisting movements, the ball and socket joint is the king. |
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Cuddle up baby, move in tight. We'll go dancing tomorrow night. |
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In a car with a smallish engine up front, turning circles are often compromised by the amount of underbonnet real estate the front wheels have to move in. |
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While the new Library of Birmingham is surrounded by a stunning flower display, the old Brutalist library is coming down in earnest as diggers finally move in. |
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While he recently learned people were using a similar move in the Fifties, he cites Seventies funk-dance troupe The Electric Boogaloos as his inspiration. |
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Lightning strikes and toppled trees in tropical forests allow species richness to be maintained as pioneering species move in to fill the gaps created. |
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In Einstein's theory, energy and momentum distort spacetime in their vicinity, and other particles move in trajectories determined by the geometry of spacetime. |
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When deforming pressure was applied to the outside of this design, air pressure in the rest of the skirt forced the inner wall to move in as well, keeping the channel open. |
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The Market Square is currently under redevelopment with a number of retailers already moved in and more said to be 'signed up' to move in once the development is complete. |
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Within half a year Greenpeace would move in to share the upstairs office space with The Society Promoting Environmental Conservation at 4th and Maple in Kitsilano. |
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So there's definitely been a move in the Legislature over the last two sessions to deinstitutionalize kids, to divert them to community-based programs. |
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Even with a smallish E engine up front, turning circles are often compromised by the amount of under-bonnet real estate the front wheels have to move in. |
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The researchers demonstrated that low-intensity polarized light can guide the rods' Brownian motion to ever-so-slowly line up and move in the desired direction. |
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Hyperbole was doubtless in play here, but so, too, was hypostatization, an awkward term for a common move in criticism, the inflating of a characteristic into a criterion. |
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The end of the rod attached to the crank moves in a circular motion, while the other end is usually constrained to move in a linear sliding motion. |
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If you cannot locate a Newton's Cradle, you can have students research Newton's Cradle online to learn how the balls move in different circumstances. |
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However, in an unprecedented move in October 2009, one of the judges of Madras HC, Justice K Chandru had banned lawyers from addressing his court as My Lord and Your Lordship. |
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This is evident in space probes that continuously move in outer space. |
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It has become an ongoing trend for elderly generations to move in and live with their children, as they can give them support and help with everyday living. |
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The first lands taken over by the Thervingi Goths were in Moldavia, and only during the fourth century did they move in strength down into the Danubian plain. |
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The swashplate can also change its angle to move the blades angle forwards or backwards, or left and right, to make the helicopter move in those directions. |
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I worry we will be in the poorhouse or, worse yet, that we will have to move in with our kids and their snotty-nosed spoiled brats who call us grandparents. |
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For an object to move in a straight line, it must accelerate so that its velocity changes from point to point by the same amount as the velocities of the frame of reference. |
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The boys move in cloudish groups, like schools of fish on the reef. |
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