There is a need also to move away from a wealth creation approach based on the exploitation of natural resources. |
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Counties tend to adopt newer technologies that are analogous to the technology they move away from. |
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The most moving of the three, this chapter has Spheeris move away from focusing on the performers and looks at the punk subculture itself. |
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Alexander cried out in anguish, but was unable to move away from a final blow. |
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We must move away from this artificial reconciliation, but rather allow white people to voluntarily join us at these celebrations. |
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Tests have also shown that if a needle is placed into the sac and touches the baby, the baby feels pain and will immediately move away. |
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If mainstream comedy is to move away from its stagnant form, I feel it will find salvation in more absurd comedy. |
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That competition is helping the world move away from carbon-rich fuels, like oil and coal. |
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The therapist encouraged her to feel free either to move closer to him physically and emotionally during this process or to move away. |
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His attention flicked to Alexandra, started to move away, and then was drawn back in surprise. |
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A bearing rein is a rein placed against a horse's shoulder, causing the shoulders to move away from the rein. |
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After observing it for several more minutes we saw a small object separate and move away from the bigger object. |
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The movement into modern society was imagined as a move away from tradition and constraint and toward freedom. |
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These artists advocated a move away from modernist styles to a more straightforward naturalism. |
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One of the most popular animals is a ten-year-old mongrel dog, whose owners had to move away. |
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The research is an attempt to move away from simplistic polarisation and address the more complex issues. |
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Once a popular dancing venue, it has been underused for years, and the Tourist Information Centre on the ground floor is planning to move away. |
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There will be a short pause as the bait is taken in, then the skate will slowly move away. |
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When the balloon is held up to a wall, the negative charge causes the electrons in the wall to move away from the area. |
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A move away from bulk billing by local doctors has made it difficult for low-income earners to access health care according to local patients. |
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Because the ground ball's spin caused it to move away from Tejada, he dived after it. |
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However, not everyone is in favour of the move away from more traditional schemes. |
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The Council for Industrial and Commercial Development yesterday held a forum to urge the government to move away from the current stalemate. |
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The new range is a move away from the irons and includes hair treatments, ceramic brushes, shampoos, conditioners, hairsprays, and styling gels. |
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Clark says this move away from hand-held camera work effectively forces audiences to face the proverbial music. |
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He swayed as he spoke, and the ladies near him hastened to move away from his whiskey-laden breath. |
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One of the biggest changes that Hogwarth has seen over the years is a move away from royal icing to softer sugar paste. |
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As I move away, the incredible house with its dazzling colours disappears again behind the hedge and the bushes, invisible to the outside world. |
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It may also add strength to the argument for a move away from the current structure of 43 separate forces. |
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As a group they are keen to move away from the moral censoriousness and free market zealotry which are typical of older Tories. |
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His call to buy more shares and move away from residential property has been labelled an attempt to outflank political opponents on the right. |
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One option would be for it to move away from its business model as an out-of-town retailer by opening stores in urban areas. |
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The high-pitched sound can only be heard by the young and is designed to be so annoying that they move away. |
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She smelt a foul smell of cigars and cigarettes, and suddenly she wanted to move away. |
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Fears that young members of the community are being forced to move away from the town have prompted civic leaders to investigate the issue. |
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At times like these, I feel the urge to move away from home and try to find a more civilized environment to live in. |
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So he began to move away from such division to reluctant toleration of partition of India. |
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For many in the industry, the move away from a focus on clickthrough rates represents a shift in thinking. |
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He took a step closer to her, pausing briefly to see if she would move away. |
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Among many international business schools, the move away from open enrolment to customised programmes is also continuing. |
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As he came towards her, she knew that she should move away, but her feet wouldn't budge. |
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There may be a move away from electronics to photonics, a merging of the two, as well as links to carbon-based systems. |
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He added the market would be happier to see US policy move away from interventionist moves, such as the tariffs announced this week. |
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Cadbury needs to move away from relying on impulse purchases at corner shops and into mainstream supermarket distribution. |
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Jerde accepted, wanting nothing more than to move away from the cornfield he had grown up in. |
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Deeming it expedient to move away, he became steward in the household of Sir Thomas Arundel, one of the king's courtiers. |
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The Clandestine Service needs to continue the efforts it has been making to move away from cover in embassies. |
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It is part of a move away from overtly sexual clothing such as push-up bras, crop tops and low-cut jeans. |
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Electrocardiography records the flow of electrical currents of the heart as they move away or toward a specific electrode. |
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It was a revolutionary move away from the Greek concept of mathematics which was essentially geometry. |
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There is a definite move away from minimalism with even plain white delph adorned by texture, French antique finishes and softer lines. |
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Research into health inequality now aims to move away from description and towards explanation. |
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When you move away you do feel different as a person because it is a fresh start. |
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As you move away from the equator and toward the poles, the longitude lines get closer together, creating a nonhomogeneous globe. |
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This implies a move away from an exclusive service delivery focus to one that marshals local government to economic growth and development. |
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They are all up in my personal space so I say excuse me and move away but they keep looking at me. |
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The new police signified a move away from a degree of popular control that had existed in some places over parish constables. |
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Once we are explicit in the legislation, we can move away from that general reference to the principles of the treaty. |
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The paramount reason for the move away from cork is the problem of cork taint. |
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The herd had also slowed to a walk, but continued to move away from the bear. |
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Wishman loves to move away from the action, from the groping and humping and onto inanimate objects like a fruit basket or a clown wall hanging. |
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Have they any place in a world struggling to move away from war and confrontation into a new sort of globalism and co-operation? |
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If the individual is unable to acclimate to the LPF, or move away from it, then symptoms of stress and eventually death will occur. |
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As a smoker I always ask if the people near me mind me smoking and if they say yes then I move away from them or put out my cigarette. |
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Before she could try to move away, he put his palms flat against the wall around her. |
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After a couple of bad recent league results, a win was needed to move away from the bottom end of the table. |
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When it came to redesigning this page, everyone was using blue, orange and grey and I wanted to move away from that. |
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However, to end this review, I think we should move away from the energetic questing Ives and hear a moment of tranquil repose. |
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The biggest change in food television over the last five years has been the move away from showing cooks prepare food to revealing how they manage their careers and lives. |
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He felt the only way to emancipate himself from his parents was to move away. |
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Certainly, you can move away from a religious culture in which you were brought up in much the same way that one can change one's accent, or mode of dress. |
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Issues such as sick building syndrome and sustainability are also prompting a move away from synthetics back towards natural materials and finishes. |
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Encouraging people to use host plants in their gardens is one way to move away from exotics and invasive plants which can be damaging to the wider environment. |
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Panicking, I tried to scramble up and move away, but was too late. |
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My point is that the preacher will need to move away from a method of close exposition of a single pericope to take a broader look at the larger plot. |
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People will become deskilled, grow disillusioned and move away. |
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The move away from national capitalisms to a more uniform system based on market disciplines has contributed to the undermining of the legitimacy of governments in Europe. |
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She urges academic unionists to move away from place-based approaches to organizing and embrace new ways of creating cyber-communities and worker collectivities. |
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For she would always move away, as long as there was a despicable husband that yelled and disturbed the neighbors, and broke objects in a constant state of insobriety. |
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Around the same time, they reported that planarians move away from intense visible light, and they showed that even blinded planarians are negatively phototaxic. |
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He broke away abruptly and held her arms so she couldn't move away. |
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Then the seven vehicles started to move away, travelling in reverse. |
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My brain was screaming at me to move away as I walked towards the pool. |
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How did you arrive at him as your gambit, and why did you decide to move away from Taylor Kitsch? |
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If the expressed wish for moving towards an other begins by asking whether one is allowed to move away from oneself, three facts are being posited at once. |
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In the old days, they used to tell you to turn a little sideways and move into the pitch because the ball was spinning and would move away from the plate once it hit the dirt. |
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These are represented by utility contours which indicate increased levels of happiness as we move away from the origin to higher levels of consumption of both goods. |
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We could really move away from the spit curl and the greased-out hair. |
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To some, this will look like progress, a move away from the backwardness of rural life. |
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But what influenced his change of heart to move away from Jacobinism as an ideology? |
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I knew I wanted to move away from the usual products manufactured by sheltered workshops such as pens and key chains, but I didn't know what I was looking for. |
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Gold's milieu, the laid-back '70s, saw things move away from the highly tailored mod look to unisex dressing inspired by the sexual revolution and feminism. |
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The ambitious Rovers star has switched agents after failing to secure a move away from Ewood Park last summer. |
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Since the 1970s there has been a large move away from manufacturing and an increasing emphasis on the service industry. |
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Agriculture expenditure will move away from subsidy payments linked to specific produce, toward direct payments based on farm size. |
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Tactically, Henry's reign saw the Navy move away from boarding tactics to employ gunnery instead. |
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Pedestrians with handcarts and goods were still on the move away from the fire, heavily weighed down. |
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This was a move away from coffee houses and a step towards the modern model of stock exchange. |
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One notable aspect of the Victorians' commemoration of Guy Fawkes Night was its move away from the centres of communities, to their margins. |
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Some analysts argued the decision to move away from the Sky and, in particular, the BBC undermined the FA Cup in the eyes of the public. |
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The implication is that the world may well soon begin to move away from a financial system dominated uniquely by the US dollar. |
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His move away from easel painting and conventionality was a liberating signal to the artists of his era and to all who came after. |
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Taylor of the Manchester Guardian took an interest in his work and encouraged him to move away from the sombre palette he was using. |
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That led to the move away from a dependence on volunteers to govern the sport, to the Association's first salaried employees. |
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Turner remained, but Wales international Hal Luscombe opted for a move away from the region, joining English Premiership side Harlequins. |
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We move away from outrage culture when we accept that there is no way to win this fight we're all engaged in. |
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He was forced to leave Rome and move away to the city of Tomis on the Black Sea, now Constanta. |
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That is impossible, the water has to move away from the wheel, and represents an unavoidable cause of inefficiency. |
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Work can provide an escape from debilitating poverty, sometimes by allowing a young person to move away from an impoverished environment. |
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According to Potts, Heaney's poetry exemplifies the move away from anthropocentrism which an ecologically sound 'post-pastoral' calls for. |
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We also urged them to comply with the law and move away from the injuncted part of the site. |
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If you plan to move away from the lectern, you will need a clip-on or lavaliere microphone with 25 feet of cord. |
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The group said that the new team was a move away from its previous variable structure using supplier secondees on a six-month basis. |
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This allows Stemilt to move away from the traditional method of using a diverging roll sizer to size cherries and the human eye to sort fruit. |
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And just because children have oved on in their lives, it doesn't ean they will move away from you motionally. |
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They appear to have evolved a way of telling mistaken mounters to move away. |
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I cannot put a timescale on it but there is an inevitability about this move away from mutuality. |
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As we move away from the appliance computing model of the past, totable computing is inspiring ubiquitous computing. |
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When it is safe to drive on, depressing the clutch pedal and selecting a gear is all that's required to switch on the power and gently move away. |
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It is noted as a transitional work, both in the move away from Ciceronian style in preaching, and in the changing meaning of elocution to the modern sense of vocal production. |
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At the time Scott wrote, Scotland was poised to move away from an era of socially divisive clan warfare to a modern world of literacy and industrial capitalism. |
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David Iverson of the United Church has suggested that it may be time to move away from litigation towards an out-of-court compensation settlement. |
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Conversation topics include consumer society, the move away from Fordism, rising education costs, soaring inequalities, crowdsourcing, globalization and localism, and more. |
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There is a steady move away from livestock rearing and dairy farming. |
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The elephants' reaction was to move away from the approaching noise. |
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Hubble's law and the Doppler effect, observed in nearby stars, suggested that stars moving away shift toward red, and the faster the stars move away, the greater the shift. |
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