Older ones can be given a flask of soup made with milk for extra nourishment during winter months. |
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We are the rotted bags of meat moving to the next location, hoping to find a source of instinctual nourishment. |
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The plant's shoots receive nourishment from a complex network of connections to the roots. |
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Rags clung to a frail and bony body, one that did not look like it'd had any nourishment for quite some time. |
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He took nourishment from press conferences, where he was notably generous, but not bountiful enough to promise a match. |
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Don't breastfeed a toddler during pregnancy because the new baby needs all the nourishment it can get. |
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Its functions are viscidity, nourishment, the binding of joints, the solidarity of the body, and the maintenance of sexual vigour. |
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She has been comparatively sparing in the room, and the nourishment necessary to rear them. |
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Growth of an organ, such as a buck's antlers, requires additional nourishment and that means additional blood flow. |
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Their little mouths flail about searching for nourishment, and their mothers are often ill-equipped to help them. |
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In the hot southwest, the extra leaves are needed to shade the tomatoes from sun scald and to provide added nourishment to the roots. |
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I had a good, strong and very robust constitution, perfectly able to take its nourishment from a vegetable source. |
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Royal patronage in China certainly had an aesthetic edge, so essential to the nourishment of art, even if generated by peculiar foibles. |
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So the nurse was responsible for the wellbeing of her patients and the nourishment of the doctors' sense of professional self. |
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Democracy is a plant that requires long nourishment and does not take root everywhere. |
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They maintain the functions of all the organs and are important in the development and nourishment of the body. |
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Parenting and education are to provide the nourishment and care that allow these potentials to unfold. |
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The mineral composition of the rock as well as the soil affects the nourishment of the vine. |
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Although food is for nourishment and growth of the body it also plays a key role in our social development. |
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I do not think that nourishment of my body should be at the expense of the suffering of another living being. |
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For spiritual nourishment there were halls of worship filled with statues of the Buddha. |
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My feeling is that there is a lack of spiritual nourishment among younger people. |
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For instance, people demand food because of the nourishment it offers them. |
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They all offer white bread, middle-of-the-road ideas or experiences entirely lacking in intellectual or emotional nourishment. |
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When the spleen is weak, the body will not be able to use the nourishment available in food. |
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Art was hailed as an inner, ethical necessity, primary nourishment for the soul. |
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Also, he knew he needed bodily nourishment to bring up his declining health. |
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Adequate nourishment is critical when attempting any difficult mental and physical work. |
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As long as we get the nourishment necessary to survive we live, when we don't, we die. |
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We may value the activity of eating to the degree that it provides nourishment. |
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He breathes without the machine, receives nourishment through the tubes, stares without seeing, and listens without hearing. |
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One proposed explanation is that animal alcoholics are after the high calorie nourishment of ethanol. |
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Gradually the blood vessels to the hip cut off nourishment to the head of the femur where it fits into the acetabulum. |
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Who provides nourishment to the fowls in the air and who attends to their ailments and illness? |
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What was once our sustenance has become carcinogenic and devoid of goodness and nourishment. |
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Places with poor refrigeration or contaminated water sources rely on aseptically packaged milk for nourishment. |
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Now she takes you on a harrowing true life journey from childhood neglect so bad she gnawed at dog bones for nourishment. |
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The sturdy roots dug deep into unyielding rocks and drew nourishment from the seemingly sterile soil. |
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Consider how the fruit of the Spirit in its splendid variety provides nourishment for our souls. |
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With Anzac biscuits and breakfast muffins, I entice children who need nourishment back to life again. |
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They paralyse snails with a lethal injection which liquidises their insides and then they suck out the nourishment. |
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If an animal is to grow to maturity and propagate, it must be able to take in nourishment and to navigate its way through the world. |
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The patient can specify in advance in his living will under what conditions nourishment, hydration or other life support should be withheld. |
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She stresses the importance of protein in diets to stop cravings and satisfy the body's need for nourishment. |
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A library can provide the mind with nourishment, pleasure, yet prove a source of tedium and dismay. |
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Young artists ransacked antique shops and archives to find spiritual nourishment beyond the groundwork that had been laid waste. |
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One Thai made the dangerous descent down into the flooded beach village and returned with rice and other nourishment for frightened tourists. |
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Animals have the vegetable kingdom for their nourishment, and within the animal kingdom again every animal is the prey and food of some other. |
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Spend all day in bed tomorrow, in the dark, with the windows shut and only a plastic beaker of water for nourishment, and you'll be fine. |
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He simply wants to be on stage and in the spotlight, hip-hopping his way to stardom and never-ending nourishment. |
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Holistic health care is a perfect technique for the nourishment of mind, body and spirit. |
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The link between a specific shoot and a specific root is not clear, but each has a part to play in the overall growth and nourishment of the plant. |
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They are in pots and planters but get plenty of water and nourishment. |
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Death by pills or lethal injection might be unnatural, but she believes that declining nourishment and medications is not. |
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Coke goes on to say estovers signify sustenance, aliment, or nourishment. |
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Most of the commercially valuable wild species derive their nourishment from the rootlets of living trees in a mutually beneficial relationship called mycorrhiza. |
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The human soul is an ocean tossed by storms of passion, deep and bottomless in its need for succor and nourishment. |
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Even if they found shelter from the sun each morning, could the same be said for nourishment? |
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The novel is set at a time of scarcity, and all of the characters fret about nourishment. |
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Meaningful friendships require constant attention, nourishment, feeding and watering. |
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Much of the research, conducted on soldiers and workers in order to determine the minimum nourishment necessary to maintain health, emphasized models of efficiency. |
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Since you, the parent is the baby's primary source of physical and emotional nourishment, your well being can contribute to the presence or absence of colic. |
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If this congestion is not cleared up quickly, the blood will clot and arteries that bring the tissues their necessary nourishment will become plugged and the tissues will die. |
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His instincts tell him that is where he will find nourishment. |
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A fortnight ago, they stopped the nourishment, deliberately. |
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This has little to do with true nourishment of body or soul. |
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They have been forced for over fifty years to stay in the camps, being fed diets of hate instead of the nourishment of hope and peace which is their right. |
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Designing ways to protect valuable creative works is very much in the long-term best interests of consumers and indispensable to the nourishment of our nation's economy. |
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The tree extends its roots deep within the soil to draw the finest and the richest minerals and elements for its nourishment and growth irrespective of the type of soil. |
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It is land set aside for the king's game, in which the nourishment of deer, wild swine and hares took precedence over the nourishment of human beings. |
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Children have also become more sedentary, frequently relying on junk food for nourishment, all of which adds to the growing epidemic of obesity in the United States. |
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These sad, determine men have found that their one-time hobby has become a must have matter of sustenance, like karmic nourishment for their soul. |
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A day cannot live in infamy without the nourishment of rage. |
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She explained these as exercise, nourishment and intellectual stimulation. |
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What do tourists, nourishment, and futurists have in common? |
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The anemonefishes provide some protection and bring in sources of nourishment for their anemone hosts, and some groups of juvenile damselfishes clean other fishes. |
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I'm proud of my baby body, knowing that it gave my son a comfy vessel in which to gestate and has been the source of all his nourishment since birth. |
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The setting of a beach nourishment project is key to design and potential performance. |
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Prior to nourishment, in many places the beach was too narrow to walk along, especially during high tide. |
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Conversely, high erosion rates may render nourishment financially impractical. |
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A benign environment increases the interval between nourishment projects, reducing costs. |
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Green baby stretchmark cream is a base cream of sunflower oil with added cocoa butter, organic jojoba oil and carrot oil for deep nourishment. |
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A celiac disease sufferer gets much less nourishment, regardless of how much they eat. |
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A flake of biotite near the tree's roots provided nourishment and was the only source of potassium in the soil, Bonneville says. |
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Bevacizumab, also known by the trade name Avastin, blocks the growth of blood vessels that provide tumors with nourishment. |
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Blood was viewed as a potent source of nourishment for the Maya deities, and the sacrifice of a living creature was a powerful blood offering. |
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For they cut the cheeks of the males with a sword, so that before they receive the nourishment of milk they must learn to endure wounds. |
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For growing youngsters, this marvelous nourishment helps pack on the pounds, adds inches to height. |
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Techniques for incorporating nourishment projects into flood insurance costs and disaster assistance remain controversial. |
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Many nourishment projects are advocated via economic impact studies that rely on additional tourist expenditure. |
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The 1971 Delft Report outlined a series of works for Gold Coast Beaches, including beach nourishment and an artificial reef. |
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Artificial headlands can occur due to natural accumulation or also through artificial nourishment. |
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Nourishment is typically a repetitive process, since nourishment mitigates the effects of erosion, but does not remove the causes. |
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Others can be used singly or in combination with nourishment, driven by economic, environmental and political considerations. |
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Until the calf is six months old, it obtains its nourishment solely from its mother's milk. |
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These children are suffering because they lack proper nourishment. |
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Blubber serves both to keep the animals warm and to provide energy and nourishment when they are fasting. |
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As I was in a state of extreme debility, I resolved to sail directly towards the town, as a place where I could most easily procure nourishment. |
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Phytoplankton absorb energy from the Sun and nutrients from the water to produce their own nourishment or energy. |
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An eroded beach with substantial submerged sand surrounding it may recover without nourishment. |
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Besides, aleuronat is the cheapest albumin, and very appropriate for the nourishment of men. |
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Wind wave models are also an important part of examining the impact of shore protection and beach nourishment proposals. |
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A few, such as Amphipholus squamata, are truly viviparous, with the embryo receiving nourishment from the mother through the wall of the bursa. |
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Soft options such as beach nourishment protect coastlines and help to restore the natural dynamism, although they require repeated applications. |
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Tormented dualities and unblessed beginnings, and endings, are still nourishment for the spirit. |
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These are used for beach nourishment, land reclamation and construction. |
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These techniques include beach nourishment and sand dune stabilisation. |
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During that time, they are dependent on their yolk sac for nourishment. |
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Hence also animals and vegetables may assimilate their nourishment. |
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Beach nourishment has significant impacts on local ecosystems. |
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This was observed at a Waikiki nourishment project in Hawaii. |
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The performance of a beach nourishment project is most predictable for a long, straight shoreline without the complications of inlets or engineered structures. |
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If human activity is a major cause of the erosion, mitigating that activity may be more cost effective over both short and long term periods than direct nourishment. |
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The production and turnover of the preocular tear film is essential in providing tissues with nourishment and lubrication, and for maintaining ocular health. |
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Myrmecophilus species are known to strigilate their hosts, supposedly to gain nourishment from oily secretions of the body, and also to engage their hosts in trophallaxis. |
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I've spoken to breast-feeding consultants who say breast-feed for as long as possible, quoting the nourishment and protection of breast milk throughout toddlerhood. |
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