The ventral slit is a vent on the obverse side which is neater, transforming the jumper from a tight crew-neck to a comfier V-neck. |
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The obverse of all denominations bore a harp, along with the legend Saorstat Eireann and the date the coin was struck. |
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It would help to ascertain the temporal relationship between the inscriptions on the reverse and the quota list on the obverse. |
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The first thing you have to do is carve out steel dies for the obverse and the reverse of the coin. |
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It is the one baht coin with the King's portrait on the obverse and the three-headed elephant on the reverse. |
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The main reason for this is that the obverse side of the U.S. manufacturing revival was a manufacturing crisis in Japan and western Europe. |
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The obverse is the same as on the smaller coins, but the reverse is different. |
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To celebrate this year's Olympic Games in Athens, the national obverse will be replaced by a discobolus and the five Olympic rings. |
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Why would collectors of Thai medals be interested in a French medal with King Louis XIV on the obverse? |
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I explained that all Euro coins have the same face but that the obverse depicts a scene of the country where the Euro coin was first issued. |
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The obverse web is also woven plain, but is much more sheer and the thread is coarser. |
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The obverse, but equally necessary, type of data flow is when people know reality and influence it. |
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Beside the countermark, this copy is easily distinguished because of the casting marks on the obverse. |
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On the other hand, the obverse countermarks show a rather careless placement on the imperial portrait. |
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It was no wonder that this minting machine was chosen as part of the design for the obverse of the medal. |
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This process is to a large extent coterminous with bodily decomposition, which is the obverse of gestation. |
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On the obverse, it is a picture of a quadriga and the reverse is a picture of the goddess Artemis-Arethusa with four dolphins around. |
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The notch is formed on each of the obverse and reverse sides of the base plate. |
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On the obverse side, the authors examine the motives and reactions of owners who, ostensibly, did not understand why their slaves absconded. |
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Of course there's an obverse side to this move, it would also give the government the power to take away licences. |
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But isn't occupational mobility of this kind a great strength, the obverse side of robust job creation? |
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The conquests were for the motive of sway, involving massive slaughter as the obverse politics of claim. |
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Smaller coin has one square incuse and larger coin has two square incuses on obverse and rough surface on reverse. |
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This obverse voyeurism involves a gaze that is marked by a global optics filtered through nostalgia. |
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On its obverse side is the image of two worlds between two columns, representing the Pillars of Hercules. |
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The designs of the medals are based on a traditional style that includes a generic obverse side, based on the Commonwealth Coat of Arms. |
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Packer is the obverse to Wallace and it is exciting that they are producing powerful contemporary collections. |
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So, if the risk of contemporary philosophy is scientism, then its obverse reflection is obscurantism. |
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From the beginning, Neil is plagued by his fears of losing Brenda, which are the obverse of his extreme dependence on her. |
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The obverse, of course, was that such positive inducements would be withheld if the Soviet Union continued to pursue Cold War policies. |
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The question is not merely the obverse of the issues which arise in relation to MERCEDES or MERCEDES-BENZ registered in respect of clothing. |
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Equally questionable is the obverse of the Harmon doctrine, the principle of absolute territorial integrity or riparian rights. |
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It is large, 245 mm, and it is the same as the obverse of the medals struck for the same occasion. |
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Nevertheless, it is not impossible that the reverse inscription is separated temporally from the obverse. |
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Like the obverse it was chosen by the Royal Mint Advisory Committee following a design competition. |
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The coin shows on the obverse the elephant with the date CS 1197, and on the reverse is the inscription Muang Thai. |
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The obverse of the coin shows His Majesty King Rama IX, Bhumibol Adulyadej. |
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The obverse of the medal bears the text, AWARDED BY THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA and a graphic device assumed to be the logo of the Franklin Institute. |
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The disc displays a simple and deeply carved symbol of the cross on the obverse side, and a double cross on the reverse side. |
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What you realise is how much of Weiner's problem is down to the obverse of that thick hide – a lack of self-awareness and introspection. |
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The obverse is that one slip of the tongue before the camera can doom a candidate. |
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Schist crosier with serrate back edge, geometrically decorated on the obverse and flat on the reverse. |
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These rights are the obverse of the moral obligations each generation owes, as the custodian of the common patrimony, to future generations. |
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Featured on the obverse are the conjoined effigies of King George VI And Queen Elizabeth, crowned and robed, facing left. |
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And that brings us to the second problem, which is really the obverse of the first. |
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The idea that it might be the obverse of something good sounds, to say the least, counter-intuitive. |
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The obverse of the medal depicts the likeness of both de Monts and Champlain while the reverse bears the City of Saint John coat of arms. |
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The ballot papers must contain on the obverse a space specially reserved for the wording of the question. |
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Each of the badges has a reverse that is similar in appearance to its obverse. |
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The obverse of the medal shows the portrait of King Louis XIV and the reverse shows the Thai ambassadors showing their respect during the audience with the King. |
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The old Kaiser Franz Joseph, faithful and hardworking, was the obverse of the feckless and impetuous German kaiser. |
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The doors, surrounded by a delicate architrave, are divided into six equal panels each of which bears in mezzo-relievo the obverse or reverse of some coin of ancient Greece. |
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The general obverse type is of a crowned and bearded portrait inside a triangle with a hand holding a sceptre to the left and a cinquefoil or sexfoil to the right. |
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As for the obverse, my liberal allies, this explains why information that seems so obvious to us never gets through. |
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Quite often the obverse carried a coat of arms, a vignette, or a portrait. |
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Similarly, on the obverse of each coin is its value and a mark to indicate directionality, and on the reverse is its suit and another directional marker. |
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I regard the next sentence as the obverse of the first instruction. |
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His approach is the obverse of what Justice O'Connor did in Grutter. |
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Think of this as the obverse of 1970s-style stagflation, which brought us little or no growth, high inflation and high interest rates at the same time. |
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These two pictures turn out to make fascinating, obverse pendants. |
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The obverse designs feature famous Scots while the reverse designs feature Scotland's UNESCO World Heritage Sites. |
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To take the obverse of what Mr Caplan says: it may be difficult from a neo-classical perspective to explain why a football coach is helping his players by subjecting them to extremely painful drills, against their wishes. |
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The informal Economic and Finance Ministers Council of Verona agreed in April 1996 that euro coins should have a common European reverse side and a distinctive national obverse side. |
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The metallic ink surrounding the UAE emblem on the top portion of the obverse side is replaced by multicolour ink print. |
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Crucially, these silver pennies bore the king's name on the obverse and that the moneyer on the reverse. |
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The Panamanian currency is called the Balboa, and his likeness appears on the obverse of most Panamanian coins. |
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The Great Seal of the United States uses on the obverse as its central motif an heraldic achievement described as being the arms of the nation. |
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The bulk of the stela contains the text of the code, partly erased on the obverse but restorable in some measure from clay-tablet versions of the same laws. |
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The obverse bust wears a completely new style of bashlyk, resembling the Macedonian kausia, but with a flap at the back and an eagle on top. |
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The obverse of his reverence for the natural world was a keen-edged contempt for the greedy men and crass, destructive culture that would gladly bulldoze it for a buck. |
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The obverse of the EU's major trade advantage is the need for Turkey to make substantial structural adjustments to match the EU on competitiveness. |
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On the obverse, the inscription is religious, while the inscription on the reverse shows, after the formulaic praise to God, the minting date under the reign of Ibrahim ibn Ahmad al-Aghlabi. |
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Both sides, obverse and reverse, can be inscribed with cuneiform signs. |
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The medal is a circular silver medal suspended from a five striped ribbon bearing the Canadian Coast Guard crest on the obverse and Her Majesty's Crown and Cipher on the reverse. |
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On the obverse of which is a maple leaf surrounded by a wreath of laurel. |
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The obverse of adequacy in public funding is affordability. |
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While we sometimes refer, in these Reasons, to the right to a hearing before the Tribunal, that is really the obverse side of the jurisdiction coin. |
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Although not commented on explicitly, the obverse must also be true: in the absence of additional circumstances, it is difficult to infer knowledge if the counterfeit was of a very high quality. |
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The Council agreed in 1996 that there would be distinctive national symbols on the obverse of euro circulation coins and that there should be a common design on the reverse. |
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Nobel's portrait also appears on the obverse of the Nobel Peace Prize medal and the Medal for the Prize in Economics, but with a slightly different design. |
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In 2008 the obverse design was rotated slightly, to match the new reverse design which is displayed with the heptagon point down rather than point up. |
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The theory of nescience is but the obverse of the fact of science. |
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All the circulating coins have an effigy of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse, and various national and regional designs, and the denomination, on the reverse. |
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We thought they would be pleased with our decision. We have learned, however, that the obverse is true. |
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