Stretching out her sore and knotted muscles, she slowly rose from her blanket. |
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Home prices in Shanghai are more than twice the national average, and rose by nearly a quarter last year. |
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I shingled it all over and made one half a rose garden, which were her favourite flowers, and decorated the rest with the ornaments. |
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I asked him about his famously resplendent Afghan hound photographed in a designer corset-collar and white silk rose corsage. |
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During the war he rose through the ranks from an officer school cadet to a major in command of a rifle battalion. |
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An upmarket Leeds restaurant which rose from the ashes of the ill-fated Teatro venture has now collapsed itself, only seven months after opening. |
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Governments rose and fell, new participants swelled the ranks of the political elite, and the middle class kept expanding. |
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It worked and the plane's head rose a little bit and the aircraft took off safely. |
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Inside the little box was the most elegantly carved, beautifully crafted rose of white chocolate I had ever seen. |
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The sun rose just about the hills near the lake, which made the quiet lake reflect its light, adding more radiance. |
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The hole was about eighteen feet across and lay just over the rim of a low hill that rose in a long gentle slope from the side of our farm. |
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Michael quickly rose through the ranks as orderly sergeant, first lieutenant and captain. |
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At the same time, it is not to be denied that his words, when he answered, were carefully guarded, and that he rose to take his leave. |
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For a quarter of an hour they wheeled and circled, rose and sank and effortlessly rose again as the thermal draughts supported them. |
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It is believed that Jesus was crucified, buried and rose from the dead in this place. |
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This implies that throughout the development of each mire, base level rose and accommodation rates increased. |
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They rose before dawn and stepped out beneath a moonless sky aswarm with stars. |
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His brother Richard's cremated remains are in the same garden, under a white rambling rose bush planted by him and his mother, Estella. |
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We just found out the other day that gross domestic product rose 3.8 percent, a huge jump. |
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The dye level for ventral bundles also rose initially to a maximum value, but dropped exponentially to a non-zero final value. |
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On receiving news that Moody's had turned its India outlook from stable to positive, the rupee rose four paise. |
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Utilizing beneficials has proven to be the overall most effective way to eliminate insect and mite problems in my rose garden. |
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A similar result was recorded in Tasmania, where the jobless rate rose to 8.5 per cent. |
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He was born in Switzerland in 1779, served as a staff officer in Napoleon's armies, and later rose to the rank of general in the Russian service. |
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Her feet touched bottom and she stood up slowly, revelling in the water flowing from her as she rose from the pool. |
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He rose with a groan the next morning and pulled his clothes back on, lacing his shoes with some difficulty. |
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He graduated from West Point in 1917 and rose through the ranks as an infantry officer. |
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He rose and walked to the counter where he grabbed a jug of beer and refilled his tankard. |
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The team used hand tools to tamp the aggregate into the mortar as the structure slowly rose from the seafloor. |
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They aligned their buildings with celestial movements, marking where the sun rose at the summer and winter solstices. |
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A student brass band played, rose petals were showered and pigeons were released as peace slogans rent the air. |
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The shrine is revered as the place where Jesus was crucified, buried and rose from the dead. |
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Dusting with rose powder is recommended for tea roses to keep off black spot and powdery mildew. |
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He became well known for his natty dress sense and the rose he always wore in his buttonhole. |
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The noise levels rose by more than a few decibels, while the games whizzed by at such speed that they made Concorde look slow. |
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A spired tower rose on the horizon, and I altered my direction slightly to head towards it. |
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However, naming a rose after a well-loved public figure can give it a head start. |
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Her ministerial appointments amounted to only eight women, only one of whom rose higher than the ranks of junior minister. |
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Hamilton also had one of the first radio receivers in South Taranaki, with a high aerial that rose near the house. |
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Following two months of flat sales, retail spending rose by 1.3 percent in October. |
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For the first time in the last seven days, the sun rose over Vaskio with a purpose, and the rainbirds graced the sky. |
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In the distance now they could hear the sounds of many more men shouting, a ragged chorus that rose over the clatter of steel against steel. |
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Yes, the station had a perfectly charming garden including a herbaceous border, rose beds, lupins and mop-headed bay trees in green tubs. |
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Job explained that wicked and good alike rose and fell and the work of men perished like ears of corn. |
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As old oceanic crust was consumed in the trenches, new magma rose and erupted along the spreading ridges to form new crust. |
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The city rose from one man's vision, under the aegis of patient backing and supporters. |
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I wore the blue scarf, which is actually more of a shawl or a sash, around my waist and the blue rose in my hair the next day. |
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Beyond them a tail of white spume rose into the air as the river cascaded over jutting black rocks. |
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The rose gardens contain many commercially available roses, such as floribundas, grandifloras and hybrid tea roses. |
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Aislinn and Christopher rose up into the air with the other flyers, swinging their blades and stabbing at the glassy robot eyes. |
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Early in the morning he rose and began his daily exercises, acrobatics, and swordplay. |
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Behind all this, walls of square-cut ice rose in cracked columns that avalanched regularly, sometimes bringing down a 30m-wide face. |
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The sun rose behind the Tower, backlighting it in the brilliance of a sunrise. |
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They rose through a spiraling passage, surrounded by cool stone that had been worn smooth over the many long years of the school's existence. |
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He opened his mouth to announce that he was going to be sick, but the vomit rose through his throat before he could say the words. |
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Pruning thorny rose shrubs requires sturdy, thorn-proof gloves and safety glasses to protect your eyes. |
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Before the tableland rose entirely above sea level, the waters covering it became increasingly shallow and a swamp forest moved into the niche. |
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The man with the white beard rose to his feet and strode over to the baby weeping on the ground. |
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A double bed in the centre of the wall in front of me was scattered with different coloured rose petals. |
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According to the model, barometric pressure in the lowest stratum rose by 145 millibars to 1,108 millibars. |
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The tank's engine rose and pitch, and gave a sudden lurch as the treads sprung to life. |
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His rose oils come from the Valley of Roses in Bulgaria, the vanilla comes from Madagascar, the lavender from Provence. |
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The population, divided into a dozen chiefdoms and supported by intensive agriculture, soon rose to 15,000 or more. |
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The bouquet itself was a nosegay of violets with a pink rose in the center. |
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The tension in the van rose quickly as they approached the main street of the village. |
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Class sizes rose and clashing tests made drawing up an examination timetable a nightmare. |
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She rose early to watch the farm workers begin their days planting and harvesting maize, tea and other cash crops. |
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The curtains rose to a stage packed full of instruments and, in the centre, a magnificent grand piano. |
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According to the figures the total amount of violent crime rose 11 per cent to more than 812,000 incidents. |
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Consumption of products such as soy milk also rose as consumers sought ways of reducing levels of saturated fat and cholesterol in their diets. |
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Early in the nineteenth century, the number of tailors, furriers, jewellers and haberdashers rose steeply. |
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At the same time, as the arrest rate for juvenile delinquency and crime rose in 1943 and 1944, commentators accused mothers of neglect. |
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The rose in the center, in front of the shrub, receives the best air circulation and least heat reflection from the wall. |
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Amazingly, the wind rose on the compass, and the original mica cover have survived intact. |
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Blend ten drops each of rose and chamomile oil, and five drops each of lemon and lavender oil with 30 ml of almond oil. |
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More than 90 per cent of the rose attar produced in Bulgaria is exported to the US, France and Switzerland. |
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Following the demise of the team, Zambia, with the assistance of several well-wishers, rose from the ashes to rebuild another team. |
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A new 32-room Clayton Grange rose from the ashes and retained parts of the original grey-stone walls from the original building. |
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As April arrived the lake water level rose by a couple of feet after a sustained period of rain. |
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Kazanlik, by the way, is the rose grown in fields all over Bulgaria to produce the famous attar of roses so important to the perfume industry. |
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For the first time last year, unemployment rose to an unprecedented level of 10 percent. |
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The ground fell away from the river somewhat at first, and then rose and fell again before it went up in one slope toward the Wolfing dwellings. |
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Both rose water and orange blossom water were first distilled in the 10th century, followed by lavender water in the 12 th century. |
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While overall world oil demand was essentially flat in 1993, demand in the Western Pacific rose four percent. |
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At the sound of the door squeaking slowly open, both of us rose and turned to face it. |
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The lands were held before the Norman invasion by Edwin, earl of Mercia, who seems to have retained them until 1068 when he rose in revolt. |
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Despite continuing lax enforcement, concern rose at the end of the century, in response to a perceived increase in the consumption of whisky. |
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A sharp stab of hunger gnawed at Vincent's gut as he trudged along the dunes of sand that rose and fell like waves frozen in time. |
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Evening primrose, wheat germ, and rose hip seed oils all make fine additives to this mask. |
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Tied to these are the whippy rose stems, which will soon sprout flowering shoots along their length. |
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Deeply fragrant, it usually contains cardamom, coriander, allspice, cayenne, ginger, cloves and nutmeg, and invariably, dried rose petals. |
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So, you have decided to plant rose bushes in your yard or on your patio, porch or balcony. |
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As the knell died away, a black flag slowly rose up the mast and stopped half-way. |
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Amoruso rose to meet a Ricksen corner and the ball broke in the six-yard box and Flo smacked it into the net for his 21st of the season. |
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This was like a red rag to a bull for the IMF, which rose to the bait last week. |
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When she completed the variation, we rose to our feet in a spontaneous standing ovation. |
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Around the same time, the price of gold rose and Hawk took up gold prospecting, living in tents and mining shacks from the southwest to Alaska. |
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The white smoke rose in a small trail towards the stormy skies, far to the north of the two warriors. |
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A York man barricaded himself in his tea shop for three days as the River Ouse rose higher and higher at the peak of this week's floods. |
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And at the end of the performance, we rose to our feet and gave a standing ovation. |
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Running now at her full speed, she dashed to the edge of the lake, where a large bolder rose up above the water. |
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As the music stopped, then abruptly changed to the familiar wedding march, the entire packed sanctuary rose to its feet as one person. |
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He rose from the chair and crossed the room to a shadowed corner where a large safe sat squatly. |
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Chuck Schumer rose to ask whether the Senate majority leader might yield for a question. |
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Dig out that hybrid tea rose that suffers from black spot and replace it with an easy-going butterfly bush. |
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They would let whole milk stand for several hours until the lighter cream rose to the top. |
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Smoke rose from chimneys in the distant village, the traceries of smoke vertical in the crisp morning air. |
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However, the Mamelukes learned of this conspiracy, rose up against the governor and exiled him to Jaffa. |
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On the 25th day of the ninth month they rose early in the morning and performed the first morning sacrifice that had been offered in three years. |
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The park is more commonly associated with the restorative powers of its 2,000 rose garden, teeming wildlife and hay meadows. |
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All of the colors swirled together, scarlet, crimson, vermilion, gold, violet, and rose converging on a darkened figure in the center. |
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His hands rose weakly, pushed at Leonardo's shoulders, and fell, only to reattempt it again seconds later. |
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The total of Montreal-area landlord repossessions rose from 561 to 622 in one year. |
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The super-cute shop is always inviting, with the lovely smell of roses filling the air and rose petals scattered outside the entrance. |
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He rose to his feet, and then leapt back when a loud roar issued from one of the many passages branching from the cavern. |
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He rose from his crouching position, rearranging his hair so that it no longer blocked the better part of his plain of vision. |
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Cartons of bottled water for rescue workers rose in charitable ziggurats outside police stations and schools. |
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There is off-street parking and a paved patio area to the rear, and the gardens are planted with lawns and rose bushes. |
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The sensuous milk bath is scented with fresh rose petals, kaffir lime and stimulating essential oils. |
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In addition, as she noticed these things, an agonized cry rose up from the hut, in a voice she knew all too well. |
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Sara stood there dressed in dusty rose and ivory, mahogany-brown hair aglow in the light of the sun as she stared behind him to the easel. |
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And there's a lot of good drinks as well, fruit juices and lassi, the yogurt drinks mixed with fruit, and sometimes with rose water. |
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Conner rose and stretched, his lupine muzzle gaping wide in a colossal yawn, the muscles rippling across his broad back. |
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Hindus in Jammu rose up in protest in a movement known as the Praja Parishad agitation. |
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In a small picnic basket collect a tablecloth, a vase with a realistic rose in it, 2 taper candles with holders and a lovely meal for two. |
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You will be amazed at the beauty and crispness of this hand carved wood floral rose wreath. |
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Using the same water as that of the first two bowls, add some perfume drops, rose water, lavender water, rosemary water, or saffron. |
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You can avoid caffeine by choosing green teas such as Chinese Gunpowder, and herbal teas with rose hips, chamomile, peppermint and raspberry. |
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The sheer cliff walls rose ominously against the brutal onslaught of the waves below. |
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Unlike it's haughty cousin, the hybrid tea rose, which takes endless tending, spraying and deadheading, an antique rose is almost carefree. |
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A rose covered arbour smells ambrosial, looks even better and the path through it leads you into the garden. |
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The dead woman rose for a moment of agony while she was lapped in the flame, and her bitter scream of pain was drowned in the thundercrash. |
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Many of the latter rose to important positions, usually in fields other than their original calling. |
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With your bloodshot eyes and pale yellow skin, you look like you've just rose up from the dead. |
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The sides were level five minutes later when Brian Kaye rose at the back post to head home a Gavin Holligan cross. |
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Riverside homeowners were keeping one eye firmly on the clouds today as river levels rose even higher through the night. |
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The composition is punctuated by dramatic rocks, pine, bamboo and flowering prunus, plantain, rose and willow. |
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A once-blooming rose with its extended flush of blossoms may work equally as well as a remontant rose under the same conditions. |
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The valley of Taif in Western Saudi Arabia near Jeddah is famous the world over for its rose attar and water. |
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Despite increases in Canada's planted corn area, US corn sales rose sharply to meet feed grain demand. |
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Wren's season of notoriety rose mainly from vehement wowser pursuit of his illegal totalisator in Collingwood. |
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The answer came when one delegate rose to address the notion of political action by the labour movement. |
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The value of re-exports, accounting for 90 per cent of Hong Kong's total exports, rose 18.3 per cent in July. |
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America rose up and rebelled, and then expanded in power until it tipped the balance during World War One and harnessed the power of the atom to win World War Two. |
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His hands were cuffed together as he rose to return to the cells at the end of the proceeding. |
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The figures on the telegraph-board rose from twenty to thirty. |
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When the bison slaughter rose to its height, wolves and other scavengers thrived on the availability of carrion, and wolf numbers probably spiked briefly. |
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The next moment his loud shout rose over the din of battle, and swinging his hat over his head for a banner to those who pressed after, he spurred against the flying enemy. |
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She says it is reassuring to learn that the rose is still available. |
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She quickly rose through the ranks and was soon given the reins by Mays and Scott. |
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As usual, she looked stunning in a sleeveless red sheath dress, her honey blonde hair held in place by a rose very similar to the one I was holding. |
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Tutors and students rose to the challenge of devising a special three course menu for people who must exclude a protein called gluten from their diet. |
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Quartz is colourless when pure but minute amounts of impurities or lattice imperfections give rise to varieties such as amethyst, cairngorm, rose quartz, and smoky quartz. |
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He was a constant agitator against the Communist government that rose to power in 1948, and was jailed for nine months in 1950 for one of his writings. |
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The following day the ground rose up beneath us, and the fir trees thinned to larches, and there was more Sun and open glades with grass for our horses to graze upon. |
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The demand for intelligence rose when increasing education, hand in hand with the material advance of the bourgeoisie, awoke a desire for political action. |
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As the two women charged down the pool on the second lap with Quann clearly in the lead, the crowd rose to its feet and beseeched her for a world record. |
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Rocket fanatics to a man, they rose to their feet and cheered. |
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He rose to his feet, slowly trailing behind the stern headmaster. |
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The rose bush is flowering although it's still having a little trouble with aphids, which I used for target practise with my squirt gun yesterday. |
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And I do wonder why she had to find her inspiration in the rose bay willowherb she saw in Germany, when there must be a wealth of other imagery in the Park itself. |
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Recent data showed industrial output in the US rose in the month of March for the first time in six months and consumer prices advanced at the slowest rate in seven months. |
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She rose from humble origins to become a military heroine by the age of 19, although she was ultimately captured and burned at the stake for heresy. |
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The scarlet hue of the rose shone brightly in the mid-afternoon sun. |
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Sure enough, a skinny blond boy rose from the back and walked toward us. |
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Ms Gold started in her father's business as a junior at the age of 21 and rose through the ranks to become chief executive trying to take the business upmarket along the way. |
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Unbidden, desire for her rose within, like some ravening beast. |
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Unpublished wind rose data reveal that prevailing winds are generally from the west, with significant components from both the northwest and southwest. |
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The building takes its name from the late Admiral of the Fleet, Lord Fieldhouse of Gosport, the hugely popular submariner who rose to Chief of Defence Staff. |
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Each successful composer rose from some authentic tradition. |
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They formed local councils, headed judicial proceedings, tilled the land, and rose through the ranks of government. |
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Where there were once rose beds and lawned areas up past Hermit Hole, there is now rough grass which is occasionally and halfheartedly mown and the cuttings left to rot. |
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Seen from space a sunrise takes on a glory all of its own, the dark shield burning like a crescent of fire-gold as the sun rose from beyond the curve of the horizon. |
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After the lapse of some time, Sharpe rose to address the meeting, speaking in a low, soft tone, that his voice might not be heard beyond the walls of the building. |
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The nation's unemployment rate rose just 5.9 percent last month. |
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The room was built of rose-coloured marble excepting the floor, which was tessellated in rose and grey. |
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And how investor confidence would fall drastically each time Rousseff rose in the polls. |
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The cry that rose up into the night signaled a moral indictment no matter what the grand jury had said. |
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Juniper whiled many a day away in her sitting room, speaking to none, playing absently with the pale rose petals, as soft as the skin of a newborn's cheek. |
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There was much talk of shady dells with dappled sunlight, satin sheets and rose petals, fluffy bunnies, tissues, anything that might make the deal sound sweet to both parties. |
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Kate Winslet, the emphatically English rose of British cinema, is a trouper, a ruddy good sport, a thumping great head prefect of common sense and hockey-sticks jollity. |
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Tessie sat by the window, but as I came in she rose and put both arms around my neck for an innocent kiss. |
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In 2002 and the years 2006-10, the percentage of children born to cohabiting parents rose from 41 percent to 58 percent. |
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Erythronium dens-canis is the true dog's tooth violet, the name comes from the shape of the corm, and has rose coloured flowers on 10 cm stems and purple marked leaves. |
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During the season when the advertising was on air, sales rose 12 percent. |
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Between 1999 and 2008, the number of severely intoxicated young women who wound up in E.R.s rose by 52 percent. |
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He rose through the ranks at the firm, which his father Sydney had helped to set up, eventually becoming a director and then spending ten years as chairman. |
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After working as a welder he attended university, and rose through the ranks of the steel industry to emerge as deputy head of a large steel mill. |
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He rapidly rose through the ranks until he was offered the chance to be its Leeds-based director of operations for the north of England and Scotland. |
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The road turned again and rose up onto a knoll cast deep in shade, a place even farther removed from countryside and daylight than the rest of the woods. |
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Every woman made her web and bleached it herself, and the price never rose higher than 2 shillings a yard, and with this cloth almost everyone was clothed. |
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Later, his father rose through the ranks in the army, but he never forgot. |
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Very few officers rose from the ranks, and those who did were disliked. |
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Hiking a slope to the east, I rose above one of the world's great mountain scenes, trout leaping in the lazy creek and a breeze ruffling the spruce trees. |
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The Finn never rose to the bait, either feigning an inability to understand the question or flat-batting inquiries with a quizzical shrug and a nondescript answer. |
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Republican forces of liberation rose up in March 1848 against their Austrian overlords and held the city for over a year before it was reconquered after a bitter siege. |
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Conjunctivitis can be treated by mixing one drop of chamomile oil with a teaspoon of witch hazel, and blending this solution with 30 ml of rose water. |
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The hunt for treasure will include a visit to the old rose garden, the hop garden, the old engine pond, the Japanese garden and the new mathematical maze in the woods. |
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Tension rose as the other bus drivers became involved in the scuffle, which was momentarily resolved when traffic police detained the cabby and dismissed the bus drivers. |
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Groundwater levels rose and fell over a period of about 45 minutes. |
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He rose and refilled his mug, and gave a filled one to Nelson. |
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Energy use rose 5.8 percent from a year earlier to the equivalent of 9.83 million kiloliters of oil in August, the Bureau of Energy said yesterday. |
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Notably, delinquencies rose in all four regions during the fourth quarter. |
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Presently Louis rose with a nod to us and offered his arm to Constance, and they strolled away along the river wall. |
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After the revolution the social prestige of the working class rose considerably and in consequence the prestige of the lower middle class fell in relative terms. |
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And they were quick to defend the noble white rose yesterday, especially after it was revealed voters had chosen to leave rival Lancastrians with their red rose. |
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Rosshall Academy rose from the ashes of two crumbling secondary schools, one of the first examples of how private finance could breathe new life into state education. |
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As the sea level rose in the early to middle Holocene, dunes on the low-gradient shelf were transgressed and provided the core for the modern offshore sandy shoals. |
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Her Really Red Velvet Cake is as red as a climbing rose in June. |
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Directly across the car from me, next to an old woman with a gaudy cabbage rose print babushka over thinning white hair, is a young man I cannot take my eyes off of for long. |
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A wave of hands suddenly rose high in the air as each one moved about in erratic and unpredictable movements, each as unique as the children's personality. |
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They laughed at his jokes, hissed at his political opponents and rose to their feet for his applause lines. |
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While thus fettered I was seized and flung down by a heavy sea which retreating suddenly left me lying naked on the sharp shingle from which I rose streaming with blood. |
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A month ago, the Bea thought health-care spending rose at a 9.1 percent annual rate in the first quarter. |
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Barely a regular structure, road or building broke the contours of the mountainsides, whose ragged, stony slopes rose straight from the shore to a thousand feet. |
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And he was there in Beirut when the explosive cloud rose over the BLT Headquarters 30 years ago. |
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He first rose to prominence as a lawyer in Queens, who settled a boiling racial dispute over public housing in Forest Hills. |
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This luminescent Italian rose has a sweetness on the nose and delicate spice on the palate that begs for a mouthful of chilled raspberries and a touch of vanilla ice-cream. |
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While at the Tribune, Axelrod rose to city hall bureau chief, covering the rough-and-tumble politics of the Windy City. |
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The citizens of Prague rose in revolt against the occupying German forces on 5 May 1945 and held the city until the Russian Army arrived four days later. |
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A cold, biting wind blew and the rose dropped soundless on the grave. |
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Only one in twenty had seen a full episode of The Bachelor or The bachelorette, another had tuned in for a rose ceremony. |
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And as a byproduct of the continuing resurgence of housing, sales of high-margin pickup trucks and SUVs also rose smartly. |
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During his occupancy of this position the maximum daily outsend rose from 2,500,000 to 4,000,000 cubic feet. |
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Next place your hair, the rose quartz, some of the orris root powder, and the candle drippings into the box. |
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The oil possesses a sweet, heavy aroma, similar to rose but with a mintier overtone. |
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The shrubs bloom in the summer and than the rose hips are harvested in the fall. |
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Enjoy beers such as Golden Rose, made with rose hips, and Gose Coastal, made with Oregon huckleberries. |
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I personally prefer the Herbalist's favorite, a blend of rose hips, lemon grass, apple pieces, and linden and hibiscus blossoms. |
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My dad claims he used to collect rose hips and haw berries from the hedgerow and get paid by the Women's Institute. |
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The illustrations include two pictures of gunmetal cases set with rose diamonds. |
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But in the stem of this elegant thing, as small as a lorgnette, tiny rose diamonds sparkled sprightly today as they did a century ago. |
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According to the New Testament, Jesus was crucified, died a physical death, was buried within a tomb and rose from the dead three days later. |
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And if pea-green jade, carved in the form of a pea and set with rose diamonds is your kind of thing, you need look no further. |
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I recall particularly Catherine the Great's saddle-cloth, edged entirely with swags of rose diamonds. |
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This lead rose up to approximately 10 points over the Conservative Party during 2012, whose ratings dipped alongside an increase in UKIP support. |
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England's Tudor rose, made from gold and silver bullion and rose diamonds, is on the sleeves. |
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These particular beauties are in blue-black or powder-blue enamel set in solid gold cage-work mounts with the Czar's cipher in rose diamonds. |
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A wisp of smoke rose from the candle for a few moments after he blew it out. |
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Becks will be reunited with the singer today and is expected to give her a pounds 1million rose diamond ring. |
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The Edinburgh Medical School rose to prominence by the end of the 18th century. |
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Parity though lasted barely two minutes as de Vincenti rose above everybody to head past Roin, the Paphos keeper. |
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Each member of the group, in turn, rose to share a personal story, until nearly everyone in the room had spoken. |
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He pointed to the herbs, already in place and growing nicely, and the rose bushes, and the candytuft. |
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Constantine was sent east, where he rose through the ranks to become a military tribune under the emperors Diocletian and Galerius. |
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The rose hip puree is made from locally foraged rose hips-a New England seaside delicacy. |
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Hearing of this, Danes in East Anglia and elsewhere then rose against Alfred. |
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The Tudor rose was adopted as a national emblem of England around the time of the Wars of the Roses as a symbol of peace. |
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The Shang Dynasty of the Yellow River Valley rose to power after the Xia Dynasty. |
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Then he set the jug down wrong side up, and remained glaring at it fixedly, while his chest rose and fell in deep heavings. |
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Intercommunal tensions rose and the constitution was amended to minimise the potential for conflict. |
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The most commercially successful of their many recordings, the album rose to the higher reaches of the UK charts immediately after its release. |
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However, every rose has its thorn, and alopecia universalisis no different. |
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As the geanticline rose upwards, nappes glided off like slicks from the back of an emerging whale. |
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In the greenery below, a thistle, Tudor rose and shamrock are depicted, representing Scotland, England and Ireland respectively. |
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Mid-cap growth and small-cap growth bullishness both rose from the previous quarter. |
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I rose accordingly from table, got into a hansom, and drove straight to Jekyll's house. |
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Between the 2001 and 2011 censuses, the number of Gaelic speakers rose in nineteen of the country's 32 council areas. |
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Common colored varieties include citrine, rose quartz, amethyst, smoky quartz, milky quartz, and others. |
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He rose from the bench, and prepared to attend upon his uncle, who, as yet unapprised of his arrival, remained in his chamber. |
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The country hadn't pumped that much oil since 1979, when Saddam Hussein rose to power. |
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On 2 December 1998, the Conservative Leader of the Opposition, William Hague, rose in the House of Commons to attack Blair's plans. |
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Security as a result became a thing of the past, and as a corollary, abscondences rose dramatically. |
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However, they rose against them in 47 after the governor, Publius Ostorius Scapula, threatened to disarm them. |
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Meanwhile, William Wallace rose in Balliol's name and recovered most of Scotland. |
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He rose to prominence in the 1940s with works for both children and adults and he became one of the world's best selling authors. |
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Then, without another word, he rose and left the shelter, apparently in order to light the vessel's wick with a punk from the dying campfire. |
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Clusters of strong flowers rose everywhere above the coarse tussocks of bent. It was like a roadstead crowded with tall fairy-shipping. |
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Flynn rose to the occasion once again to keep the rangier Fitzpatrick at bay and seal the finest moment of his boxing career. |
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Billed as 'earware' it's more jewelry than ho-hum headset and comes in black, silver and rose gold to accessorize with your every outfit. |
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As Britain rose in naval power and settled continental North America and some islands of the West Indies, they became the leading slave traders. |
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Wolves rose out of the drop zone with a deserved win to add more pressure on to defending champions Chelsea. |
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He gradually rose in the estimation of the booksellers for whom he drudged. |
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He cocked his eyebrows up and one side of his mouth rose into a grin. |
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He created a rose with eleven petals, to represent the eleven players of the team, based on the hedge rose. |
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The dusky rose was of a muted color, not clashing with any of the other colors. |
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Perhaps, like every rose has a thorn, every latent-variable SEM model begins with a contirmatory Factor analysis model. |
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Lord Hawke, in the early days of his captaincy, designed the white rose badge. |
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I suggest a new standard to be hoisted, showing a tail-less cat, thistle, shamrock, leek, pink rose and a Cornish pastie. |
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The Alps were millions of years old before the Apennines rose from the sea. |
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On either side the cliffs rose higher, and the walls of Jurassic rock, above the brashy steeps, more towering, precipitous, and fantastic. |
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Bedell Smith was a shopkeeper's son from Indiana who rose from buck private to general without the polish of West Point or a college degree. |
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But presently the gray dawn stole over the world, the birds piped up, then the sun rose and poured light and comfort all around. |
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There had been dry seasons, accumulations of dust, wind-blown seeds, and cedars rose wonderfully out of solid rock. |
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He rose to light my cigarette, then sank back into his wicker chair contentedly. The tea was weak, but not cold, thanks to the hot-plate. |
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A FORMER Port of Tyne baggage handler who rose to become a top executive is to return to the port as its chief executive. |
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Clusters of strong flowers rose everywhere above the coarse tussocks of bent. |
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By the early 1980s, Coventry had one of the highest unemployment rates in the country and crime rates rose well above the national average. |
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Blackcurrant and guelder rose are frequent but alder buckthorn a common constituent of East Anglian carr is very rare. |
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Once more our village palpitates With joyous preparations To celebrate the bloomsome rose With proper incantations. |
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The popular Cruiser speaker is available to everyone in carbonado black or pearl white with rose gold accents. |
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The risk of a low birthweight baby rose significantly with increases in pollution, suggesting a greater risk for those living near a major road. |
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Towards the end of this period the basin rose above sea level, and extensive coal forming swamps developed, particularly in the Anambra Basin. |
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Even when the latter rose to 14 mahmudis in 1692 and 1693, they were still sent profitably to India. |
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The biggest tax hiker was Wyoming, where taxes paid by businesses rose 20 percent. |
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To the right of the Bay immediately behind the reef, rose a pair of uncouth cone-like hills, their heads bonneted in lowering clouds. |
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Revenue rose 10 per cent to 57 billion ringgit on higher crude oil prices, Petronas said. |
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There was a faint rose acronical glow high in the room, the beginning of twilight. |
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Why say it with a single rose when they can say it instead with some armpit farts in class? |
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Shortlisted flowers for Cheshire are lady's smock and cow bane and for Lancashire red rose and bee orchid. |
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