In the estuaries, where the bed is more sandy or muddy, the number of species is smaller but the size of their populations is larger. |
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Each of these versions is slightly different in size and text, and each is considered by historians to be equally authoritative. |
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The size of the forests had expanded under the Angevin kings, an unpopular development. |
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Among such traits, propensity to inquilinism in termites is known to relate positively to colony size. |
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This software can print compact disc inserts if you have the right size of paper. |
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Descriptive accounts include those of chroniclers who wrote about the size of armies, victims of war or famine, participants in an oath. |
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It is shown that an improvement of interarea transport facilities may encourage trade and as a consequence decrease the disparity in area size. |
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Although its size had increased substantially since the landing, Henry's army was still substantially outnumbered by Richard's forces. |
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First, we demonstrate the presence of small postsynaptic vesicles and characterize their size and intrasynaptic localization. |
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If the rules specify that the DLLs' size will be added to the 64K limit, there's not a lot of space to code an intro. |
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A more useable size might be 1 g with an accelerated decay of 200 kg of TNT. The isomer bomb obtained funding, but was canceled as nonsensical. |
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With a population of 16 million, Britain was barely half the size of France, which had a population of 30 million. |
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The size of their combat forces remained modest yet they could still provide a welcome addition to the major powers. |
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Most historians argue that the escalation in size and scope came from two sources. |
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The sale of the Louisiana Territory to the United States doubled the size of the United States. |
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That territory almost doubled the size of the United States, adding the equivalent of 13 states to the Union. |
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The Soviet Union succeeded the Russian empire in the remainder if its former territory, and Germany, Austria, and Hungary were reduced in size. |
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The nozzle size, together with the area of the turbine nozzles, determines the operating pressure of the compressor. |
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The army doubled in size, and cavalry and smaller units replaced the Roman legion as the main tactical unit. |
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Although Italian cities remained inhabited, they contracted significantly in size. |
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Census data provides eight nominal rather than 25 real wards, all of varying size and population. |
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A civil parish can range in size from a large town with a population of around 80,000 to a single village with fewer than a hundred inhabitants. |
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The precise dates and means of formation of the lordships varied, as did their size. |
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The bore consists of three or four sizeable waves followed by a few of diminishing size. |
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There are certain towns with large urban areas that could qualify for city status on the grounds of population size. |
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These topographical factors have served to restrict urban spread, resulting in a relatively stable population size and a low degree of mobility. |
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Throughout this period, the size and value of the gold coinage fluctuated considerably. |
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Similar in size to the A variant, the B sacrifices about a third of the A variant's fuel volume to accommodate the vertical flight system. |
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The scheme attracted criticism due to its large size and location, with some officials saying that it would interfere with harbour operations. |
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This was probably the first reported observation of the effects of quantum size, and might be considered to be the birth of nanoscience. |
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It sold briskly at first, despite its size, and was translated into many languages. |
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A life size seated statue of Darwin can be seen in the main hall of the Natural History Museum in London. |
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The life-sized statue was the same size as the subject, and since he had never fit in that chair, neither did the statue. |
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Being smaller in size and mass and being completely submerged, it was also far less prone to damage. |
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The size of ocean liners increased from 1880 to meet the needs of the human migration to the United States and Australia. |
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At first brass cylinders were used, but these were expensive and limited in size. |
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The resultant gap was filled with copper tokens that approximated the size of the halfpenny, struck on behalf of merchants. |
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The study also concluded that the effectiveness of the safety belt did not differ with size of car. |
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In some jurisdictions children below a certain size are forbidden to travel in front car seats. |
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School buses which are much bigger in size than the average vehicle allow for the mass transportation of students from place to place. |
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These were much more powerful for a given cylinder size than previous engines and could be made small enough for transport applications. |
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The number of individuals in a population is not critical, but instead a measure known as the effective population size. |
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The effective population size may not be the same for every gene in the same population. |
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These categories determine the locomotive's combination of physical size, starting tractive effort and maximum permitted speed. |
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After the Second World War, the base reverted to a civilian airport and gradually expanded to its present size. |
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For this reason Stansted has been involved in more hijack incidents than might be expected for an airport of its size. |
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The geography and small size of the island makes the climbing easily accessible. |
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Buildings vary widely in size, most were square or rectangular, though some round houses have been found. |
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The country's maritime territory in the Bay of Bengal is roughly equal to the size of its land area. |
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Caribbean societies are very different from other Western societies in terms of size, culture, and degree of mobility of their citizens. |
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Academics refer to power differences among groups rather than differences in population size among groups. |
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Additionally, countries such as India have been slowly undergoing social change, expanding the size of the urban working class. |
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The size of Vatican City is thus unrelated to the large global reach exercised by the Holy See as an entity quite distinct from the state. |
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Other even smaller groups had their own rulers, but their size means that they do not often appear in the histories. |
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With baptistries and mausolea, their often smaller size and different function made martyria suitable for architectural experimentation. |
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At Winchester, during the Norman period, an entire cathedral of unprecedented size was built from scratch in less than 20 years. |
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The church building reflects this status, and there is considerable variety in the size and style of parish churches. |
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Giants are the monsters of human appearance but prodigious size and strength common in the mythology and legends of many different cultures. |
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The kneecaps of Ajax were exactly the size of a discus for the boy's pentathlon, wrote Pausanias. |
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Veneration of God was also expressed by the relatively large size of these buildings. |
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Historically the park covered an area many times the size known as Windsor Forest, Windsor Royal Park or its current name. |
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Spain had founded small settlements in Florida and Georgia, but nowhere near the size of those in New Spain or the Caribbean islands. |
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Many types of cystidia exist, and assessing their presence, shape, and size is often used to verify the identification of a mushroom. |
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Their color, shape, size, attachment, ornamentation, and reaction to chemical tests often can be the crux of an identification. |
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Slightly expanded they are called buttons, once again because of the relative size and shape. |
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A cheese this size would use the equivalent of the daily milk production of 16,000 cows. |
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After large initials the following letters on the same line, or for some lines beyond, continue to be decorated at a smaller size. |
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Over the years the Friends scheme has grown in size and importance and by 2007 had almost 90,000 members. |
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Thus, wage per worker can be derived by dividing the total circulating capital by the size of the working population. |
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For example, an afflicted person may look at a larger object such as a basketball and perceive it as if it were the size of a golf ball. |
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It was the band's first experience playing large stadiums, whose size caused unease in the band. |
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Australopithecus garhi is certainly megadont, at least relative to craniofacial size. |
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The orchestra, depending on the size, contains almost all of the standard instruments in each group. |
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Music libraries vary in size from a few hundred tracks up to many thousands. |
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The remainder form the study collection which ranges in size from beads to large sculptures. |
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National libraries are usually notable for their size, compared to that of other libraries in the same country. |
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Libraries range in size from a few shelves of books to several million items. |
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The Laws of Cricket do not specify the size or shape of the field, but it is often oval. |
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Unlike those of most sports, cricket playing fields can vary significantly in size and shape. |
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While the dimensions of the pitch and infield are specifically regulated, the Laws of Cricket do not specify the size or shape of the field. |
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Stricter rules apply to the pitch size for matches between national representative teams. |
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For the first 100 years of the modern game, rackets were made of wood and of standard size, and strings were of animal gut. |
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Tennis balls must conform to certain criteria for size, weight, deformation, and bounce to be approved for regulation play. |
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The three most common shapes in order of size are the standard, the kite, and the smaller pear shape. |
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The size of the horse is one consideration for buyers and trainers when choosing a potential racehorse. |
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Coyotes can be challenging opponents for the dogs in physical confrontations, despite the size advantage of a large dog. |
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Each national football association has one vote, regardless of its size or footballing strength. |
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This marked the beginning of a rise in both the popularity and the size of the Olympics. |
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Environmental magnetism is sensitive to particle size, and has proven effective even at low detection levels. |
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Jump racing can be subdivided into steeplechasing and hurdling, according to the type and size of obstacles being jumped. |
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There have traditionally been several races at each event for various classes of motorcycles, based on engine size, and one class for sidecars. |
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However, as the size of the boat increases, the benefits of mainsail roller furling increase dramatically. |
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A box rule which specifies a maximum overall size for boats in the class, as well as features such as stability. |
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The Disarmament Commission obtained initial agreement from France, Italy, Spain, Japan, and Britain to limit the size of their navies. |
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In Portuguese, traces of the neuter plural can be found in collective formations and words meant to inform a bigger size or sturdiness. |
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The structure of the government appears to be closely correlated to the size and political development of the territory. |
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Cardiff had a population of between 1,500 and 2,000 in the Middle Ages, a relatively normal size for a Welsh town in this period. |
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The concentration of labour into factories has increased urbanisation and the size of settlements, to serve and house the factory workers. |
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It can be found using many factors, such as the size, the frequency of visits, etc. |
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The budget is funded by the member countries based on a formula related to the size of each member's gross national product. |
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Interestingly, unlike the vanilla SGD algorithm, the stochastic normalized gradient descent algorithm provably requires a minimal minibatch size. |
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Measured by only land area, the United States is third in size behind Russia and China, just ahead of Canada. |
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The United States, with its large size and geographic variety, includes most climate types. |
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Parliamentary boroughs in England ranged widely in size from small hamlets to large cities, partly because they had evolved haphazardly. |
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For earlier periods estimates of size and distribution of the population are based on observed demographic patterns. |
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Because of the differences in size and population the subdivisions of the states vary. |
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Hundreds of camps of varying size and function were created by the end of the war. |
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The average class size increased from 37 in 1927 to 43 in 1938 due to the resulting teacher shortage. |
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As the Air Force has reduced in size and modernised, the squadrons and aircraft types have tended towards groupings at fewer, larger bases. |
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In 1940, following the German capture of Paris, the size of the United States Navy was significantly increased. |
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The size of his offer indicates that he is eager to buy the house. |
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I had to reorder the shirt because they sent the wrong size. |
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The size and weight which the adipescent liver may acquire varies from five to eight or nine pounds. |
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Paris put fear into him, a city of monstrous size to which London was but a market town. Its ambages of streets bewildered. |
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This toughness is the result of a uniquely fine grain size imparted by vanadium to steel, anodium steels are readily cast, forged, and rolled. |
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Mandibles with 4 teeth decreasing in size from the apical teeth, the antepenultime smallest. |
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Analysis of CD59 antibodies on antiglycophorin A gated erythrocytes was used to identify erythrocyte PNH cone size. |
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Further, Bruce demonstrated variability in the size of the arthrobranch, which is reduced in Leander manningi. |
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For a grant this size, you would expect either that the vesting occurs over a considerably longer period or is backloaded. |
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A survival tactic I learned on the psych ward was how to quickly size up potential enemies or garden-variety badasses. |
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On talk shows Mr. Huckabee would hold up his campaign pledges and the bannerlike size 50 pants he wore in his previous life. |
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Aspect values on bicameral fonts are based on the size of the lowercase characters. |
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He pulled up his sleeve and there on his scrawny arm hung a Rolex the size of Big Ben. |
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Since protein constitutes the majority of the biomass of a cell, building new protein is a major way that cells increase their size. |
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Bring centres have set opening and closing times similar to Recycling Centres but are smaller in size and serve a smaller community. |
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Because of their small size and often delicate structure, bryophytes have a poor fossil record, dating back only about 290 million years. |
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Cheshire cheeses, on account of their great size, are generally packed flat, and in a single tier only. |
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One reason for this, the researchers say, is that it might be more difficult for a fiddler to size up an opponent of opposite clawedness. |
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Clinal variation in the size of the secondary sexual character may be due to the effects of the Fisher or the handicap process. |
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The morphology of cormophytes exhibits considerable variations in size, appearance of the various parts, and duration of the life cycle. |
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Near Rio Frio we shot several handsome birds, and saw a cayjotte, or wild dog, which in size nearly approached the wolf. |
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A big greyish rounded bulk, the size, perhaps, of a bear, was rising slowly and painfully out of the cylinder. |
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One darwin equals the rate of evolution that would produce a change in size by a factor of approximately 2.7 in one million years. |
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Dedecoration did not produce any advantages in observing the size of the displacement of dislocations. |
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The average peasant allotment, at 2.6 dessyatiny in 1900, was comparable in size to the typical smallholding in France or Germany. |
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Remove the pan and slice cookies into bars or squares, depending on the mouth size of your dog-child. |
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Within this size group, the epibiosis trophic strategy identified in the meiobenthic harpacticoid copepod was present only at this site. |
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If ever they fail of beauty, this failure is not be attributed to their size. |
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In other words, a majority of the Fortune 500 are of the size of universities, from 500 up to about 40000 employees. |
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The Gibbs phenomenon is characteristic of Fourier series at a discontinuity, its size being proportional to the magnitude of the discontinuity. |
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Cover with a piece of glad wrap or a large tea towel and let stand in a warm place until doubled in size, 1 to 2 hours. |
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The other variant is a rather large jar, smaller in size than a pithos, and has a characteristic collar rim and very grittish clay. |
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Other urban areas of considerable size and influence tend to be in northern England or the English Midlands. |
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The hawk boy's server is about the size and shape of a common garden hoe, but the handle is in the direction of the instrument. |
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For local government purposes, Scotland is divided into 32 council areas, with wide variation in both size and population. |
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The illustration accompanies a section of text setting out directions for estimating the size of a headwound. |
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The size of hefts will depend on the material requiring attention, and the annual volume is to cost about 15 marks. |
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Towards the end of the century the size of the helm port on large ships was much reduced by bringing the head of the rudder inside the ship. |
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Warfare of varying size however was a distinctive feature of barbarian culture. |
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Status among the early Germanic tribes was often gauged by the size of a man's cattle herd or by one's martial prowess. |
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They were also much lighter weight and smaller in size for a given horsepower than the stationary condensing engines. |
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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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Because of their differing origins the counties varied considerably in size. |
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Scotland is half the size of England and Wales in area, but has roughly the same length of coastline. |
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If a browser window is larger than a layout table's fixed size, your viewers end up looking at a honkingly big white void. |
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Despite its impressive size, the OED is neither the world's largest nor the earliest exhaustive dictionary of a language. |
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For the first time, there was no attempt to start them on letter boundaries, and they were made roughly equal in size. |
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Also, it is thought that Late Paleolithic and Mesolithic human hunters might have affected the size of the last mammoth populations in Europe. |
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The only known comparable sites of similar date are only a quarter of the size of Avebury. |
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Fig. 9. represents a hydrophore used for procuring specimens of water from moderate depths, drawn on a scale of one-tenth of the full size. |
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Ptolemy offered explanations for many phenomena concerning illumination and colour, size, shape, movement and binocular vision. |
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In the following years, the Romans conquered more of the island, increasing the size of Roman Britain. |
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Soldiery of the era ranged from lightly armed mounted archers to heavy infantry, in regiments of varying size and quality. |
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The size of the burhs ranged from tiny outposts such as Pilton to large fortifications in established towns, the largest being at Winchester. |
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In 896, he ordered the construction of a small fleet, perhaps a dozen or so longships that, at 60 oars, were twice the size of Viking warships. |
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The size of the Danish population is far greater than the population size of the Faroe Islands and Greenland. |
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In the 1st quarter of 2009, the GNP of Norway surpassed Sweden's for the first time in history, although its population is half the size. |
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I bumped the font size up to make my document easier to read. |
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For example, Heinrich Hertz did not report the size of the room used to test Maxwell's equations, which later turned out to account for a small deviation in the results. |
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Examples of field data include the physical size of a settlement, and how it grows over time, and the appearance, or disappearance, of settlements. |
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A further building, designated Concourse D and of similar size to Concourse C, may yet be built to the east of the existing site, providing up to another 16 stands. |
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Moreover, all the outgrowths which I have said constitute the acantha are not of equal size in all the vertebrae, and Nature has done this with wonderful forethought. |
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Billiard balls vary from game to game, in size, design and quantity. |
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As baronial armies grew in size, the rule of law was weakened. |
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The idea was that the books were of a size for the soldiers to read. |
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Following World War I, the Royal Navy was significantly reduced in size, although at the onset of the Second World War it was still the world's largest. |
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After the Second World War, the decline of the British Empire and the economic hardships in Britain forced the reduction in the size and capability of the Royal Navy. |
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We had prepared, by precipitation methods, finely divided crystalline apatites that were similar in crystal size and x-ray diffraction profile to bone apatite. |
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As a result, the RN surface fleet continues to reduce in size. |
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A line of further research may focus on mechanisms of size scaling in specific PD subgroups in order to find an explanation for the existing interstudy variability. |
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Due to its diversity, large student population, and convenient size and location, Cardiff has seen a rise in the number of people coming to the city to learn English. |
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They are almost always accompanied by immature bald eagles that, although about the same size as a mature baldie, have a darkened head and mottled feathers. |
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Not all countries have every level of division, depending on their size. |
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Snow shattered and spilled down the slope. Within seconds, the avalanche was the size of more than a thousand cars barreling down the mountain and weighed millions of pounds. |
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The crown was set with six beryls of excellent size and color. |
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The consuls had to work with the senate, which was initially an advisory council of the ranking nobility, or patricians, but grew in size and power. |
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I created an alert window using java script, but I found the fonts too small. Is there a way of controling font size and style when java alert window opens. |
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James only in late August seriously began to consider the possibility of a Dutch invasion and then overestimated the size of the naval force the Dutch would bring against him. |
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However, during the 1950s through to the 1970s the removal of the partition forming part of the enclosure to the box bed recesses to increase the size of rooms was common. |
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The export of coal had become the railway's main business, but the staiths at Stockton had inadequate storage and the size of ships was limited by the depth of the Tees. |
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Aston Manor Brewery is currently the only brewery of any significant size. |
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You may only carry on items that are smaller than a certain size. |
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She began a circuit of the dining room, peering at the baronial fireplace with its andirons the size of torture racks, and heavy oak carvers like gnarled thrones. |
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The Jacobins expanded the size of the army, and Carnot replaced many aristocratic officers with soldiers who had demonstrated their patriotism, if not their ability. |
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The pain pattern is so intimately related to the ingestion of food that the patient will reduce the size of meals, become reluctant to eat, and even develop frank cibophobia. |
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The creation of the Praetorian Guard and his reforms in the military, creating a standing army with a fixed size of 28 legions, ensured his total control over the army. |
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Even small nations now had armies rivalling the size of the Great Powers' forces of past wars but most of these were poor quality forces only suitable for garrison duties. |
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An abridged dictionary can be further condensed to pocket size. |
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The last track on each of the three sections is a professional course, where you can customise your bike by changing the tyres and the size of chainwheel. Coo! |
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Now you are ready for the copy shop! Have your parents take you to the copy shop and ask the technician to reduce your art to fit the memo-pad size you want. |
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The assessments in the Hidage reflect the relative size of the provinces. |
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It had a slender stem several feet high, and from its top stood up a single tongue of flame, an intensely red flower of the size and shape of a small corn-cob. |
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Over the years the paper grew in size, readership and breadth of coverage. |
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The Cougar has entirely disappeared, or is very rarely met with. This animal was about the size of the wolf, of a gray color, strong, active, fierce and untameable. |
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The goal height and ball size are the same as for adults, but players rotate positions during the game, permitting each player to play each position. |
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Despite these successes, the numbers continued to mount against Napoleon, and the French army was pinned down by a force twice its size and lost at the Battle of Leipzig. |
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The behaviour of the audience during the tour, as well as the large size of the venues, proved a strong influence on their concept album The Wall. |
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With the end of the Cold War, navies have decreased in size and patrol less frequently, while trade has increased, making organized piracy far easier. |
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After the 1970s, the festival took place almost every year and grew in size, with the number of attendees sometimes being swollen by gatecrashers. |
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I hope the addition of KenKen to the puzzles page is an accommodation to the new size, not preliminary to discontinuation of the cryptic, acrostic, diagramless, etc. |
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In the disturbed zone, introgression was less frequent and slender body shape was associated with diatomivorous behaviour, smaller size and greater gut vacuity. |
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This binomial is a reference to the large size of the distiflagellomere. |
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This involved the demolition of almost the whole site including several adjacent buildings to make room for a major increase in the size of the complex. |
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To reproduce right-of-way, speed-restriction, yard-limit, and other signs, photograph the original signs, and make prints, scale size, on doubleweight paper. |
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The goal of downstaging is to decrease the size and number of tumors in patients who do not meet the criteria for transplantation on initial evaluation. |
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First you should know that the size of the drain hole in the bottom of the sink is reflective of the drainpipe's diameter that has been standardized by the plumbing industry. |
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To get a feel for the size, the energy required to completely liberate an electron from the ground state of a hydrogen atom is 13.6 electron volts. |
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In man the encephalos reaches its full size about seven years of age. |
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Called khubz, the bread is about the size of pita but much denser. |
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Estrildids and ploceids are clearly different in courtship posture, clutch size, egg coloration, pattern in mouth of the young, and mode of begging of the young. |
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Tripping a walker the size of a house is difficult but not impossible. You will need high-tensile wire and suitably grounded posts. Ask your Ewok friends for help. |
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In conclusion, initial surgery approach, tumor size, extrathyroid invasion, lymph node metastases, and pathological type may be related to PTC recurrence. |
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Lying on the ground, when fired, it kicked me back a foot. There was no way a person my size was going to be able to do an effective job with this gun. |
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The small shirt doesn't fit me, so I'll buy the medium size. |
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There is no requirement for the size of wards to be the same within a district, so one ward can return one member and another ward can return two. |
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Which thread does one first insert into the garment, blue or white? How long are the fringes? What is the minimum size of a fringe-worthy garment? |
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The kief, which is the flower and seeds of the plant, is the strongest, and a pipe of it half the size of a common English tobacco-pipe, is sufficient to intoxicate. |
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It also concerns the size and distribution of gains from trade. |
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Due to the greatness of his size, he was an effective bodyguard. |
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The size of the vocabulary of German is difficult to estimate. |
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While no constituencies were disfranchised in either of those countries, voter qualifications were standardised and the size of the electorate was expanded in both. |
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The size and cost of a symphony orchestra, compared to the size of the base of supporters, became an issue that struck at the core of the institution. |
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However, the larger colleges' sites are of similar size to these areas. |
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Most towns and districts of any size on the river have at least one club. |
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The size of the ground hole crater from the blast indicates it was a bomb. |
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Class size has been around 400 students in every annual cohort. |
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We have made measurements on the size of the helicotrema two ways, either by reconstructing the helicotremas from serial sections, or directly in osmium-fixed preparations. |
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While the resulting ice balls make a dramatic visual statement, their size and shape also serve a functional purpose, chilling the cocktail with little meltage. |
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The inner ward was created during Richard the Lionheart's reign, when a moat was dug to the west of the innermost ward, effectively doubling the castle's size. |
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Settlements remained of a fairly constant size throughout the period. |
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After English people were forbidden from wearing foreign cloth in 1326, Ripon developed a cloth industry which was third in size in Yorkshire after York and Halifax. |
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Brawn GP went through a painful size reduction, laying off hundreds of employees, but eventually won the year's world championships with Jenson Button and Rubens Barrichello. |
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The community and its successors have grown in size by the accession of new member states and in power by the addition of policy areas to its remit. |
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The size of London's economy makes it the largest city by GDP in Europe. |
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Due to its great size in comparison to other English counties, functions have been undertaken over time by its subdivisions, which have also been subject to periodic reform. |
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This airport has experienced significant and rapid growth in both terminal size and passenger facilities since 1996, when improvements began, until the present day. |
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Over time the aesthetics of the design became more important, as the castle's appearance and size began to reflect the prestige and power of its occupant. |
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The narrow slits were intended to protect the defender by providing a very small target, but the size of the opening could also impede the defender if it was too small. |
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The size of the Egyptian collections now stand at over 110,000 objects. |
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Greenlandic women excel at football relative to the size of the country. |
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In his book The Comparison of Romulus with Theseus Plutarch describes how the Athenians uncovered the body of Theseus, which was of more than ordinary size. |
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The revision is expected to roughly double the dictionary in size. |
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Free trade creates winners and losers, but theory and empirical evidence show that the size of the winnings from free trade are larger than the losses. |
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This method of digestion would have required a large throughput of food and thus links the large mouthful size to the low nutritive content of the chosen grasses and sedges. |
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However, analysis of grave furnishing, size and deepness of grave pits, position within the cemetery, did not lead to any strong conclusions on the social divisions. |
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However, conventional techniques, using Neolithic technology as basic as shear legs, have been demonstrably effective at moving and placing stones of a similar size. |
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Island countries are more susceptible to attack by large, continental countries due to their size and dependence on sea and air lines of communication. |
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Specifically, genome size may help resolve conflicting hypotheses about the origin of polyploids and identify putative parental combinations in hybridogenous species. |
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The National Gallery at Pall Mall was frequently overcrowded and hot and its diminutive size in comparison with the Louvre in Paris was the cause of national embarrassment. |
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Hydrostatic locks are being successfully employed in tower cookers, and have been demonstrated to be sound in reduced size form from an engineering standpoint. |
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Those are ranked according to the size of their parts within Europe only. |
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He expanded the Claudian tunnel to three times its original size. |
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Historically, Italy has been one of the leading European horse racing nations, albeit some respects behind Great Britain, Ireland and France in size and prestige. |
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It sold well in France, but was eventually eclipsed by the Renault 11 hatchback, as the hatchback bodystyle became more popular on this size of car. |
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By 440 CE, an imperial law frankly states that the Roman state has insufficient tax revenue to fund an army of a size required by the demands placed upon it. |
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As the medical corps grew in size there was also specialization evolving. |
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The hide would differ in size according to the value and resources of the land, and the landowner would have to provide service based on how many hides he owned. |
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The cultivated mushroom as well as the common field mushroom initially form a minute fruiting body, referred to as the pin stage because of their small size. |
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While players of other outdoor sports deal with similar variations of field surface and stadium covering, the size and shape of their fields are much more standardised. |
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The Twingo was roomier than any prior cars of its size range. |
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Norway has obtained one of the highest standards of living in the world in part by having a large amount of natural resources compared to the size of the population. |
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Fitness is measured by an organism's ability to survive and reproduce, which determines the size of its genetic contribution to the next generation. |
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The time for a neutral allele to become fixed by genetic drift depends on population size, with fixation occurring more rapidly in smaller populations. |
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The settlement probably shrank in size and may even have been abandoned. |
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The maighin digona's size varied according to the owner's rank. |
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