Specifically, the normally green stems began to discolor from the outside of the tree inward. |
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Early feeding occurs at the crowns and below the soil surface on the roots and stems of small plants. |
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The popularity of email stems largely from its user friendliness, efficiency, and versatility in facilitating asynchronous communication. |
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The plant's shiny, fleshy leaves, stems and underground tuber store water, so it's able to go weeks without water. |
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Tannins are astringent substances found in the seeds, skin and stems of grapes. |
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Electronic music styles have sprouted like shoots off the main stems of house, trance, hard core, techno and drum and bass. |
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On the sides, long-eared creatures utter foliage from their mouths, and more stems issue from two heads at the rear. |
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The wine glasses are very thin and delicate, with elegant slender stems and a simple, clean design. |
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Shoots were cut, divided into stems with broad leaves, tendrils, flowers, and fruits, dried and weighed separately. |
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We serve broccoli stems and florets steamed and tossed with a vinaigrette salad dressing just as you would a salad. |
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Long stems of summer flowering hardy jasmine that protrude from their support can be cut back to tidy them up. |
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Mature specimens develop a thick trunk and stems with leaves and flowers at the top of the plant, often too high for the gardener to enjoy. |
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Symptoms include small black spots on leaves, petioles and stems of new shoots. |
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The proper way for the corsage to be worn is the flower going upward and the stems down. |
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Using sharp pruners, cut the stems cleanly where they meet larger branches. |
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It would be untrue to suggest, however, that the attractive, flowing style evinced by this team stems directly from Kerr's football philosophy. |
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Well, I was outside the shop sweeping the dead leaves and flower stems away into the street gutter, and He walked by. |
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As so much of their art, rooted in portraiture, stems from their personal relationships, this is hardly surprising. |
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They have alternate, elliptical, smooth-edged leaves growing on smooth stems bearing two or more flowers. |
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Avoid pruning leaves or stems while the fruit is ripening, and consider shading the fruit. |
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As they ooze from the pycnidia, they are splashed by rain onto the leaves, petioles and stems of newly emerged shoots. |
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All of this fogeyish complaining stems from reading the title of this album, the debut from the Capitol Years. |
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Cut back around a third of the oldest stems to just above ground level to encourage the production of new growth from the base of the plant. |
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Spent flower stems can be removed as well as dead leaves but leave healthy foliage to die back naturally. |
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Buy potted bulbs when the stems are short and the buds are formed but not open. |
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Have you calculated the necessary down-pressure on each blade necessary to crush the stems of a rye cover crop? |
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Variables included the number of stems and percent plant cover in the shrub, subcanopy, and canopy layers. |
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We conclude that number of stem segments on longest stems of plants was a good predictor of force necessary to remove terminal segments. |
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In late autumn, cut down the stems to 6in above ground level when the leaves turn brown and lift the tubers as required. |
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Older studies noted that runners, stolons or prostrate stems of many plants became more erect when shaded. |
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High above tree line, this group had survived on a diet of heather, azalea, hair grass, and the leaves and stems of cowberries. |
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The court considered a belief may be honestly held whether it stems from intoxication, stupidity, forgetfulness or inattention. |
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Another key reason that I'm crazy about marriage stems from the fact that it truly is a unique relationship, and one to be valued and cherished. |
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Once plants had built strong stems and trunks, they could stand upright and reach for the sun. |
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Part of the price cut stems from a new body welding line at the Kentucky plant that Toyota is adopting worldwide. |
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It can also reproduce asexually using stems that creep along the ground and establish new roots, giving rise to its name. |
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For formal hedges, shorten main and secondary stems just before the plants begin their second season of growth. |
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Still, much of that probably stems from the dialogue, which is full of jarring shifts between period-speak and anachronisms. |
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For best results apply mulch to a depth of least 15 cm thick, avoiding the area immediately around plant stems and tree trunks. |
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Egyptian papyrus was formed by cutting strips from the stems of the papyrus plant, placing them in layers, pounding, then drying them. |
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Because of the harsh environment, most plants that survive in the tundra are dwarfed, and many have stems that creep along the ground. |
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The Graphic mine in the same district is known for smithsonite replacements after crinoid stems and mollusk shells. |
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A sub-sample of 15 stems per variety was used for anatomical studies and quantification of tension wood. |
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Such animosity stems from a particularly low level of morale among the Guardsmen and reservists. |
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The tree's main stem or stems is called a leader, a continuation of the trunk. |
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Cut back the old stems to around ground level then, and give the plants a feed. |
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Most of the sphinctozoans and crinoid stems are found almost complete and articulated, lying parallel to bedding. |
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Crisp green stems should be loosely wrapped in paper towel and kept in the crisper. |
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Most of ephedra's activity stems from the ephedrine component, which produces amphetamine-like actions. |
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It's leaves are deeply cut, but many stems make up a single frond on this plant. |
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Keep the mulch two to three inches away from tree and shrub stems to prevent stem decay and pest problems. |
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Place the freshly cut stems in a bottle of water and place in contact with the defoliated loosestrife plants. |
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For the philosopher Roland Barthes, the power of furtive photography stems from its ability to disclose part of its subject's subconscious. |
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Look at it closely and you'll see stems as thin as fuse wire supporting dazzling-white, tiny blooms like a mass of twisted fairy lights. |
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Among the wildflowers are a wild geranium, an aster with smooth stems and leaves, leafy arnica, yellow monkey flower, meadow rue, and bluebells. |
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The first two are internal, one with simple word stems and the other with complex or idiomatic expressions. |
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You will find potpourri, herb plant collections, lavender stems and informational booklets. |
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Notice how alternating floral blossoms on bifurcated stems are superimposed on the flutes between each of the gadroons. |
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Long, sturdy, round flower stems develop from the leaf rosette starting in May. |
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The pith of the stems is used for antiphlogistic, antipyretic and other medicinal purposes. |
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The stems can be blanched by earthing them up, which makes the astringent flavour milder. |
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Standing them in water will keep the stems shiny and plump but be careful when using electric lighting near water. |
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Bulb flowers such as daffodils should have their stems snipped across at an angle. |
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A friend had given us a beautiful Easter lily, two stems with four or five lilies on each, and more to come. |
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Dark green leaves arranged in rosettes cover the ground at a rapid rate, and stems clad in bright yellow bracts illuminate the spring garden. |
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Lincoln's status as a great patenter, incidentally, stems from a single patent for a device for lifting riverboats over shoals. |
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The development of some of the most vital weapons in our armament stems from open, unclassified fundamental scientific research abroad. |
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They are mostly epiphytes and lithophytes with fleshy or wiry stems that may grow erect or pendant. |
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Aside from the obvious things such as hard work and passion, business success stems from imagination and an enquiring mind. |
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The stems are slightly swollen and if the gall wasps have emerged, their emergence holes are also noticeable. |
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I think the whole concept of highlighting the servicing character of a hospital stems from an over-preoccupation with superficial glitter. |
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They take their glasses delicately by the stems and bring them together in a mock show of etiquette. |
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Thirdly, prophecy and social action are captured by a knowing that stems from the will. |
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My lament, you see, stems from the tragic demise of one of the most influential professional couples in all of the film world. |
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The larvae of Japanese beetles, they've gnawed the roots until nothing remains to nourish the stems and leaves. |
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Grass pea is a weedy annual with one to several glabrous stems arising from 20-50 cm high. |
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Sympodial in nature, which means the plant has connected stems which cease growth after flowering, the dendrobium has pseudobulbs at the base. |
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Without in any way deprecating entrepreneurship and ingenuity, its power stems from its command of money and what money can buy. |
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The association of the Purple Heart with wounds or fatality suffered in the line of meritorious service also stems from this time. |
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Food is mainly roots, leaves, stems and shoots of grasses, reeds and sedges. |
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As the flowers die the stems become woody and the blooms dry while the foliage dies back and the plant takes on its winter form. |
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Fusicoccum is a fungus which infects blueberry stems causing dieback and plant decline. |
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The strongest stems are several feet long and have been carrying fat, pale green buds for some time. |
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They have intriguing hooded flowers on tall airy stems that add to the vertical dimension of the garden. |
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Corn gromwell is an annual with erect, slender, single stems or several stems branched from the base. |
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Misting their stems regularly will also help provide additional humidity which they like. |
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Use orange Chinese lanterns, bright rosehips, stems of red or orange berries, or chilies. |
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Lechea minor can be easily distinguished from that species by its stems more than 5 cm tall, ovate to elliptic leaves and ovoid capsules. |
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This plant has yellowish green, grass-like leaves, and its fertile stems may reach three feet or more in height and produce many yellow flowers. |
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Carefully cut out as many of the stems as necessary, taking out diseased or weak growth first and untangle the rest if possible. |
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Remove leaves from the Chinese kale or cabbage, and cut the stems into 1 inch pieces, then chill for garnish. |
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Our analysis of dissected stems and the outer anatomy of fossil logs indicates that the Eocene Metasequoia were strongly self-pruning. |
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Eventually a mat of stems forms around the host plant and the dodder loses contact with the soil. |
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With its prostate growth habit, the ground-hugging stems of this form are clothed in glaucous foliage. |
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The percentage of stems affected by damaging lesions of eyespot at 22.1pc was the highest on record. |
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Mopheads bloom in solid masses, their clusters often so heavy that they cause their stems to droop and bend. |
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In a nutshell, coal ports are exposed to the vulnerability that stems from overdependence on the fortunes of a single commodity. |
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The species in this section are subshrubby with the stems being woody or succulent at the base. |
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The problem stems from big cities dumping all their problem families on the old seaside resorts. |
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One plant we should see more of is Rubus biflorus, the ornamental bramble, whose prickly stems are covered in a white, waxy bloom. |
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The first stage is rapid, vigorous growth characterized by unusually dense formation of prickles on stems and canes. |
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The need to raise the debt ceiling stems from the record budget deficits of the past two years. |
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Some the stems of the flowers seem too weak to support the flower, so they bend over and sometimes break off. |
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In these stems and leaves with intercalary meristems, the upward transpiration stream clearly bypassed most of the enlarging cells. |
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The stems and rachises both contain a high percentage of pith and vascular tissue. |
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Soot and char make it difficult for equipment operators to judge wood quality of the stems being harvested. |
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Scars of early-falling-off stipular sheaths ring the stems of magnolias, Yellow-poplars and Sycamores. |
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From there stems new business, and with new businesses and new product comes trade and commerce. |
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Mature plants, which often grow wider than they grow tall, develop a good framework of stems with flaky fawn bark. |
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Juvenile plants and regrowth stems usually have obovate leaves, but these are soon deciduous and rarely appear on older stems. |
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The ruling stems from a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of Presbyterian minister Matthew Peterson. |
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At heart, I fear that much of the ill-informed criticism stems from this misunderstanding about the role of columnists and commentators. |
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Large stems of F. grandifolia experienced high mortality rates, but were balanced by ingrowth of smaller stems. |
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Irvine writes that a decoction of crushed stems is drunk in Ghana for severe sickness and weakness. |
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The payment of principal and interest on these instrument stems from the cash flows collected on the underlying assets in the pool. |
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The leonine head has a grimacing, tooth-filled mouth from which issue stems with pellet decoration ending in foliage scrolls. |
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Tall bugbane is a tall wildflower with branched and leafy stems arising from 100-200 cm high. |
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Remove all rootstock suckers or low-growing branches, and pinch the main stems to keep the height manageable. |
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The thick succulent stems of spekboom readily sprout when a freshly-cut branch is simply inserted into soil. |
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Spent flower blooms and affected buds, leaves or stems should be removed when plants are dry. |
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Green stems are interconnected by sensitive petioles and bear pinnate leaves. |
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After a rain, its barren, gray-black stems change overnight to green as small leaves emerge from buds covering the plant. |
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The best time to take cuttings is during the softwood stage in spring or early summer, when stems are still green and pliable. |
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Hs fatal fascination with the Arctic stems from his desire to find an environment suited to his peculiar slowness. |
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The history of Slovak parliamentarianism stems from the struggles of Slovaks for national identity and state sovereignty. |
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They are small annuals or undershrubs, with small green flowers crowding along the stems intermixed with leaves. |
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Almost all of my work stems from a concern with the strange juxtaposition of the very abstract and the very concrete. |
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The ambivalence stems from Wittgenstein's admiration of Freud combined with his staunch condemnation of psychoanalytic theory. |
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Google's success stems from its uncanny ability to sort useful web pages from dross. |
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Hydraulic conductance measurements on single stems at different levels of applied pressure were the repeated factor. |
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Conifer cones, cone scales, cone seeds, and tiny scaly conifer stems are found at a number of short-shoot sites. |
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Trim off tough or discolored bottoms of mushroom stems and any bruised spots or blemishes. |
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Fasten small brown paper bags carefully to the stems with twist ties and staple the bottoms closed if necessary. |
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They attack the stems of roses, blackberries, raspberries, and dewberries growing in damp, shady places. |
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The shield bugs were darting up and down the dandelion stems and into the seed heads. |
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The millennium bug stems from mainly older computer systems which were programmed to read only the last two digits of a year. |
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Cut leafless stems of rose and abelia into 10-inch lengths and set them directly in the propagation bed or container. |
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The dramatic crisis stems from Galileo's enforced abjuration in 1633 of his belief in a heliocentric universe. |
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They put out tubes holding cuttings of milkweed stems with two leaves, whole potted milkweed plants, and microscope slides coated with glycerin. |
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The flower stems tend to flop and I find it best grown through other plants or some twiggy sticks. |
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I then turn to herbaceous dicot species, whose aerial stems essentially lack significant quantities of wood. |
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Although deciduous, it reveals an attractive network of small stems and branches when bereft of leaves. |
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More likely however is that the worrying lack of form stems from instabilities off the field. |
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Place live stems of white lilies cut to slightly different heights in a bell-shaped glass container. |
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The flowers are clusters of bell-shaped blossoms on stems that rise above the foliage, leaves being deep green and either oval or lance shaped. |
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Most of the perches were exposed horizontal stems or branches about 1 cm in diameter. |
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Recent studies found that acidic solutions could increase the flow throughout the stems after 40 min of flushing. |
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Working towards daily bliss, a little at a time, can have big pay-offs in terms of lasting beauty that stems from deep within you. |
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The search for new ideas stems from a feeling that things are running out of control. |
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Collective apathy towards the problems faced by our nation stems from the burden of self-aggrandizement. |
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The interdependency of the two women stems in part from that which the father will not or cannot give. |
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In wild-type Arabidopsis plants, the roots, hypocotyls, and inflorescence stems exhibit gravitropic bending. |
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But the problem stems not only from the constructs of English, but also the influence of Latin grammatical structures. |
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Ploughman's Spikenard is a tall, but rather plain plant with purplish stems and dull yellow flowers. |
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The phloem of some stems also contains thick-walled, elongate fiber cells which are called bast fibers. |
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The horned Angora goats use horns to pull down multiflora stems for feeding. |
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If this has happened, gently firm around the base of the plant with the foot being careful not to damage any stems or leaves. |
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But just let it rain and the next thing I know I've got thistles out there with stems big as my wrist. |
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When the stems of the bushes are wounded, even slightly, mastic exudes as a clear sticky substance. |
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The branched stems are waxy with purple blotches and are hollow between nodes. |
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Once thought to be a terrible menace, some experts now advise to ignore these bulges which appear in the stems of all types of citrus trees. |
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I think my Nokia problem stems from a wobbly disconnect that I attempted when I noticed someone had sent me a 2.5 MB attachment. |
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To dry agrimony, spread out the leaves, flowers, and stems on a wire rack in a warm, shaded location. |
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While flails can cut strong stems, a circular saw is recommended for stems over two centimetres. |
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The entire, sorry saga of managerial incompetence stems from that single decision. |
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The flower stems should be tall, around two feet in height, and the flowers a rich cherry red, each petal edged in scarlet. |
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Saw-wort is an attractive, medium to tall, thistle-like plant with wiry grooved stems and no spines. |
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Violet blue flower clusters resembling baby's breath are borne on stems 4 to 6 feet tall. |
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A moss is a small, nonvascular plant that has both stems and leaves but no roots. |
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Harvested plants were separated into lateral roots, taproots, remaining leaves and stems in the crown, and regrowing leaves and stems. |
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Select a small, straight-sided glass vessel, cut the stems to the same length, and graduate the blossoms up the side of the bowl. |
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Such spectacularly bad timing stems less from faulty reasoning by fund owners than from faulty emotions. |
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Magnus has large, warm purple flowers with an orange cone on strong stems about 90 cm tall and has a very long flowering period from July to October. |
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Three television sets surmounted a polished wood counter, with innumerable flasks and glasses dangling by their stems in racks above the rows of bottled liquors and beverages. |
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This is due to a phenomenon known as allelopathy where there are chemicals in the leaves, flowers and stems of the flamboyant which inhibit the growth of other plants. |
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Looking at the stiff stems topped with dry flowers, it is hard to believe they were, only a short while ago, thick and fleshy and held above a mound of soft, succulent leaves. |
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The secondary phloem in perennial stems consists of sieve tubes with companion cells, storage and crystalliferous parenchyma and sclereids in both species. |
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Their most important trait, the economical production of beef under range conditions, stems from the fact that Galloways have been bred from their origin for beef production. |
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Better to train it against a wall, tying the main stems to wires and pruning back all side branches to within two buds of the main framework each summer. |
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If only about 60 percent of the better stems are staked with canes and the other lateral shoots removed through disbudding, the plant forms bigger, and more showy flowers. |
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In the past week, the fall in temperature has turned the leaves and stems of the dogwood a glorious crimson, making it a marvellous foil for mauve Michaelmas daisies. |
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When shopping for bok choy and nappa cabbage, look for smooth stems and unwilted leaves. |
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Look for firm dense bunches of nappa and bok choy with smooth stems and unwilted leaves. |
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Look for Chinese broccoli that is a bright vivid colour, has flexible stems and unwilted heads. |
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Seen from far away, the comet will look like a small potato sprouting an immense growth of stems and foliage. |
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From this primacy of the intrinsic in the analysis stems the importance given to the theory of the course of experience that we will now present. |
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If these essays are any guide, Americans' shopping addiction stems from a heap of psychological baggage. |
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Long floral stems develop with the beginning or about the middle of the summer, over which are born from many flowers of color apricot-cream. |
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This communication problem stems from the vestige of a Geordie accent that even seasoned English theatre professionals attempt to master at their peril. |
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The primacy of logic stems from the fact that we have to know what knowledge is so we will recognize that we have met its demands in a particular case. |
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Another aspect of the district's impact on student achievement stems from the district's role as implementer of state policy. |
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The finish on the origials tops is a little less chrome like in appearence. The stems seem a little more polished as compared to the the repro. |
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The use of nettle stems as a revulsive for therapeutic flogging datea from Antiquité. |
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The plants are capable of accumulating high quantities of contaminants in their stems and leafage. |
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Partial tree mortality causes an opening in the forest providing space for smaller stems whose growth had been suppressed to start to grow again. |
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So, the dilemma of modeling stems from the fact that the model would either be incomputable or else incomplete. |
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This perennial aquatic or semi-terrestrial stoloniferous herb with branched, thick and hollow stems can grow till 10 m long. |
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Their popularity stems from the fact that the chemical's molecules easily slip and slide past each other, making the materials pliable. |
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Wooden stems cross through the leaves from one end to another to give the bouquet a global dynamism. |
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The tamarillos are held in clusters of 2-3 fruits each on long thin stems and are easily harvested. |
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This hesitance stems from the belief that the trainees should be given the time to solve their own problems. |
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Its perpetual youth probably stems from its purity, total transparency and unobtrusiveness. |
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It is an achene which develops first at the end of a juicy stems and edible too, which is a false fruit called the cashew apple. |
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The complexity of the work of Rabelais stems from just this mixture of seriousness and bawdiness. |
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If belief in God stems from intellectual inadequacy, then all believers are feebleminded – and the most devout are the most feebleminded of all. |
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Remove the stems of the mushrooms, and carefully scrape away the gills using a spoon. |
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Most of the queasiness stems from the continued accumulation of bumper compensation packages. |
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Some stems are so narrow as to be threadlike, as in many tropical epiphytic ferns. |
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They are followed by orange to reddish pome fruits that cling to the stems well into winter and are an important food for birds. |
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A further characteristic of cycad stems not occurring in cycadeoids, seed ferns, or coniferophytes is the presence of girdling leaf traces. |
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In any case, one point must be made: instability largely stems from underdevelopment, which causes bad governance and unrest. |
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I raise this because our current interest in the Arctic stems from two issues: climate change and resource development. |
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The main stem is largely buried, a rosette of decumbent or erect stems 4 cm thick and up to 75 cm in height appear from the main stem. |
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Canada's development as an independent country with a unique identity stems in no small measure from its achievements in times of war. |
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There is a general belief that much of the venture into drug-taking among young people stems from unsatisfying family life. |
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Once the soapwort is ready, cut as much as you need, chop up the roots, stems and leaves and boil it up. |
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This probably stems from daytime loads being met directly by the module inverter, reducing losses in rectification for storage in the battery. |
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Shorter lily stems make the focal point with pandanus leaves that get tangled. |
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Leaves, cuneate, broadly cuneate, or spatulate in shape and highly variable in size, are arranged in whorls at the nodes of stems and branches. |
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A pierced frieze rounded on the sides, stands on foliage stems wich divide at the top thus releasing a large crosier. |
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The message's effectiveness stems from its obviousness and is made even stronger by visuals with which everyone can identify. |
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In susceptible blueberry cultivars, blighting of 1-year-old woody stems with flower buds is the predominant symptom in North Carolina. |
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The characterization also stems from the antique doctrine of the four humors, in which red represents the choleric temperament. |
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My gracefulness stems from the fact that I'm walking directly on my toes, sort of like a furry ballerina. |
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The slender, stringlike stems of the dodder may be yellow, orange, pink, or brown in colour. |
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Its leafy, elongated stems are 8-12 mm in diameter, initially green and covered by the amplexicaul, striated leaf bases which become dry, papery and grey with age. |
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The problem of missing data stems from more than just police obstructionism or oversight. |
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The common thread that binds Americans stems from their individualism, self-reliance, independence, courage to take risks and readiness to challenge the impossible. |
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That it stems from an engrained sense of unworthiness and shame is something that Dunne is winningly eager to acknowledge. |
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Pinching leggy plants promotes stronger stems and better flowers. |
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Dwarf varieties produce smaller flowers but their stems are not as leggy. |
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Pinch stems as needed to avoid legginess and stimulate bushiness. |
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A cloud of light in tough moulded Japanese paper hooked up by four wickerwork stems at the top. |
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The effect stems in large part from the availability of prepaid services, coupled with the development of mobile payphone services. |
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Their puzzlement stems from an analytical yardstick that ties NATO to the single purpose of providing for collective defence, argues Mr. Rhle. |
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They can be very invasive, spreading with suckers and by stems rooting where they touch the soil but hard annual pruning will keep growth in check. |
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Equally significant, their bare winter stems are a rich mahogany red. |
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Indeed, the current American spate of interest in apocalyptic prophecy stems precisely from attempts to draw meaning from complex and difficult imagery. |
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The temperature dependence of most chemical reactions stems from the activation energy associated with them. |
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Increasingly, these include hedge funds. Part of the expected windfall in 2006 stems from the wrathful weather last year. |
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The apparatus stems from a wooden horse introduced by the Romans and used to teach mounting and dismounting. |
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It all stems from a decision made almost half a century ago by the Some Like It Hot star's legal representatives in the wake of her 1962 death. |
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This colouring is natural and stems from the proliferation of these strains of local bacteria. |
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The main uncertainty with regard to the above outlook stems from the external environment. |
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The survival of these fish is not one that stems from overharvesting by the commercial or sports fishermen, or in fact by native fishermen. |
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Our frustration stems from the fact that we can see that the results have not yet been achieved. |
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The recovery of the fiber in branches and in the tops of hardwood stems strongly affected the felling and processing productivity. |
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But it also stems from cruel and inhumane regimes that suppress their people's freedom and rights. |
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It stems from the law of God and is essentially orientated towards the divine, via the face of man here below. |
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Once you know more about where the conflict stems from, you will be better equipped to address it. |
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Perhaps the most serious problem with them stems from the fact that they are based on individual judgment and therefore are subjective. |
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Its great popularity stems from the fact that the food could be easily prepared because there would be only a few guests to eat it. |
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This improvement stems from the exploitation of physical properties, enabling continuous progress to be made. |
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For Stem Foliage Treatment, apply to all foliage and stems to the point of runoff. |
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It encompasses different kinds of activities and different types of enterprises, and it stems from different motives. |
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This misunderstanding stems from the fact that for most of us, a player is an institution. |
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Both the blue and the yellow have the classic, satiny translucent petals of the poppy tribe, both, characteristically, are held on wiry stems above the parent plant. |
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Each of the crises listed above stems in some way from that willingness to think of our own particular interest as somehow divorced from that of everyone around us. |
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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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As Ben Crair demonstrates, the hit parade stems from title and marketing formulas that are nothing short of scientific. |
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It also stems from the fact that Congress seems utterly detached from the rest of the nation, or even the planet. |
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And I think the chemistry that Jason and Jessica have stems from that innocence they both share. |
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The dried stems of beechdrops can often be found through the winter. |
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The stems of the flowered bellworts rise to your knees, bend, and droop low under their heavy ovate leaves and lemon-colored, bell-shaped flowers. |
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The perception that liberals are unpatriotic stems from that moment in time and from actions just like that. |
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The investigation stems from Dec. 2013 charges that 25 Russian diplomats allegedly tried to obtain fraudulent Medicaid benefits. |
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It happens to belong to the planetree family and sports one-inch thick, spherical fruits supported on long stems leading to the name of buttonball tree. |
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Then the stems were hackled to remove any remaining non-fibrous material by drawing them through a big comb consisting of a bed of nails in a wooden board. |
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Cut when flowers are half-open, and then re-cut stems underwater. |
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The study, which was conducted by Superdrug, found that Middleton's popularity stems from her relatability and natural look. |
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Enoki mushrooms are pale and fragile, with slender stems and tiny caps. |
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The conclusion that the affective meaning of these subliminally presented stimuli was processed by the participants, stems from two lines of observations. |
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The phaseout stems from evidence that methyl bromide is an ozone depleter, that is, a substance that destroys the protective ozone layer of Earth's atmosphere. |
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It needs space to look its best but can be grown in a confined area if some of the stems are cut back and it is grown through a support of some sort. |
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Large flowers such as gerberas are less time-consuming to work with than small ones like button mums, as you'll need fewer stems to cover the foam base. |
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A towering perennial, which takes on a stately ghostliness by late autumn, it needs a sheltered spot away from strong winds, which might buffet the stems to breaking point. |
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The stems are succulent, and have dark green to black distended nodes. |
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Looking at the evolutionary history of four everyday domesticated plants, he argues that their success stems from their ability to gratify human desires. |
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Most analysts would agree that autocannibalism stems from the time when the mother's breast is still regarded as part of the body ego of the child. |
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Before modern times these substances have been consumed through pipes, with stems of various lengths or chillums. |
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The upper parts of the stems with the leaves are plucked off before harvest. |
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After growing in a few spirals around one host shoot, the dodder finds its way to another, and it continues to twine and branch until it resembles a fine, densely tangled web of thin stems enveloping the host plant. |
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Extended verb stems from which an extension cannot be removed without rendering a non-existing basic verb stem, contain a lexicalised extension. |
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Adults of these species eat plant parts like flowers, leaves, stems and fruit, while juveniles eat more insects. |
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Gorse is closely related to the brooms, and like them, has green stems and very small leaves and is adapted to dry growing conditions. |
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This stems from a greatly improved financial position. |
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The dry wood of dead gorse stems provides food for the caterpillars of the concealer moth Batia lambdella. |
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One area that tweaks my interest stems from a comment one of you made to the effect that, as you know, Alberta is doing a lot of work in this area. |
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Leaves may be removed from stems either by scraping with the back of a knife, or by pulling through the fingers or tines of a fork. |
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The specific characteristic of Château Tour Peyronneau is its epicurean style, which stems from airiness provided by the gravelly soils upon which it grows. |
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Is the milky white sap, extracted from the young stems or the foliage of the European common fig tree, effective on the involution of the palmar or plantar warts? antiviral effectiveness? |
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The relationship stems not only from the fact that gifts and bequests share the quality of gratuity but also from the practical consideration that gifts are often resorted to as a means of avoiding estate taxes. |
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The uncertainty stems from a competing bill sponsored by a bipartisan group of Congressmen, led by Reps. |
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It induces a dermatitis that is mostly occupational and affects tulip bulb sorters and florists who cut the stems and leaves. |
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The original confusion about the law stems from the 2003 Criminal Justice Act, which scrapped the need for a minister to automatically review a whole-life sentence after a prisoner had served 25 years. |
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This stems from a discontinuity in the acoustic impedance of water created by the sudden change in density. |
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In my opinion, the greatest inequity stems from the equalization program. |
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Their utility stems from the fact that fertilizers are subject to antagonistic processes. |
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Apply to foliage and to stems to the point of run-off. |
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The fundamental risk connected with any equity portfolio stems from the fact that the value of investments held in this type of portfolio may fall. |
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