The issue for her critics is the extent to which her populist approach has compromised the channel's public-service remit. |
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What is startling about this statement is the degree to which this mayor is simply abdicating responsibility for governing the city. |
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All property rights in the property to which the order relates lie in abeyance. |
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Rather than waffle or quote at length from pieces to which I have little to add, I will simply link to few pieces well worth a look. |
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I returned from Siberia to a mountain of furious letters to which I could only write abject apologies. |
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That is, the logic of power is a reified logic to which the prince must, qua prince, ultimately submit. |
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The colonists celebrated it as a traditional English harvest feast, to which they invited the local Wampanoag Indians. |
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Like the Russian icons to which they are often compared, the Malevich abstractions gain spiritual power because they are also so physical. |
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Bea had a most generous nature to which people warmed to immediately and her kindness and good deeds were legendary. |
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His special contribution was a circle of wire sewn inside the rim to reduce warping from the heat and moisture to which the hats were subjected. |
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A nation always on the warpath means a nation always under arms, a nation to which war is always coming home. |
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He alleged MPs had received car hire, hotel accommodation and other advantages by means of travel warrants to which they had not been entitled. |
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But she would not have to reimburse the Government for any past benefits to which she had been entitled. |
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Within an hour they'd hacked it down to fence height, luckily sparing the thick branch to which one end of my washing line is tied. |
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To remove lacquer, place the item in 2 gallons of boiling water to which 1 cup of washing soda has been added. |
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What we do not expect, however, are the speed and extent to which many of these victims accommodate to their new circumstances. |
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The base rates varied greatly according to which definition of sexual recidivism was being used. |
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If not, it will be queued in the computer to which the printer is attached. |
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But what this reading underplays is the extent to which the play is also a revenge drama. |
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Key to future success will be the degree to which organizations respond quickly to change. |
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Dana says that this is a major issue to which the main parties have turned a blind eye and that it has been allowed to creep up on the quiet. |
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A candle sat on the left corner of the desk, next to which sat a quill pen, a blotter, an inkwell, and various other writing necessities. |
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As Polsby points out, the art of the gerrymander is another instance with respect to which the constitutional order has been turned on its head. |
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The social hierarchies to which it was attached were as likely to be weakened as strengthened by such a model. |
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Kenneth had acquired a good reputation in the area, and was asked to take on the role, to which he agreed. |
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She chased the spider from its web onto adjoining vegetation to which the lead threads of the web were attached. |
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Each leaf has a central rachis to which the many small leaflets are attached. |
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The action of the story divides between this rural backdrop and Helsinki, to which Eeva eventually flees. |
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Your Lordship has well in mind the degree to which the arguments found favour and to which they did not. |
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The extent to which other factors, such as experience or training, affect reading adequacy is also helpful. |
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So he helped me to prepare a jug of lime juice with water, to which he added some sugar and salt. |
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Initially, work was at Pin Hole Cave, the entrance to which lies towards the western end of the north side of the gorge. |
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The island is closer to Tunisia than to the southern coast of Sicily, to which it belongs administratively. |
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He kept his van there so he could be wheeked around in the style to which he was accustomed. |
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Nat, I know, was humbled when he was told the lengths to which his old adversary had gone to honour his name. |
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We defined a territory as any location to which one or more Peregrine Falcons were attached, irrespective of whether we found an eyrie. |
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A kilo of Amul butter is slapped onto a sizzling hot kadai to which a pile of chopped fresh vegetables is added and reduced down to brown mulch. |
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The bath included a 10-cm glass Petri dish to which tubing was affixed with cyanoacrylate glue. |
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Afghans require weekly baths and brushing to remove dead hair and to prevent the tangling and matting to which they are prone. |
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It has certainly exacerbated the extent to which people are afraid of terrorist attacks. |
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Who, after all, had set the standards for good English to which we should all aspire? |
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They, somehow, made readies available to keep their friend in the style to which he had become accustomed. |
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The dramatic reversal illustrates the extent to which the media's polling results are simply measuring the impact of their own coverage. |
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Discard the myths in which biblical stories are wrapped and hold on to the kerygma to which they point. |
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But the ends to which it aspires are neither moderate, nor reasonable, and it gives me a squirmy feeling to contemplate them. |
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The contract lists the key performance indicators to which Maloi has committed himself. |
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Today's audiences can hardly appreciate the ahistorically high standards to which they have grown accustomed. |
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To begin the fermentation process, the cooled wort is transferred into a fermentation vessel to which the yeast has already been added. |
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It needs to be if we are to remain the air force to which nobody else comes close. |
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But his freedom was short-lived as his kidnappers recaptured him at a government building to which he had fled. |
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Pellet selection ultimately comes down to which pellet is most accurate in your air rifle. |
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There's also a USB 2.0 port to enable the unit to be wired up to a PC, to which it appears as a generic USB Mass Storage device. |
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But at the same time she had a sincere, kindly and generous nature to which I instinctively warmed. |
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Titles and badges are exercised as such a weapon, to which you and I look up wistfully. |
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Discovered in 1983, these tiny worms have a spiny head, and so resemble the kinorhynchs to which they are related. |
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It's a great thing for getting your feet wet and figuring out whether blogging is something to which you want to devote some time. |
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As the name suggests, the housing bank deals in houses in a similar way to which banks handle money. |
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The extent to which we are free, for example, may have to be revised if we accept reductionist explanations of behaviour. |
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Therefore, the researcher is limited in the degree to which he or she can genuinely adopt the world view of the people being studied. |
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What the worriers fail to contemplate is the uses to which that capital is put. |
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The extent to which the tenth-century monastic reformation in England transformed the church should not be exaggerated. |
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Literate peasants might find themselves on trial as much for their ability to read and write as for the uses to which they put this knowledge. |
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Every instrument of alienation to which section 160 of the Act applies shall be accompanied by a declaration by the alienors. |
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The heart of the Fat Freddy sound is reggae, from ska through to dub, to which they add subtle hints of house music. |
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Its concerns are massively wider than the lowest common denominator of xenophobic prejudice to which the Sun consistently plays. |
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This directive defines the lactoproteins to which it applies and reserves the names corresponding to those definitions. |
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He is apt to spend thirty or forty pages on an incident to which an equally good writer might devote three. |
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Gehazi is a Yahwist, however, who understands nothing of the transformative faith to which the narrative attests. |
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The sites were the lairs of Allosaurus, places to which adults brought food to feed their offspring. |
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Would you just concentrate on the time in relation to which you gave the answer. |
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Reliability is the degree to which a test or an instrument consistently measures whatever it measures. |
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Large windows to the side provide attractive views over the rear garden, to which there is direct access through glazed yellow pine French doors. |
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The degree to which a society values altruism, known as social responsibility norms, can also have an effect. |
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This amount was to be used over the five year period to which the naming rights applied. |
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This power of legal language is that to which we refer when we call upon the state to effect the regulation of offensive speech. |
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I also want to say that there's a degree to which we never really thought of this as an antihero show. |
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The colour of the jade indicated to which rank its wearer belonged. |
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There is, it seems, a certain sort of human pathology, male pathology, to which this appeals, just as serial killers get a kick from their power over the powerless. |
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To buy an Apple product is to bet on the longevity of the closed system to which we've committed ourselves. |
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In so doing, they suggest that the conflict to which the artist alludes in the exhibition's title is a personal struggle with his own compulsions. |
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The case under consideration involved an alleged terrorist conspiracy to murder in relation to which both countries would claim extra-territorial jurisdiction. |
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For far too long, we have been coasting on a moral authority to which we long ago lost any clear title. |
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The extent to which folk medicine, which I've made reference to, is practiced is a measure of the quality of the medical service available in that community. |
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Indeed, they view us as children who can never adhere to the standards of civility and decency to which they hold other groups. |
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It illustrates the lengths to which peace-wreckers, and men of violence, are prepared to go to to scupper hopes of harmony and disturb political stability. |
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The many particular proposals to which we agreed are less important than the report's explicit reaffirmation of the centrality of human rights commitments. |
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The 4-foot-11 Douglas appears to have chemically relaxed natural hair, to which she has added a human-hair ponytail for height. |
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The analysis also fails to determine the degree to which many economic variables, such as hourly pay rates, are catching up on other parts of Europe. |
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He is widely believed to have fueled the war in support of one of the fighting parties, to which he committed ragtag militias that perpetrated unspeakable atrocities. |
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The book casts a jaundiced eye on everything from helicopter rescues and large, boisterous groups to the use of cell phones, to which Guy had a particularly strong aversion. |
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One official asked the guard whether he was aware that there was a breakdown on one of the production lines, to which the guard replied affirmatively. |
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The problem, to which I alluded briefly earlier, is whether his emphasis on evidence can be combined with his molecular conception of understanding. |
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The sci clearance level restricts information into compartments, access to which is granted on an individual, need-to-know basis. |
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Nymphidae is the family to which lacewings and ant-lions belong. |
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As an act of humility, before a mass to which she had invited the poor, she gave the royal scepter to the most indigent and had the royal crown placed on his head. |
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Doing so, he highlighted the degree to which creationism is a decidedly incurious, insular worldview. |
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Love and good wishes were in abundance, during the ceremony at the church, and during the wedding breakfast at Bidenscourt to which the whole village had been invited. |
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If an adjoining owner places a structure on his land that overhangs his neighbours land, he thereby takes into possession airspace to which his neighbour is entitled. |
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Given the extent to which it is taken for granted today, it can be difficult to fully appreciate the truly innovative and radical approach Frege took to logic. |
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A contour feather, as a typical feather, has a complex morphology consisting of a central shaft or rachis to which barbs are attached on two margins to form a vane. |
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She dressed for the job to which she aspired, but balanced polish with approachability. |
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The chapter demonstrates that fantasies and day dreams may have radical differences in both structure and content, depending on the use to which we put them. |
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That's the level to which the so-called debate from these people has sunk. |
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All it takes is to claim all the allowances to which you are entitled and keep a weather eye on the tax implications when deciding where to invest your hard-won savings. |
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The distance to which the weet-weet can be thrown is truly astonishing. |
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The group is easily recognized by their radial symmetry, with a central nonseptate axis to which are attached whorls of lateral appendages which may or may not be branched. |
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The next few days are all very exciting though, today it's the wedding of my cousin Amanda to which I'm wearing the exciting and jolly expensive new suit. |
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These stories are the immovable objects of Star Wars history, the characters and events to which all other tales must align. |
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Maintaining the high caliber of guest to which his viewers have become accustomed, Galifianakis welcomes brad Pitt to the ferns. |
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Is there any other government in the world to which brog outsources his own moral judgment in this way? |
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The chain to which a hotel belongs is one of the best predictors of WiFi performance. |
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In this regard, the degree to which Leavenworth embraced the applicatory method was paramount. |
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The article cites a survey of 1,925 women by a large insurance company, to which 46 percent of respondents said they feared becoming bag ladies. |
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Patients then met with an audiologist from the respective group to which they were randomized. |
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There is limited evidence on the extent to which Hornsea functioned as a port. |
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The site was given by the Prince of Wales, who held the lands of the Duchy of Cornwall to which the whole moor belonged. |
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Ben had much fun out of it, assuring the other boys that those were the signs and password of a secret society to which he and Sam belonged. |
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Russell also brought in the sense-data sensed by other persons and even unsensed sense-data, to which he gave the name of sensibilia. |
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At Amber Hill, setting was a high-profile concept, and the students were frequently reminded of the set to which they belonged. |
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The tremulant is a small apparatus that gives to the tone of any department of an organ to which it may be applied a waving or undulating effect. |
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Thus to Tylerize became a term meaning to forsake the party to which one owes allegiance or office. |
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Veganism is a position according to which people ought to be vegans both now and in an ideal state. |
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Up to seven people in the UK die every year from anaphylactic shock after eating nuts or other food to which they are allergic. |
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There are always several zayats in the neighborhood of a kyoung, to which the devotees of Boodh resort to listen to their priests. |
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But the world to which Bly had returned was a very different one. |
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This literature review describes the goals of after-school programs and examines the degree to which programs have achieved those goals. |
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Apart from this, the other problem she faces is sweating, due to which she needs to have wind machines blowing air around her constantly. |
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The only figure with a hint of colour is the person with the dog, to which I added a tiny touch of weak Alizarin crimson. |
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A recent Ontario case shows the magnitude to which devotion to rejectamenta can go. |
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Kurtosis describes the degree to which a distribution is flattened or sharpened. |
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Lastly, female renunciants have habitually been refused the same material support to which their male counterparts are privy. |
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Admittedly, asseverating the very notion of complete freedom goes against the very purpose and scope of that to which the notion refers. |
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The DNA polymerase recognizes the base sequence to which it must bind and align the ribonucleoside triphosphates with the complementary bases. |
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In fact, the Uniform Trust Code has left open the extent to which a trustee may claim attorney-client privilege against a beneficiary. |
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That is because the freezing process damages the zona pellucida, the outer shell of the egg, to which the sperm normally must bind before penetrating the egg. |
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Rather than joining the middle-class Rechabite temperance association to which his Uncle Tristram belonged, Gilman became a member of the more plebeian Washingtonians. |
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When the time came, the husband would build a new house to which the old wife would retire with her children, while the new wife assumed the spousely role of homemaker. |
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All experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. |
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The target number and arithmetic operation in the upper left corner of each heavily outlined box, or cage, provide a clue as to which numbers go where. |
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For Lott, liberal boomer intellectuals such as Paul Berman and Todd Gitlin have betrayed the '60s legacy of radicalism to which all boomer liberals ought to pledge allegiance. |
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This is the 24th destination to which THY operates flights on the African continent, following the commencement of flights to the Republic of Djibouti in early September. |
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Is it any wonder that the more mature Ankori would devote himself to exploring the rise and spread of 'sectarian' Karaism in Byzantium to which he sailed as often as possible? |
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That defeat led the former Lancashire and Kent player to develop his exaggerated wrong'un, leaving opponents uncertain as to which way the ball would fizz off the pitch. |
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Call me a worrywart, but I remain concerned by the extent to which our systems of economic governance have lagged in addressing these four outcomes. |
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Furthermore, if the extent to which a plant uses shiftwork changes over the cycle, the cyclical behavior of the workweeks of capital and labor will be different. |
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Previous investigations have yielded conflicting results regarding the extent to which word method directed-forgetting influences explicit and implicit memory tests. |
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Ibn Sina's concept of soul rests on his dualist account in which souls can achieve different grades depending on the degree to which its potential has been actualized. |
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And no guesses as to which duo are badmouthing him at every opportunity? |
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Coming down from Mount Sinai, for instance, she came to a place she identifies as Horeb, the site to which the prophet Elias came after he had fled from King Achab. |
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A way-going crop is a crop of grain to which tenants for years are sometimes entitled by custom, despite not ripening until after the termination of the lease. |
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Yet, Africans on the continent may be surprised by the extent to which residual Africanisms are present in religions, languages and cultures in the Caribbean. |
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Attribution theory suggests that people differ in the degree to which they believe they have personal control over the positive and negative events in their lives. |
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In it, Clarke defends on behalf of Newton a form of substantivalism according to which space exists independently of matter and is as real as matter. |
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The communities to which he writes, apart from Rome, seem to be facing serious doctrinal division, from Judaizers on one side to Docetists on the other. |
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The degree to which Malakhov will attempt to maintain the diversity of the repertories of the Staatsoper Ballet and Deutsche Oper Ballet will be something to watch. |
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Genetic modification of the viruses renders them replication-deficient and avirulent, and allows expression of the mycobacterial antigens to which the immune system reacts. |
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It occupies a position in the very south of the main range of fells, alongside and just to the north of Parlick, to which it is joined by a ridge. |
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